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Japan Boxing to Adopt Stricter Safety Rules After Deaths of Two Fighters

Japan enacts rapid safety reforms including mandatory ambulances, hydration tests, and advanced brain scans after two boxers died from injuries linked to dehydration and rapid weight loss.

  • Following the deaths of two 28-year-old fighters, Shigetoshi Kotari and Hiromasa Urakawa, who passed away several days after undergoing surgery for head injuries incurred during different matches on August 2 at Tokyo’s Korakuen Hall, Japanese boxing officials convened an emergency meeting on August 12.
  • The deaths, described by JPBA president Shoji Kobayashi as "really regrettable," prompted the adoption of urgent safety reforms including urine hydration tests, stricter rules on rapid weight loss, and improved medical coverage.
  • Officials announced four major initiatives: ambulances at all professional boxing events, expanding hospital partnerships for immediate surgery, reducing OPBF title bouts to 10 rounds, and establishing Japan’s first joint pro-amateur boxing medical committee.
  • JBC secretary-general Tsuyoshi Yasukochi said the measures will be implemented as soon as possible, while former champion Toshiharu Kayama acknowledged the incident may spark calls to halt boxing but emphasized a desire to change how the sport is contested.
  • These reforms represent a fundamental shift toward zero accidents, combining medical monitoring, emergency response, and organizational cooperation to honor the fighters and improve boxer safety nationwide.
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15 Articles

Radio France InternationaleRadio France Internationale
+4 Reposted by 4 other sources
Center

Japan boxing to adopt stricter safety rules after deaths of two fighters

·Paris, France
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Lean Left

Two 28-year-old boxers who participated in the same event in Tokyo succumbed to brain injuries shortly after each other. The Japanese Boxing Association now feels compelled to intervene.

·Netherlands
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Lean Left

It was decided to introduce urine tests to measure dehydration and stricter rules regarding the rapid weight loss of boxers.

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The Straits Times broke the news in Singapore on Tuesday, August 12, 2025.
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