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This is a list of the fictional characters that appear in the manga and anime series Hajime no Ippo (はじめの一歩), also known as Fighting Spirit. Characters are grouped by the boxing gym they are a member of.
Ippo Makunouchi (幕之内 一歩, Makunouchi Ippo)
Ippo is the main protagonist of the series. His boldness as a boxer is juxtaposed with his shy and amiable personality outside the ring. He lives with his mother, Hiroko Makunouchi, and helps with the family charter boat fishing business—a job which has developed his lower body well enough to become an effective boxer. When he was young, Ippo used to get bullied and picked on by others in his school. As fate would have it, Takamura came upon Ippo as he was getting a beating from a couple of bullies and decided to help him. Takamura saw something in Ippo and introduced him to the world of boxing. After seeing a video of Tyson, Ippo becomes inspired to take up boxing to feel reborn with strength and asks Takamura to get him into Kamogawa Gym. Immediately after arriving at Kamogawa Gym he impresses Takamura and Kamogawa with his explosive punching power and guts in the ring. Like he has with Takamura, Kamogawa personally takes on Ippo as his pupil and starts him on the path to being a pro boxer. Since then, Takamura has treated Ippo like a younger brother and has taken him under his wing.
Ippo is described as an in-fighter (though, he resembles more of a boxer-puncher) and is well known for his comeback KO victories, his Peek-a-Boo style defense and his heavy blows which include three signature punches: a rib-cracking Liver blow, Gazelle punch (an uppercut variant), and the Dempsey roll, modeled after punches used by Mike Tyson, Floyd Patterson, and Jack Dempsey respectively. He stands at 164 cm (5'5") tall with a 165 cm (5'5") reach and has consistently weighed 126 pounds (57 kg). His natural talents include stamina, balance and enough punching power to turn around a match instantly; combined with his superb fighting spirit, these assets lead to his comebacks victories and have allowed him to overcome any technical shortcomings. His destructive Dempsey roll technique has been a particular focus in the story and has continued to evolve through the series: in the match with Sawamura, he added a rapid stop-and-start to prevent it from being countered, and against Jimmy Sisfa, he incorporated an uppercut to the rotation, but Makunouchi needs to continue to develop his lower body to use these without risking further injury. He temporarily stopped using the Dempsey roll in order to refine his basics and become a more complete boxer. His nickname is the God of Wind, coined after the force of his powerful blows. In addition, his intense training has allowed him to mimic some fighters' specialities with a degree of success such as Sendo's smash attacks or Jimmy Sisfa's jolt attacks during their matches.
During his fight with Sendo, Ippo showed the Dempsey Roll's perfect form. Since the Dempsey Roll could not be used if the opponent won't back down, Ippo utilized all three of his techniques. Starting with the liver blow, which damaged Sendo's right ribs, Ippo then used a feint with his own version of "Sakki" (killing intent), called "Courage", making Sendo raise his guard. Ippo then followed up with the Gazelle punch (an uppercut using the strength of the legs for additional power), which made Sendo's jaw fly up and stunned him for a few seconds. Taking the opportunity of Sendo being stunned, Ippo then revved up his Dempsey Roll which hit Sendo a couple of times before knocking him out. Ippo used the same pattern of attack on his first title defense with Sanada but due to the damage that he sustained his attack stopped after a couple of hits.
Hajime no Ippo has covered each of Makunouchi's fights, starting with his introduction to the boxing world and winning the All Japan Rookie Kings tournament in a talented rookie Featherweight class that has produced four national champions and two OPBF Champions in varying weight classes thus far. The story continues with his ascension to becoming the Japanese Featherweight Champion, a title he defends eight times before relinquishing the belt to focus on the world title, a journey he began by challenging other national title holders in the OPBF. His current record as a professional boxer is 26 matches, 23 wins and 3 losses with all 23 victories by KO, and at his peak he had held the seventh ranking in the WBC. His only losses are to Eiji Date in his first attempt to challenge for the Japanese Featherweight title, his first Mexican opponent in the professional ring Alfredo Gonzales who was ranked #2 in the WBC at the time, and Filipino Featherweight Champion Antonio Guevara after making a 10-month comeback. He won three tournaments: the East Japan Rookie King Tournament, the All Japan Rookie King Tournament and the Class A tournament. He was nominated boxer of the tournament in these competitions. He fought only twice sparring matches, both against Miyata.
Date would go on to challenge Ricardo Martinez—the only man he'd ever lost to in the ring—for the world title, but the injuries he sustained in his title bout forced him to retire and pass the baton to Ippo. Date's young son, Yūji, who had watched his father's defeat from the crowd asks Ippo if he'll fight Ricardo as the Japanese champion after his father, to which Ippo declines, stating Ricardo is too strong for him as he is now. After eight Japanese featherweight title defenses and wins over other Asian national champions from Thailand, the Philippines, and Indonesia, Ippo's fight with Mexican boxer Alfredo Gonzales for the #2 spot in the WBC World Rankings was his first loss since becoming champion. While Gonzales dominated most of the fight, Ippo was able to knock him down and caused Gonzales to begrudgingly accept Ippo's strength. Gonzales won the fight after being luckily saved from a second knockdown by the ropes and caused massive damage to Ippo in his final attack.
After the fight, Ippo makes a promise to Kumi Mashiba that the next time he loses in the ring will be his last and he will retire without regrets. At the same time, fears of becoming "punch drunk" manifest when Ippo finds himself underperforming in spars and displaying symptoms such as becoming forgetful and being unable to draw in a straight line, a concern and suspicision shared with the Kamogawa Gym, who ban him from the gym for one month despite his insistence on his good health. Ten months after the fight with Gonzalez, Ippo returns to the ring to fight Filipino Featherweight Champion Antonio Guevara with the goal of unveiling a new Dempsey roll, but loses due to fatigue before being able to display the fruits of his training to his expectations, feeling indebted to Coach Kamogawa who had supported him for so long. Ippo retires after this fight as promised due to his own worry over punch drunk syndrome and injuries he sustained, prioritizing his ability to work in the family business for his mother's sake over boxing. He is currently employed as a second at the Kamogawa gym while acting as a trainer for his new, young pupils Taihei Aoki and Kintarō Kaneda.
Mamoru Takamura (鷹村 守, Takamura Mamoru)
Takamura is an undefeated two-time World Champion boxer of the Kamogawa gym. The other fighters there look up to him and feed off of his energy, and he's their unspoken emotional leader. Like a big brother, he teases them without tact and facetiously bullies them constantly, but he also gives them advice and helps them to become better boxers. Takamura also has an insatiable appetite for women, which is only overshadowed by his obsession for victory. At one point when training in the mountains, he runs afoul of a mother bear who he defeated by repeatedly punching it in the forehead, but not before it clawed deep gouges into his chest and arms. The weakened bear is later shot and killed by Nekota (to fulfill a request Takamura had for bear stew), and Takamura was dubbed "The Bear Slayer". Sometimes he honors the moniker by wearing the Bear pelt, bearing his scars proudly.
During one of his title defense fights, (He was advised by Coach Kamogawa beforehand that he will soon be contending for the world as WBC is eyeing him already) Takamura defeated his challenger using only his left hand, starting from left jabs that evolved to left straights, proving the old adage "He who rules with his left rules the World" as stated by Nekota - and that it was Takamura's declaration to the world if his intent. The boxing commentator stated further that Takamura has proven that "Japan is too small for him".
He originally was a delinquent who often got into fights. Because of his strength, he usually left his victims with serious injuries. He was disowned by his family due to a brawl he initiated with some fans who were booing his older brother in a rugby match. By the time the brawl was over, at least twenty people were injured. After the incident, Takamura continues to brawl in the streets out of utter boredom until he meets Coach Kamogawa, who stepped in to keep him from killing someone after noting his powerful right. After weeks of relentless running and forcing him to use only left jabs - and without a single sparring session - Takamura defeats his first opponent twenty-five seconds into the first round. He works his way to becoming the JBC Middleweight Champion, and then moves on to defeat Bryan Hawk to become the WBC Junior Middleweight Champion, and then beats David Eagle for the WBC Middleweight Championship, and then beats Richard Bison to win the WBA Middleweight Championship and unify both the WBC and WBA Middleweight Championships (which makes him the only current World Champion from Japan). His current aspiration is to conquer the next four classes up through heavyweight.
Morikawa described Takamura as by far the best pound for pound fighter in the series. He's the ideal blend of athleticism, technique, intelligence and instincts. Morikawa often uses Takamura's keen insight to break down what is happening during a fight. Even before he started boxing, his strength, speed, stamina, and reflexes were already world class and he easily could have become a national champion. But despite his prodigious natural talent, his determination to achieve greatness has pushed himself to work tirelessly at his craft, and he suffered through painful weight control without complaint to reach the world stage. He is the former Japanese Middleweight Champion, the former WBC Junior Middleweight Champion, former unified WBC and WBA Middleweight Champion, and the current WBC Super middleweight champion. Takamura currently holds a record of 27-0-0, with all twenty-seven wins coming by knockout.
Masaru Aoki (青木 勝, Aoki Masaru)
Tatsuya Kimura (木村 達也, Kimura Tatsuya)
Manabu Itagaki (板垣学, Itagaki Manabu)
Ichirō Miyata (宮田 一郎, Miyata Ichirō)
Takeshi Sendō (千堂 武士, Sendō Takeshi)
Sendō is an aggressive mid-range fighter, and his specialty punch is the "Smash", Deadly Smash and Ultra Low Smash which was popularized and created by Donovan Ruddock. He resides in the Naniwa Ward of Osaka, where he is known as "Rocky" and the "Naniwa Tiger" - although he emphatically denies any relation to the fictional character, explaining that the "Rocky" nickname was influenced by his power boxing style similar to that of Rocky Marciano, the only heavyweight champion in history to retire undefeated. In a recent interview with Shōnen Magazine, Hajime no Ippo's manga artist, George Morikawa said that Hidekazu Akai was also one of his models for Sendo. Like Sendo, Akai was from Osaka and was nicknamed the Naniwa Rocky.
Sendo's mother died after childbirth, so he spent his first years with his father and paternal grandmother, raised under the motto "you should protect those around you". When he was around five years old, his firefighter father died while rescuing a boy about the same age as Sendo during a blaze. Sendo, proud of his father's sacrifice, continued to follow his advice by trying to help others. He started by helping people from bullies, but eventually became very violent with his "justice". By high school, Sendo had already become one of the most feared street fighters and gang leaders in Osaka, but not attacking people, rather defending the weak.
One day while looking for people to test his strength against, he beat up several initiate boxers from the Naniwa boxing gym and met their coach, Yamaoka, who told him not to boast "until he knocked down a real boxer" (but privately bragged about his intensity). He followed Yamaoka to his gym and declared his intent to prove he was the strongest in Japan, going on to win the Western Japan Rookie Championship. As a result, he was slated to fight his counterpart Ippo, the Eastern Rookie King Champion, in the All Rookie King Japan Tournament. However, during the fight for the division title, Ippo injured his right hand and as a result decided to skip the fight. After finding this out, Sendo immediately leaves Naniwa for Tokyo and heads to the Kamogawa Gym to speak with Ippo - and as Sendo explained that all he wanted was to fight the strongest person he could and win, Ippo realized he felt the same way, and so decides to go on with the match despite his handicap, fighting with an anesthetized hand. In the end Sendo loses the fight by TKO - however, Ippo felt that the issue of who was strongest was still unresolved; at the end of the third round Sendo had unleashed a brutal flurry of blows that Ippo barely weathered before the bell rung, but at the start of the fourth round Sendo couldn't rise from his seat - Ippo had actually knocked him unconscious due to a blow to his temple, and his final attack was out of pure instinct.
Sendo has held the Japanese featherweight following a questionable win over Volg Zangief (that even Sendo himself didn't accept gladly) to decide who would take the Featherweight Championship vacated after Eiji Date retired, defending it twice by KO. Ultimately not only would he lose the title to Ippo in their rematch but as a result of Ippo's devastating punches, he was shelved due to Ippo cracking his ribs with body blows and Liver blows. Despite their Rivalry, and Sendo's desire to avenge his losses, he has become good friends with Ippo as the series has progressed.
Following his recent comeback, Sendo holds a record of 21-2-0, with 20 KOs and is the former JBC Featherweight Champion. After several victories over highly ranked Mexican opposition, he becomes known as a 'Mexican Killer'. Sendo is ranked 5th by the WBA and declared his ambition to defeat the WBA champion, Ricardo Martinez albeit not before indirectly threatening Ippo's most recent opponent (and the boxer who handed the latter his second loss) Alfredo Gonzales, instructing his most recent knockout victim to inform Gonzales that he'll 'see him real soon.' Recently, George Morikawa released a 48-page one-shot manga focusing on Sendo before his time as a fighter. Sendo is based on legendary heavyweight world champion Rocky Marciano, whom Sendo admits he admires most, for his fearless style and passion for infighting.
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