Naoya Inoue is dazzling. His speed, his power, his composure — he makes world champions look ordinary. ESPN even declared in July 2023: “Naoya Inoue isn’t simply the best boxer in the world — he’s an all-time great still adding chapters to his legendary career.”

But history doesn’t bend to highlight reels or pound-for-pound polls. It bends to the truth. And the truth is that Inoue’s greatest achievements to date are a win against Nonito Donaire — a past-prime legend already beaten decisively before Inoue got to him — and a very good win over Stephen Fulton, a top fighter but not the kind of elite name that defines eras. Those victories are impressive. They are not yet legendary.

The Broner Warning

Boxing has seen this movie before. In 2013, Sports Illustrated ran a headline that read: “Adrien Broner is boxing’s next big thing.”   The media, promoters, and fans anointed Broner as the heir to Mayweather, the sport’s savior, the future of boxing.

Then Marcos Maidana came along. One night was all it took for Broner’s aura to collapse. The hype was real until it wasn’t.

That’s the warning for Inoue. Yes, he passes the eye test better than Broner ever did. Yes, he has discipline and dedication that Broner lacked. But until he faces the fighter who can truly threaten his aura, we won’t know if the hype is real — or if history will file him alongside those who looked unbeatable until they weren’t.

The Shakur Puzzle

For Inoue, that threat has a name: Shakur Stevenson.

Shakur is the opposite of everyone Inoue has fought. He doesn’t give openings. He doesn’t unravel under pressure. He makes punchers miss, then makes them doubt themselves. He’s tall, long, defensive, patient — the perfect antidote to Inoue’s aggression and timing.

If Inoue can solve that puzzle, then yes, he becomes what ESPN has already called him: an all-time great. But until then, he has not arrived.

The Problem With “He’s Done Enough”

Some fans and writers already argue that Inoue doesn’t need 135, that he’s already achieved greatness. But that’s not confidence in Inoue. That’s protection. It’s low-key proof they think he’ll lose to Shakur and want to stop history before the truth comes out.

It’s like asking a referee to blow the whistle at halftime because your team is ahead. You don’t want to play the second half. But greatness lives in the second half.

The Standard of Legends

Michael Jordan didn’t stop once he was an All-Star. He didn’t settle for “good enough.” He wanted the Pistons. He wanted the Celtics. He wanted the Lakers. He wanted to climb the mountain until there was nothing left to prove.

In boxing, greatness demands the same. Pacquiao didn’t stop at flyweight. Mayweather didn’t stop at super featherweight.

Terence Crawford didn’t stop once he became undisputed at 140. He didn’t declare himself complete. He moved up, cleaned out welterweight, and when the biggest challenge of all appeared — Canelo at 168 — he jumped two divisions and took it. Crawford didn’t settle for “good enough.” He climbed until there was nothing left, until every doubt was silenced.

That’s the standard. That’s how legends are made.

Naoya Inoue must follow the same path. If he truly believes in his greatness, he should be eager to face Shakur Stevenson at 135.

Verdict: Great, But Not Yet Arrived

Naoya Inoue is already great. Nobody denies it. He has stats, skills, dominance, and aura. But history will not enshrine him as a legend until he climbs to lightweight and faces the puzzle waiting for him there.

Legends have fans who say: “Who’s next?”

Good fighters have fans who say, “That’s enough.”

Greatness inspires confidence.

“Good enough” inspires protection.

And so, the choice is yours.

If you believe your fighter has reached his ceiling and you’re content to watch him collect wins at his current weight until he retires happily ever after, that’s respectable: take the blue pill.

If, on the other hand, you have no doubt in his ability to conquer 135, then take the red pill — and see how deep he can go down Shakur’s rabbit hole.

Last Updated on 09/26/2025

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