860 00 en lettre
Log In nana
noun ˈna-nə plural nanas
informal : the
mother of one's father or mother : grandmother . my nana's commonsense wisdom still resonates. She told me it's not important what people say
they do, it's what they do that counts. —Ms. The Detroit rapper [Big Sean] hopped on Instagram on Monday . to send out a heartfelt tribute to his nana, who he says has a special place in armed forces lineage. —C.
After that incident,
Ippo gave the situation a lot of thought and decided that he would like to begin a career as a professional boxer. When he conveys this message to Mamoru Takamura, he gets verbally reprimanded: Takamura thought Ippo was taking professional boxing too lightly. However, Takamura felt that he couldn't outright refuse Ippo, especially since his feat of punching the sandbag much harder than anybody else in the gym (except for Takamura). Therefore, he challenges Ippo to catch 10 falling leaves from a tree simultaneously after a week of training, fully convinced that Ippo would fail, Takamura jogs away as he continues his roadwork. However, after a week of tough training, involving nightly hours, Ippo manages the technique in the nick of time. He
waits for the jogging Takamura to come by his usual path and surprises him by catching all 10 of the falling leaves and only doing so with his left hand. This impresses Takamura greatly, and he informs Ippo that the action required to catch all 10 leaves is called a boxing jab. Takamura invites Ippo back to the boxing gym for introductions. When they got back to the gym, the coach, Genji Kamogawa, was not at all impressed by Makunouchi's lack of fighting spirit, and therefore, was challenged by Takamura to have a practice spar against a member of the gym. However, Kamogawa decides to give Ippo a severe challenge and tells him to spar with Miyata, who is 16, the same age as Ippo. Miyata is known as a boxing prodigy and is one of Kamogawa gym's future hopes.
Ippo discuss his thoughts about Sendō to Mari. Later, Ippo was approached by Mari, who returned from Osaka, asking for his opinion on her magazine article about his and Sendō's match. Ippo described the article section about Sendō's spar as if he was watching it and noted Sendō's widened stance would make it hard to push him back and felt that he won't be able to use his Dempsey Roll. Ippo then expressed how instead of going into the match thinking of it as a title match, he believed that they are not fighting over a belt. At his home, Ippo gave a ticket to Umezawa and planned on giving two to Kumi and one to Nekota along with a letter. Ippo was then unable to sleep that night in his room as his heart would not stop racing in anticipation for the fight. Ippo and Sendō
shaking hands. The day before the match, Ippo arrived to the Kōrakuen Hall and met Sendō in the weigh-in room. Ippo was surprised at the champion's relaxed nature and both boxers were amazed of each other's muscle build as they
partake in the weigh-in. After the two passed the check, Ippo ran into Sendō again while trying to leave the hall. While Ippo mentioned how calm Sendō was, Sendō explained that he is in fact not calm.