Inoue (28-0, 25 KOs), a four-division world champion and pound-for-pound sensation, earned his ninth consecutive stoppage. He became the first man to stop Ireland’s Doheny (26-5, 20 KOs).
The opening rounds were tactical, as Inoue swept rounds one and two on the judges’ scorecards with an educated jab. Doheny, who won the IBF junior featherweight world title on Japanese soil in 2018, had pockets of success in rounds three and four, landing overhand lefts and using lateral movement to keep Inoue at bay. Inoue ramped up the attack in round six, connecting with several body shots that had Doheny holding his side at the end of the round.
Inoue charged from his corner to begin the seventh, delivering a body punch combination that left Doheny holding his back in pain. After taking a knee, he walked to his corner gingerly. The fight was over. And for yet another evening, The Monster reigned supreme.
Top Rank Chairman Bob Arum said, “I told him it was another great performance. I understand he’ll be coming back here to Tokyo to defend his title again at the end of the year. And then we’re taking him to the United States for a big celebration in Las Vegas.”
In the co-feature, Yoshiki Takei (10-0, 8 KOs) made the first defense of his WBO bantamweight world title, edging former world champion Daigo Higa (21-3-1, 19 KOs) via unanimous decision by scores of 114-113 2x and 115-112. After suffering a knockdown in the 11th, Takei dominated round 12 to secure the victory.