Boxers Shigetoshi Kotari and Hiromasa Urakawa died following fights on the identical card in Tokyo final week.
Japanese boxing officers will maintain an emergency assembly on Tuesday as the game within the nation faces intense scrutiny following the deaths of two fighters in separate bouts on the similar occasion.
Tremendous featherweight Shigetoshi Kotari and light-weight Hiromasa Urakawa, each 28, fought on the identical card at Tokyo’s Korakuen Corridor on August 2 and died days later following mind surgical procedure.
The Japan Boxing Fee (JBC), gymnasium homeowners and different boxing officers are beneath stress to behave and can maintain an emergency assembly on Tuesday.
They’re additionally anticipated to have talks about security subsequent month, native media mentioned.
“We’re conscious about our accountability because the supervisor of the game,” Tsuyoshi Yasukochi, secretary-general of the JBC, informed reporters on Sunday.
“We’ll take no matter measures we will.”
Japanese media highlighted the dangers of fighters dehydrating to drop pounds quickly earlier than weigh-ins.
“Dehydration makes the mind extra prone to bleeding,” the Asahi Shimbun newspaper mentioned.
That is likely one of the points the JBC plans to debate with trainers.
“They need to hear from gymnasium officers who work intently with the athletes about such objects as weight reduction strategies and pre-bout conditioning, which can be causally associated (to deaths),” the Nikkan Sports activities newspaper mentioned.
In a single speedy measure, the fee has determined to cut back all Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation title bouts to 10 rounds from 12.
“The offensive energy of Japanese boxing at present is large,” Yasukochi was quoted by the Asahi Shimbun as telling reporters.
“We’ve increasingly boxers who’re capable of begin exchanges of fierce blows from the primary spherical. Perhaps 12 rounds could be harmful.”