Jason Moloney: Australia’s Road Warrior Hits Tokyo
Moloney to defend WBO bantamweight world title against Yoshiki Takei on the Naoya Inoue-Luis Nery card Monday, May 6 at the Tokyo Dome & LIVE on ESPN+
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Courtesy: Naoki Fukuda
TOKYO (May 3, 2024) — Australian WBO bantamweight world champion Jason “Mayhem” Moloney may have to change his nickname to “The Road Warrior.” Moloney (27-2, 19 KOs) will defend his strap against Japanese former kickboxing world champion Yoshiki Takei (8-0, 8 KOs) on Monday, May 6 at the world-famous Tokyo Dome.
Moloney-Takei will serve as the co-feature to the super fight between undisputed junior featherweight king Naoya Inoue and Mexican puncher Luis “Pantera” Nery. Inoue-Nery, Moloney-Takei and two additional world title fights will stream live and exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+ starting at 4 a.m. ET/ 1 a.m. PT.
Since losing to Inoue in October 2020, Moloney has won six straight bouts, a run that began with a convincing decision over Joshua Greer Jr. in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He then turned away Francisco Pedroza in Costa Mesa, California, before returning home to Australia and dominating Aston Palicte and Navapon Khaikanha. Moloney punched his passport again, outboxing Vincent Astrolabio last May in Stockton, California, to win the WBO bantamweight world title. He made his inaugural world title defense in January in Quebec City, Canada, edging American bruiser Saul Sanchez by majority decision in a Fight of The Year contender.
Moloney now moves his traveling roadshow to Tokyo against a unique southpaw riddle in Takei. Days away from his Japanese debut, this is what he had to say.
“I’m excited to be here and to be able to fight, especially on this, the biggest event in Japanese boxing history at the Tokyo Dome. This is a very exciting opportunity and one that I’ve trained extremely hard for to make it a very successful and memorable night in my life. And I’m very excited to be here, but I’m here for one job and that’s to defend my title and win this fight.”
“I’m expecting a hard fight, but I’ve put in the hard work to make sure I’m victorious.”
“His distance is different coming from a kickboxing background, so we prepared very hard for his unique style. He’s had eight fights and eight knockouts, and this is a big step up for him. It’s obvious his team has a lot of belief in his ability.”
“I need to put on a great performance, win this fight, and then I’m ready to unify with any of the other bantamweight champions. I want the big fights, and I have to beat Takei to make them happen.”