By Hisao Adachi

It is already official that Tokyo's Kyoei Boxing Gym will organize a boxing function next Monday, January 1st, at Differ Ariake in Tokyo with a total of six fights, all of which will be broadcast live to the whole country of Japan by Abema TV, which is a private Internet television company for personal computer or smart phone users.

Japan's Joe Vlog (Masahiro Kanazawa), from the Kyoei Boxing Gym, will make his professional boxing debut and his opponent will be John Yano (2-3), a Filipino based in the city of Yaizu of the province of Shizuoka. He is under the management of the Suruga Danji Boxing Gym.

There will be a four rounder, where Kyosuke Kameda, 19 years old and part of the Kyoei Boxing Gym, makes his professional boxing debut by facing Shinnosuke Kimoto (2-1, from Watanabe Boxing Gym in Tokyo). Kyosuke Kameda is the cousin of the three Kameda brothers, Koki and Daiki and Tomoki.

Also during this boxing evening there will be two women's fights. Japan's undefeated current junior youth champion, Jun Yabuki (9-0 / 4KOs, 26-year-old and Kyoei Boxing Gym) is going to take on a Thai fighter in an 8-round bout. In a 6 rounder, a former regional champion of the Federation of Boxing of East and Pacific (OPBF) Momoko Kanda (9-9-2, 2KOs, 31 years of age and of Kyoei Boxing Gym) will exchange punches with a Thai boxer.

In an 8-round bout, # 7 ranked Japanese welterweight Toshiro Tarumi (7-3-3, 3KOs, 24-year-old and Kyoei Boxing Gym) is going to face an opponent from Thailand.

In a 4-round lightweight bout, Japanese debutant Shu Ikoshi goes to battle with an Indonesian opponent.

Needless to say that the biggest attraction of this boxing function is the ring return of retired former flyweight and super flyweight world champion Daiki Kameda, 28 years old.

Kameda will respond to the spirited challenge of the four brave Japanese men (not boxers) in three-round matches being broadcast live on Abema TV's one-line television.

In the event that one of these men is able to knock Kameda out, the winner would collect a grand prize of ten million yen ($88,800 in USD).

Kameda declares that he will knock out all four of his challengers in the first round, one after the other.

Last May, Daiki's retired brother, Koki Kameda, who is a former three division world champion, took part in the same type of attraction against four brave Japanese men. And he went through all of them. On that occasion, Abema TV's audience number was just over 14 million in a surprise number.