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Thread: MMA in Asia

  1. #16
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    Bellator

    Well, I didn't foresee that one coming.
    Hong Kong's Celestial Tiger Inks Martial Arts Deals
    1:17 AM PDT 4/23/2012 by Karen Chu

    The Hong Kong-based cable channel operator signed exclusive content deals with FremantleMedia, South Korea’s CJ Entertainment and France’s Fighting Spirit for its action channel KIX and other networks.

    HONG KONG – Celestial Tiger Entertainment (CTE) signed exclusive content deals with FremantleMedia, South Korea’s CJ Entertainment & Media Corporation and France’s Fighting Spirit for programming to run on its action channel KIX and all CTE channels in Asia.

    CTE inked a multi-year output deal for mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion Bellator Fighting Championships, the sixth season of which, distributed by FremantleMedia Enterprises, will premiere in May on KIX across Asia.

    From France’s Fighting Spirit, CTE signed an exclusive output deal for global championship kickboxing tournament It’s Showtime. KIX has expanded its programming from action films to include martial arts and combat programs, which currently includes Japan’s worldwide promotion K-1, the US-based MMA promotion Strikeforce, and MMA combat program Dream.

    CTE also closed an exclusive volume deal with South Korea’s CJ E&M Corporation for its channels in Asia, including cable series Blood Thirsty Prosecutor, starring Yun Jung-hoon (My Wife is a Gangster); drama Hero with actor Yang Dong-gun; crime series Quiz from God starring Ryu Duk-hwan, and mini-series Girl Killer K starring up-and-coming actress Han Groo as a female assassin.
    Gene Ching
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  2. #17
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    One FC Destiny of Warriors

    In Malaysia
    Asia the home of mixed martial arts
    By Dennis Wong
    New Straits Times
    Sunday, Jul 01, 2012

    Judging from the 10,000 strong crowd that thronged Stadium Negara last weekend for the One FC Destiny of Warriors competition, Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) is here to stay.

    This new form of close quarters combat, using a mix of various martial art styles, is gaining popularity not just in Asia but throughout the world, judging from the viewership of the matches that were also broadcast live on the Internet.

    Malaysia is certainly making a name for herself in the MMA scene with rising stars such as Adam Shahir Kayoom, Peter Davis and Aj Lias Mansor, sparring alongside MMA greats such as Gregor Gracie, Masakazu Imanari, Renato Soboral and Tetsuya Mizuno.

    "One FC is now a platform for martial arts proponents in the region to reach even greater heights in their careers," said One Fighting Championship chief executive officer Victor Cui.

    He said as sports was very much culture-oriented, Asia was the home of the MMA because of its martial arts heritage.

    "We have Bruce Lee, Jet Li, Donnie Yuen. Everyone in Asia knows about martial arts. It is part of our culture. In Japan alone there are 50 million karate practitioners. Now MMA is the fastest growing sport in the world and we are here to stay," he told the New Sunday Times.

    In the past 10 years, MMA has raked in US$500 million (S$633 billion) via pay-per-view live telecast, compared with boxing, which only netted half that amount.

    "MMA creates local heroes, which also gives opportunities for local martial arts proponents to build their careers. When we watch an F1 race, many of us are supporting an international racer. We do not enjoy the pride of showing off a local hero. But in MMA we have that," added Cui.

    And it was patriotic pride that drove Malaysian spectators wild the minute local fighters entered the cage despite the presence of famous names such as Marcos Escobar, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt holder. This was the first time Malaysia hosted an international level MMA event.

    He said Asia had a larger fan base and a deep talent pool because of its martial arts culture.

    "A fighter who knows silat, karate or tae kwon do can become an MMA fighter in just two to three years.

    "They just need to work on their stand up and grappling skills and they can be a complete fighter," he added.

    Malaysia can also stand tall in the MMA arena as three of the 18 competitors during last Saturday's championship are locals.

    One of them was Adam, who was badly taken down and pounded by Brazilian jiu-jitsu champion Gracie in the first round of the championship, before emerging winner in the third round, dominating the match with his muay thai skills.

    Though Adam clearly won the match against Gracie (who is part of a prominent sporting family from Brazil known for their founding of Brazilian jiu-jitsu), he was quick to honour the family.

    "Without them, BJJ and MMA would not be what it is today. Thank you for helping us BJJ instructors with employment, and the knowledge of BJJ," he said after winning the fight.

    The victory comes as a double joy for Adam who will be a father soon.

    Adam travelled to Brazil at a young age to learn BJJ from Ricardo Liborio who trained under Carlson Gracie, considered the best in the sport.

    After winning several BJJ titles in Brazil and Australia, he decided to take up Muay Thai in Thailand, where he was initially rejected from most gyms because he was considered too old to train with them.

    But he proved them wrong by winning the world titles in 2006 and muay khmer in Cambodia the following year.

    The two other Malaysian fighters who fought that night were model-turned actor Peter Davis, who went against 21-year-old Singaporean national boxer Quek Kim Hock.

    He proved many wrong when he won the match against Kim Hock in just 55 seconds in the first round.

    Former national silat champion AJ Lias Mansor, 37, however, was out of the match after 1 minute 25 seconds into the first round against American Mitch Chilson, 34, by a rear naked choke submission.
    Gene Ching
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  3. #18
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    Thrilla in Manila MMA Style

    Cebu businessman bringing Asia’s biggest mixed martial arts show to Manila
    PhilBoxing.com
    Thu, 30 Aug 2012

    Cebu businessman Victor Cui, the son of Diplomat and Consul General Victoriano Cui, is bringing Asia’s biggest and most prestigious mixed martial arts promotion to Manila this Friday night.

    ONE Fighting Championship was founded by Cui just over as year ago and has already put on shows in sold out stadiums and arenas in Singapore, Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur. On Friday it is the turn of the Philippines with 16,500 fans expected to fill the Smart Araneta Coliseum to capacity at ONE FC: ‘Pride of a Nation’.

    It will be the biggest MMA event to ever take place in the country and the first chance for fight fans here to get a glimpse of famous fighters such as former UFC champions Andrei Arlovski, Tim Sylvia and Jens Pulver and DREAM champion Bibiano Fernandes.

    There will also be five champions from top Filipino promotion the URCC as well as three members of the legendary Gracie family on the card and Cui says he was determined to make the first ever ONE FC event in this country a night to remember,

    “This is our first time in the Philippines and this country has some of the most passionate fight fans in the world so we wanted to make it a really special card, stacked with champions from all over the world and fighters who are household names and MMA legends.”

    There will also be some recognizable faces in the crowd as famous Filipino models, actors and TV personalities will be rubbing shoulders in the VIP area with former President Joseph "Erap" Estrada who has confirmed he will be attending Cui’s event.

    Mixed martial arts is the fastest growing sport in the world and is a multi billion dollar industry in the US. Although extremely popular in Asia, particularly in the Philippines, there had never been a promotion in this continent to rival the UFC in the West until ONE FC came along.

    Cui, who was formerly a senior director at ESPN Star Sports, clearly spotted a gap in the market but even he admits to being taken aback by the speed at which ONE FC has grown to become firmly established as the leading MMA promotion in Asia,

    “In all my years of working in the sports entertainment and media industry I have never witnessed a sport with such rapid growth as MMA. My aim is to put ONE FC in a billion homes across Asia and the response so far has been phenomenal, our next two events are on course to collectively sell almost 30,000 tickets.”

    Cui, who lives with his wife and two daughters in Singapore, has been described by numerous journalists as ‘the most influential man in MMA’. With ONE FC’s next event taking place in the same venue which hosted the ‘Thrilla in Manila’ when Ali fought Frazier he is already making history and he says he is only just getting started,

    “ONE FC is only a year old so this is really just the beginning, next year we are going to put on events in cities all over Asia and this definitely won’t be the last time you see a ONE FC show happening right here in the Philippines.”

    Fight fans in Cebu might have to wait a little bit longer for a taste of live action as, according to Cui, ONE FC won’t be coming here anytime soon,

    “Nothing would give me more pleasure than to put on a ONE FC show in Cebu but it’s difficult finding a venue big enough to fit all the fans who want to buy tickets into. Manila is only a quick flight away though and there are still some tickets left but you can stay at home and still watch because all our shows are streamed live on the internet.”

    For more information or to watch ONE FC: ‘Pride of a Nation’ live online visit: www.onefc.com.
    We'll see how this goes...
    Gene Ching
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  4. #19
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    Evolve MMA

    Singapore - land of shopping malls...
    Asia's martial arts capital is ... Singapore?
    Here's a fistful of reasons to believe it
    By James Goyder 10 September, 2012

    Evolve MMA founder and owner Chatri Sityodtong joins members of his fight team for a convincing "don't mess with us" photo shoot.

    Singapore is renowned for its strict laws, clean streets and rapid urbanization. Martial arts? Not so much.

    But that's fast changing. Over the years the city-state has quietly been building up its credentials to emerge as the fight capital of Asia.

    Here's a fistful of reasons to put doubters into submission.
    The rise of MMA

    Mixed martial arts (MMA) combines several different fight styles, and is one of the fastest growing sports on the planet. Giving the sport further legitimacy, the International Mixed Martial Arts Federation was founded in Sweden earlier this year.

    Much of Singapore's current martial arts success is owed to the efforts of two Asian entrepreneurs who chose to base their MMA businesses in the city.

    Filipino Canadian Victor Cui is behind ONE Fighting Championship, Asia’s biggest MMA promotion.


    A fighter from Evolve serves his opponent a forceful kick during a ONE Fighting Championships welterweight bout in Singapore. The other, Chatri Sityodtong from Thailand, is the owner of Evolve MMA, arguably the most successful martial arts gym in Asia.

    Famous fighters

    Chatri, a Harvard graduate and wealthy Wall Street investor, decided to turn his business talents to martial arts in 2008. He was a veteran of numerous muay Thai fights who held a blue belt in Brazilian jiujitsu so the decision to take his entrepreneurial flair and apply it to martial arts came naturally.

    “I have always been passionate about martial arts but when I first came to Singapore there really was nothing here, it was difficult to find anyone to even train with personally," says Chatri.

    "I decided to set up Evolve MMA not just because I saw it as an investment opportunity but because people in Singapore seemed to live very sedentary lives and I wanted to give them somewhere they could come to stay healthy and to learn something new.”

    "Asia will always be the spiritual home of martial arts but Singapore has become its epicenter," says ONE FC founder Victor Cui. Chatri would not have made his millions on Wall Street without being able to spot a trend and Evolve MMA has grown to the point that it is already regarded as being the top fight training facility in Asia.

    Famous fighters from the United States such as former Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) middleweight champion Rich Franklin and Bellator welterweight champion Ben Askren will travel halfway across the world to train there and, according to the founder, membership is booming.

    “Singapore really hasn't had a culture of sports historically, let alone martial arts but in the last four to five years the martial arts scene in Singapore has skyrocketed," says Chatri.

    "Judging by our growth rates at Evolve MMA, the MMA industry in Singapore has grown eight to 10-fold during that time frame and new martial arts gyms are opening all the time.

    "In the past I would have said Tokyo was the martial arts capital of Asia but now it is Singapore. Even the UFC is looking to establish its Asian headquarters here.”

    Vegas-style fight nights


    Eyes on the fight, boys. ONE Fighting Championship's first event took place in Singapore's 12,000-seat Indoor Stadium last year. Cui believes that the country he calls home has already established itself as the martial arts capital of Asia, but there's definitely room to grow.

    “Singapore has always been a commercial hub but martial arts has really helped to establish it as a tourist destination too because people from all over the world will travel here to train MMA or to take in an MMA show," he says.

    "Asia will always be the spiritual home of martial arts but Singapore has become its epicenter with the biggest live shows and the best training facilities.”

    ONE Fighting Championship’s next show in Singapore is taking place on October 6 at the Singapore Indoor Stadium and will be headlined by legendary Japanese fighter Shinya Aoki. For more information visit www.onefc.com.
    A simple desire to get fit

    The scene in Singapore is not just about world-class fighters competing in enormous arenas.

    Most people who train in martial arts aren’t looking to slug it out in the ring or the cage but to lose weight, get fit or do something a bit different.

    There are plenty of places in Singapore catering to everyone from beginners to experienced competitors. Here's a quick list of some of the most popular.

    Evolve MMA

    Evolve MMA is home to some of the best MMA and muay Thai fighters in the world such as Shinya Aoki, Rafael Dos Anjos, Orono Wor Petchpun and Namsaknoi Yudthagarngamtorn, and is regarded as the top martial arts training facility in Asia.

    But you don't have to be interested in an MMA career to train at Evolve MMA. There's an enormous variety of classes at all times of the day that cater to students of all abilities.

    Sessions include everything from boxing to muay Thai to Brazilian jiujitsu and the trainers are all world champions with very impressive credentials. There are two locations, one is in Far East Square and the other at POMO Mall.

    For more on classes and schedules, check out www.evolve-mma.com.

    SA Judo Academy

    The SA Judo Academy was founded in 2003 by fifth Dan Judo black belt Tang Soon Onn. He was formerly a coach for the national team and represented Singapore in many competitions including the World Judo Championships and the SEA Games.

    Adult classes take place at the SA Budo Academy at SAFRA in Tampines on Tuesdays, Saturdays and Sundays and children’s classes take place at the same venue on Saturdays and Sundays.

    There are also classes held in four separate locations. Visit www.sajudo.com for more info.

    Vanda Boxing Club

    The Vanda Boxing Club offers both boxing and muay Thai and is best known for training professionals from all walks of life for its "white collar boxing" competitions.

    Often with no previous boxing experience participants will embark on a 12-week program that culminates in an amateur fight in front of a live audience.

    Boxing and muay Thai classes take place every day of the week except Sunday and are held at a variety of times. There are also sessions for children and classes reserved exclusively for ladies.

    For more information visit www.vandaboxing.com
    Gene Ching
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  5. #20
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    Eduard Folayang

    Folayang has won several international Wushu tournaments, including a gold medal at the 2011 South East Asian Games which he won with a spinning back kick KO in the final, a silver medal in the 2006 Doha Asian Games, and bronze medals in both the 2005 World Wushu Championship and the 2002 Busan Asian Games.

    Asian fighters cash in on rise of mixed martial arts
    June 11, 2013 3:00pm

    MANILA - In a caged ring at a newly built sports arena in the Philippine capital, 20 martial artists from around the world try to choke out, knock down or submit each other for thousands of paying fans.

    Scantily-clad ring girls saunter on stage in between rounds to loud rock music and cheers, part of the razzle and dazzle of professional mixed martial arts, or MMA, that is hugely popular in the United States and is growing in Asia.

    For hometown hero Eduard Folayang, MMA has been a ticket out of a career as a lowly paid school teacher and a chance to expand on his skills as one of the world's top practitioners of wushu, an ancient Chinese martial art.

    "I wanted a different, higher level of martial arts, and that was my motivation in turning pro," Folayang, who won a wushu silver medal at the 2006 Asian Games, told AFP.

    MMA pits fighters with different martial arts disciplines in a cage wearing thinly padded, open-fingered gloves, with the aim of submitting or knocking each other down.

    Unlike boxing, fighters can grapple, kick, choke, throw and punch their opponents.

    For the past two years, the soft-spoken Folayang has steadily built a cult following among fight aficionados for his fearless striking game rated as among the best and most exciting in the region.

    He trains day in and day out for a life devoted to combat under the Singapore-based One Fighting Championship (One FC), the sport's biggest promoter in Asia.

    As MMA begins to take root in the region, fighters such as Folayang have found a way to continue with their careers and earn big money in the process.

    While Folayang's contract bars him from disclosing how much he earns, he said his career as a caged-ring fighter gave him a much more comfortable and enjoyable life than if he was still a school teacher.

    "It is more than enough, and if you love what you're doing then everything else follows," he said. Folayang is a member of Team Lakay, which includes five of his former Filipino wushu teammates.

    Folayang also insisted a sport that appeared brutal was in fact relatively safe.

    He said bouts followed strict rules, were supervised by highly trained referees and sanctioned by gaming bodies to ensure all fighters were in good medical condition.

    Victor Cui, a Filipino-Canadian who was a former executive of a major American sports network, launched One FC out of Singapore two years ago, looking to emulate the astonishing success of the sport in the United States.

    "I just could not believe the growth opportunities. You are talking about a sport that is a $3-billion industry in northern America and it's just at its infancy in Asia," he said.

    Rival organization UFC launched MMA in the United States in 1993 and its pay-per-view television deals now are often more lucrative than for professional boxing.

    Cui said he estimated that pay per view revenues from MMA in the United States averaged 500 million dollars a year, twice that of boxing.

    Cui, a black-belt in taekwondo, said a few years ago MMA in the Philippines and elsewhere in the region was mostly organized in small crowded halls by local promoters.

    While One FC has yet to penetrate the biggest Asian markets, such as China and India, it has started to make significant inroads elsewhere around the region.

    At the recent event in Manila, 20,000 fans filled the Mall of Asia Arena to capacity. One FC said 12,500 people attended a Singapore fight night in April.

    Organizers are hoping to stage 36 more bouts throughout Asia before the end of next year, with the next confirmed event in Indonesia in September.

    One FC also signed last year a decade-long agreement with pan-Asian television network Star Sports to broadcast the fights across the region.

    Cui said he believed MMA could be even more popular in Asia than the United States, citing the deep histories of various martial arts in the region.

    "Asians breathe and live martial arts. Arnis, silat, taekwondo, kung fu, muay thai, karate - these are all from Asia," he said.

    "When you think of martial arts, you also think of Asian heroes - Jackie Chan, Bruce Lee, Jet Li."

    American ex-UFC heavyweight champion Tim Sylvia is now a part of the One FC stable and agreed that Asian fans had a much greater appreciation of the complexities of MMA than those in the United States.

    "The fans here are so much better than in the US. They know more about the sport," Sylvia said in Manila before a surprise loss to an American wrestler.

    "They respect the fact that this is what we do for a living, and there are no drunks cursing in the rafters."

    Brazilian Bibiano Fernandes, a six-time jiujitsu world champion who as a child scavenged for food in the Amazon before fight coaches discovered his talent, is another big name enjoying life in Asia.

    "I think I am just blessed to be here fighting," Fernandes said as fans mobbed him after beating a Japanese rival.

    For Folayang, his night in front of a home crowd ended with a bruised body and a hurt ego after a more experienced Iranian wrestler took him down for most of the bout, but he remained upbeat.

    "It was a wake-up call for me, but that's how MMA is," he said. "You win big sometimes, but get broken sometimes." - AFP
    Gene Ching
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  6. #21

    Asia MMA fight

    This fight was interesting to watch. I think Chinese MMA is improving.


    http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNTU0NTgzNjE2.html

  7. #22
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    TUF in Asia

    With a Spinning Elbow and Flying Kick, Mixed Martial Arts Squares Up to Asia
    New reality series The Ultimate Fighter set to help Mixed Martial Arts become the region's next big sport
    By David Stout Oct. 11, 20132


    Romeo Ranoco / Reuters
    Japanese lightweight King of Pancrase Koji Oishi fights ONE Fighting Championship (FC) featherweight world champion Honorio Banario (bottom) of the Philippines during the ONE FC mixed martial arts (MMA) tournament at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay city, metro Manila May 31, 2013.

    On Dec. 7, around 830 million households will be introduced to spinning back fists, flying knees and the guillotine choke when the reality series The Ultimate Fighter debuts on Chinese television. The show’s basic format will remain the same as its popular U.S. counterpart — 16 Chinese fighters will live, train and brawl together, with two emerging as champions.

    After a grueling tournament, the finalists are set meet in Macao in early March to battle it out at the Venetian’s Cotai arena for a couple of six-figure Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) contracts. In between, stars will be born, underdogs unexpectedly triumph and rivalries forged as the world’s most populous nation is introduced to mixed martial arts (MMA) — a fighting competition without the narrow rules of, for example, boxing or judo and where, almost, anything goes.

    Although the fastest growing sport in the world, this Western-born aspirant has not until now been embraced in Asia — the spiritual home of Kung Fu, Karate, Muay Thai and a host of other iconic fighting styles. That, however, looks likely to change with UFC — the original and largest of dozens of MMA promotions currently in the U.S. — aggressively staking a claim.

    “Historically, The Ultimate Fighter has been a great show to introduce the sport of mixed martial arts, and the UFC as the leader of the sport, to wider audiences,” UFC Asia managing director Mark Fischer told TIME. “We expect it to be a similar type of game changer in China as we bring out the Chinese version.” Although there have been significant inroads into Southeast Asia in recent years, promoters believe the Middle Kingdom’s huge population remains the golden ticket.

    Yet MMA’s domestic nascence was far from smooth. When the U.S. reality television series first hit the airwaves on Spike TV in early 2005, the sport was still nursing the black eye it had earned a decade earlier when it was little more than sanctioned street fighting. There were only three rules when UFC debuted in the early 1990s — no biting, eye gouging or fish hooking. Weight classes were nonexistent, neither were judges or rounds for that matter. Bouts ended when fighters tapped out, were knocked out or threw in the towel. A backlash against the gruesome spectacle saw 36 states bar the sport. (Senator John McCain famously derided MMA as “human ****ing fighting” and pushed for an outright ban.)

    Then Las Vegas came into the mix. In 2001, Station Casino executives Frank Fertitta III and his brother Lorenzo bought the UFC brand for a meager $2 million. The owners embarked on a massive overhaul to professionalize the sport and began sanding down the barbaric edges that provided MMA with a cult following among hardcore fight fans but kept it firmly out of the mainstream.

    Eventually, MMA turned the corner after bringing in weight classes, rounds, judges and a plethora of rules, as well as another $10 million in positive publicity. “It paid back in spades because it introduced all the background to the sport, putting a human face on it, telling all the stories and drama behind the sport,” says Fischer. Five years later, UFC’s President Dana White boasted of a promotion worth well over $2 billion and growing. MMA had crossed the Rubicon.

    And the latest push is to bring MMA to Asia — the continent responsible for the myriad martial arts disciplines that provide its essential building blocks. Signs are already positive as the Internet and new promotions have begun to steadily introduce MMA to the Asian masses. Gyms that offer MMA training are sprouting up across the continent, with the promise of getting clients into fighting shape regardless of whether they harbor any ambition to actually face off in an actual bout.

    At Hayabusa, a martial arts fitness center in middle of the Hong Kong’s pulsating financial district, white-collar bankers practice straight rights and sweeping kicks alongside aspiring amateur and professional fighters. In the year since opening, the gym has already attracted more than a thousand clients. “It’s more than we expected actually,” says Hayabusa director Andy Lai. “Hopefully, we will expand after Chinese New Year.”

    In Thailand, professional and amateur fighters from Korea, China, Japan and Malaysia, along with throngs of Westerners, are heading to sparring camps near the country’s famed white beaches to sharpen their traditional Muay Thai kickboxing skills, but also improve their jujitsu holds and grappling — essential tools for MMA. Will Elliot, the director of the Tiger Muay Thai in Phuket, says within just seven years his gym “went from pretty much a ragtag operation to a full-blown place where people can get world class pre-fight training under UFC veterans. I’ve seen a huge progression.”

    Or take Malaysia. According to Victor Cui, owner and CEO of ONE Fighting Championship, until now the largest MMA organization in Asia, few were interested when the company first arrived in the country just two years ago. Today, there are more than 30 MMA gyms operating across the capital Kuala Lumpur alone, and ONE FC has held two sold out events.

    “We have a major blue chip telecomm sponsor and the Ministry of Youth and Sports of Malaysia has formally acknowledged that they will focus on the sport of mixed martial arts,” he says. “You’ve gone from zero support to government support, corporate support to public support to grassroots.”

    Since launching, the Singapore-based promotion has already laid claim to 90% of MMA’s market share across Asia and packed out stadiums in Manila, Jakarta, KL and Singapore. “I’m watching this business grow into a multi-billion dollar empire in North America, but it was non-existent in Asia three years ago or four years ago,” say Cui. “Asia has always been ready for mixed martial arts… but nobody has approached it from a media-side like ONE FC has.”

    Behind the scenes, Cui has made some of his largest investments in ensuring that not only his business thrives but that MMA also spreads deep roots across the region. One of Cui’s initial moves was to host a MMA summit in Singapore where he brought together about 500 people from the industry — gym owners, trainers, promoters and fighters from across Asia to discuss a cooperation scheme. Now he boasts approximately 2,000 fighters signed to exclusive contracts, and a 10-year deal with ESPN Star Sports puts ONE FC in touch with 450 million viewers in 25 different countries.

    Naturally, he’s brimming with confidence. “Marital arts have been practiced in Asia for the past 5,000 years. Everybody gets it,” says Cui. “We know it. We love it. We follow it. It’s not unusual for us to see someone flying through the air and people kicking each other.” And with fans like that, the sport will always have a fighting chance.
    Marital arts. lol.
    Gene Ching
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  8. #23
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    An update

    In the wake of Pacquiao vs Mayweather

    Thu, May 21, 2015
    Mixed martial arts going mainstream across Asia
    AFP, SINGAPORE

    The explosive growth of mixed martial arts (MMA) in Asia is putting the squeeze on boxing as it attracts millions of young fans and sells out venues across the region.

    Just a few years ago, cage fighting was seen as a niche and grisly pursuit, but it is moving into the mainstream, with major TV and sponsorship deals and a planned US$1billion initial public offering for Asia’s main player, ONE Championship.

    Gyms are mushrooming across Asia and fights have been held in dozens of major cities across a region that groups about 4.4 billion people, two-thirds of the world’s population.

    MMA has also taken hold in the Americas and Europe, but it has a particular appeal in Asia, which is the birthplace of the martial arts, but lacks homegrown sports heroes.

    Its success is cutting into the fanbase of other combat sports, notably boxing, which is making a belated push for the Asian market with several big fights in Macau.

    Even Manny Pacquiao, Asia’s best-known boxer, who lost this month’s “Fight of the Century” to Floyd Mayweather Jr in Las Vegas, is a fan and investor in One Championship.

    The growth of the Singapore-based company, which is the most prominent of several Asian MMA organizations, is testament to the sport’s rapid expansion in the region.

    In just three-and-a-half years, One Championship — renamed from One Fighting Championship — has grown to 24 events this year, including 10 in China.

    Sponsors include L’Oreal and Sony, and a tie-up with Disney means One Championship promotes films such as Avengers: Age of Ultron and the forthcoming Star Wars reboot.

    ONE Championship CEO Victor Cui said that by the end of 2017, the company aimed to hold one event a week, and that it planned a US$1 billion share listing in three years’ time.

    “Compared to MMA, boxing attracts only the boxing fans, whereas MMA is across all the martial arts,” he said at a large MMA gym in downtown Singapore. “The appeal base across Asia is quite different, because every Asian country has some form of martial art that they already do ... whereas boxing is not as heavily rooted in every country.”

    In MMA fights, competitors can use a variety of martial arts to knock out their opponent or force a submission or stoppage, as well as accumulating points on the three judges’ scorecards, making the action varied and sometimes vicious.

    While opinions vary about the sport’s merits, it is attracting a large and young Asian fanbase, often male, fueled by its prevalence on TV and social media.

    “There’s a misconception that it’s bloody, that it’s brutal, but there’s a lot of respect that goes on out of the cage,” said Matt Eaton, editor and publisher of the Hong Kong-based Rough magazine and Web site. “They’re martial artists; they have a lot of respect for each other.”

    “Boxing has done itself a bit of a disservice by remaining relatively old school,” he said. “People still like the spectacle of boxing... but what MMA has got going for it is that it’s a relatively new sport, it’s almost a native of this whole digital world.”

    Boxing’s schism with the martial arts widened this month when the International Boxing Association (AIBA) decided to pull out of the 2017 World Combat Games, preferring to maintain its “noble” image.

    AIBA officials were not available to comment for this story when approached by reporters, but Cui said boxing faced “a bit of a challenge” to reach prominence in Asia.

    “The conversation we had with Manny [about investing] was, only Manny could fill out a 20,000-seater stadium in the Philippines, there’s no other boxer who could do that,” Cui said. “Here’s our sport, One Championship, we don’t have our Manny Pacquiao yet, but we’re filling 20,000-seat stadiums.”

    A key element to the growth is the fitness boom and the trend toward more challenging and varied workouts than the traditional approach of lifting weights at a gym.

    At the Evolve gym in Singapore, dozens of people were using their lunch break to punch, kick and grapple their way into shape.

    “It’s just so stimulating, so challenging... I just wanted do something different with my life,” said Singapore zoo keeper Rachel Yeo, 27. “This place makes me feel alive.”

    Boxing’s cause was not helped by the disappointing “Fight of the Century,” when Mayweather skilfully picked off Pacquiao while keeping largely out of range.

    “Hard to watch sober,” was the verdict of Singaporean cage fighter Stephen Langdown, 22, who said it compared poorly with the spectacle of MMA. “Nobody’s interested in seeing people run around for 12 rounds, pit-pat, pit-pat. It’s just not good TV.”
    Gene Ching
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  9. #24
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    Angela Lee

    Teen MMA sensation Angela Lee fights misconceptions about women in the sport
    The 19-year-old mixed martial arts fighter, who has numerous world titles to her name, says she hates it when people think it is just about "chicks with barely any clothes on" in a cage.

    By Justin Ong
    POSTED: 20 Aug 2015 21:32 UPDATED: 20 Aug 2015 21:33

    SINGAPORE: Nineteen-year-old Angela Lee sports a "kawaii" look and is no stranger to the occasional bikini photoshoot to promote her career, but it is her cage-fighting prowess that she wants to be known for.

    The mixed martial arts (MMA) athlete impressed on her professional debut in May at the Singapore Indoor Stadium, defeating the taller, older and more experienced Egyptian Aya Saber in less than two minutes.

    Lee, who is signed to Singapore-based MMA promotion One Championship, holds a brown belt in the ground fighting style of Brazilian jiu-jitsu - just one level shy of a black belt. Since her parents started coaching her at three, she has won numerous world titles in various disciplines like wrestling and pankration.

    Even with such credentials, the Canadian-American citizen of Singaporean-Korean ethnicity bemoaned how she attracts attention “for the wrong reasons”.

    “When people watch women’s MMA, sometimes they’re like ‘Oh, chicks with barely any clothes on and in a cage fighting, that’s super hot’,” she said. “I hate that so much.”

    “Hopefully over time, they can recognise us for our skills instead of our looks,” added Lee, who is training at Singaporean gym Evolve MMA to prepare for her sop****re fight on Sep 1, against Russian exponent Elena Pashnina in Shanghai, China.

    ASIAN PRIDE

    While she aims to become the first women’s champion of One Championship, she is also eager to grow MMA’s presence in Asia by emulating the impact made by the sport’s biggest female superstar Ronda Rousey.

    The latter remains undefeated in her reign as the first women’s champion of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), the world’s largest MMA company. As an Olympic medallist in judo and budding movie actress, Rousey is also credited with bringing MMA into mainstream consciousness.

    “I want to do that in Asia. I’m hoping to rise up and inspire women over here to train MMA, so we can get more recognition,” said Lee, who was quick to add that she had no wish to be an “Asian Ronda Rousey”.

    “There are only one or two female bouts on fight cards in Asia and I want to get more fights on there for the women,” she added.


    Angela Lee after winning her debut fight. (Photo: One Championship)

    Lee’s own heritage, however, has been a bone of contention for online detractors, with some calling her out as more American than Asian.

    One Championship labels her “Singaporean” in its promotional materials. Lee, who was born in Vancouver and raised in Hawaii, brands herself “Singaporean” and “Korean” on her Instagram account.

    “I don’t like to categorise myself with one thing, because I’m not just that. It’s all a part of who I am,” she explained. “But my grandparents live with us all the time and my dad’s Singaporean, so we’ve always had an interest in Singapore, especially in its cooking and culture.”

    “I want to fight and represent who I am and where I’m from, so Singapore, mostly, because I’m closer to my dad’s side,” said Lee, adding that her family has been “coming back” to Singapore every year since she was a baby.

    “Hopefully if I can go past the boundary of people categorising me by nationalities, I can gain more popularity here in Singapore,” she said.

    Lee is clearly serious about her career - enough to drop out of her business administration degree course at a Hawaiian university, to focus on MMA alone.

    “I can always go back and get my degree. For now I have an opportunity and I’m not going to waste it,” she said. “My parents are very traditional in some ways but in others, understanding. They know that this is what I’ve always wanted to do, and I want to put my all into it.”


    Angela Lee with her family at the Evolve MMA gym. (Photo: One Championship)

    - CNA/jo
    There's some facebook vids too, if you follow the link.
    Gene Ching
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  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    sanda actually, but people always forget sanda is part of modern wushu.
    Yes, sanda is part of modern wushu as well as TCMA. The rules for training and tournament have now been standardized in modern China time. And it is a good development.




    Regards,

    KC
    Hong Kong

  11. #26
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    Angela Lee

    Asia's female MMA star: 'I finish fights very quickly...'
    Saheli Roy Choudhury
    8 Hours Ago CNBC.com


    ONE Championship
    Angela Lee and Natalie Gonzales Hills during their weigh in, ahead of their bout at the ONE: Pride of Lions fighting event
    At first glance, Angela Lee looks like a normal teenager. But unlike her contemporaries, the 19-year-old spends most of her time inside a steel cage, beating up opponents twice her age.

    Lee is part of a new generation of mixed martial arts (MMA) fighters from Asia, and has been turning heads along the way. Raised in a family of martial artists, Lee remains undefeated since her debut earlier this year against experienced Egyptian fighter Aya Saber. It was a bout that Lee ended in less than two minutes.

    Lee told CNBC her aim was always to finish a fight before the first round is over.

    "It's just my style of fighting. I finish fights very quickly and the way I fight, it just ends...," she said.


    On Friday Lee will compete in the ONE: Pride of Lions fighting event, organized by Singapore-based MMA promotion company ONE Championship. A ONE spokesperson said the event at the Singapore Indoor Stadium was expected to draw in a crowd of 12,000 enthusiasts. The company has held similar fighting events across Asia, in cities such as Manila, Kuala Lumpur, Beijing, and Yangon among others.

    The sport is gaining momentum in China. ONE Championship recently announced a two-year tie up with Chinese sports development company Wujie that includes plans for 26 MMA fight events across the country. The first fight, which happens near the end of the month in Beijing, will see featherweight champions Marat Gafurov and Narantungalag Jadambaa battle it out at the Gymnasium of National Olympic Sports Center, the company said in a press release.

    Lee's opponent on Friday evening is Natalie Gonzales Hills, who has a 2-2 record of fights won and lost and is eight years older than Lee. But speaking to CNBC ahead of the fight, the teenager appeared unfazed.

    "I think it's great that she is a well-rounded fighter. I think that makes for a really exciting fight," said Lee, describing Hills as "aggressive."

    Mixed martial arts is a combat sport in which fighters use techniques drawn from other full-contact sports such as the jiujitsu, boxing, wrestling and muy thai, to knock out their opponents. Its origin goes back to the early 20th century and much of its current popularity can be traced to the largest MMA promotion company, US-based Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). UFC fights in the U.S. can attract more than a million pay-per-views on cable television, with thousands packing stadiums and reality television shows following individual fighters.

    Like most sports, MMA's big-name fights are almost entirely male-dominated. The highlight of the ONE: Pride of Lions tournament is between Thai fighter Dejdamrong Sor Amnuaysirichoke and Brazilian Yago Bryan, who will compete in the ONE Strawweight Super Fight bout. But there's growing global interest in women's MMA following the rise of U.S. stars Ronda Rousey, Joanna Jedrzejczyk and Miesha Tate

    Lee's fight with Hills is a Main Card event, which takes place earlier in the night, and is the only female fight on the cards.

    "Women always tend to put on a really great show," said Lee. "There's only one women's fight on the whole fight card [tonight] and I'm hoping that we'll stand out."
    'gaining momentum in China'
    Gene Ching
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  12. #27
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    ONE: Ascent to Power

    Asian female MMA fighters to fight for world title
    Carlos Cinco | Apr 03, 2016 10:05 PM EDT


    UNSTOPPABLE | Angele Lee battles Mei Yamaguchi at ONE: Ascent to Power (Photo : ONE Championship)

    Singapore is set to play host to a historic night of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA), as two female mixed martial artists -- Singapore's "Unstoppable" Angela Lee (5-0) and Japan's Mei "V.V" Yamaguchi (15-8-1) -- will go head-to-head in a battle for the inaugural ONE Women's Atomweight World Championship.
    MMA has surged in popularity in Asia in recent times, due largely to ONE Championship's extensive work cultivating the sport in the region. ONE is Asia's largest sports media property with a potential broadcast to over a billion homes in more than 75 countries worldwide.
    Lee and Yamaguchi are set to step inside the ONE Championship cage on May 6, at the Singapore Indoor Stadium in Singapore, in an event dubbed "ONE: Ascent to Power."
    Lee, widely considered one of the most promising young combat sports athletes not just in Asia, but in the entire world, believes this is her chance to shine on the big stage.
    "This fight is going to be the most important of my life," said Lee, who made her professional MMA debut last year. "I truly believe that since I started my martial arts journey, it's been my destiny to become a world champion. All my hard work and all my training is going to pay off."
    The 19-year old Lee comes from a fighting family. Her parents are both martial arts instructors and highly decorated martial artists. Angela's father Ken Lee is a Pankration, Taekwondo and Jiu-Jitsu black belt and her mother Jewelz Lee is a Taekwondo black belt instructor and a 2-time Canadian National Silver Medallist.
    Her younger brother Christian is also a martial artist, competing under ONE Championship's featherweight division and is unbeaten in two fights so far.
    On the other side of the spectrum sits Mei Yamaguchi, who grew up and discovered martial arts in Los Angeles, but moved to Japan to teach Taekwondo.
    Yamaguchi has more experience than Lee, as well as being 14 years Lee's senior. Like Lee, Yamaguchi understands the significance of this bout and how it helps women with aspirations in combat sports, especially in her home country where she teaches martial arts to children.
    "I know there are a lot of girls in Japan who do Karate and Judo. I know a lot compete in that. If they see another girl in professional sports, and see that you're able to make a living with it, you can inspire a lot of fans," said Yamaguchi, who began her professional MMA career nearly 10 years ago.
    "In the United States, MMA is really big. I know that Asian women are strong, and if they start to learn MMA, I know [the sport] is going to be big! I know a lot of good [female] athletes who can fight in MMA. This is really big. There are really good women fighters in Japan but I can show that to the world by winning this title."
    Yamaguchi grew up admiring Hong Kong action star Jackie Chan, and her parents enrolled her at a martial arts academy at age six. She fell in love with Karate at an early age and now, at 33, Yamaguchi finds herself a two-division world champion in MMA.
    Both Lee and Yamaguchi are looking to add the ONE Championship belt to their collection. But in MMA, only one contestant can take home the prize.
    "It's time to make history," said Lee. "I think that crowning the first ever women's champion is going to really help women's MMA take off. It's started in North America, but once we have a women's champion here in Asia, it's just going to skyrocket."
    The Lee-Yamaguchi bout will serve as the co-main event for ONE: Ascent to Power. In the main event, ONE Middleweight World Champion Vitaly Bigdash defends his title against Aleksei Butorin.
    I should really follow ONE Championship more.
    Gene Ching
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  13. #28
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    Aorigele

    There's a vid if you follow the link but it wasn't playing for me.

    Amazing footage of chubby MMA fighter Aorigele who weighs in at 23stone plus
    Chinese heavyweight does not fit the mould of your stereotypical mixed martial artist
    By RICHARD HARVEY
    03:23, 17 Apr 2016

    WHEN you think of MMA, you think of perfectly sculpted fighters who look like, well, they’ve been chiselled out of granite.

    However, Chinese fighter Aorigele doesn’t quite fit the mould – not by a long way.

    The 21-year-old appears to have taken a different approach towards hitting the gym and dieting than most of his peers.


    MISMATCH ... Chinese MMA fighter Aorigele (right) shapes up to South Korean opponent Hong-Man Choi Twitter

    The 23 and a half stone heavyweight has only fought a handful of bouts — winning two and losing three — and boasts a healthy layer of fat to absorb the impact from any nasty blows.

    Unfortunately, the protective cushioning didn’t do its job in Aorigele’s latest fight against South Korean Hong-Man Choi at ROAD FC 030.

    The showdown looked like a physical mismatch from the start with Hong-Man Choi standing over 7ft tall and towering over Aorigele at 6ft 2in.

    However, as the video shows, Aorigele looked to have the upper hand early in the bout and was clearly the more aggressive of the pair.

    He came out swinging hard and often, but evidently couldn’t sustain it.

    The contest ended in in rather bizarre fashion with more than three minutes still remaining in the first round.

    While the two were grappling, Aorigele appeared to just fall down of his own accord.

    Lying on the floor, Hong-Man Choi laid into him with punches to the head and body before the fight was stopped.

    Did he take a dive? Or was it exhaustion?
    Gene Ching
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  14. #29
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    My oh my. There's more to this story...

    [IMG]https://sports-images.vice.com/images/articles/meta/2016/04/18/fixed-hong-man-choi-stirs-up-more-controversy-1460997091.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;0xw,0xh&resize=900:*& output-quality=75[/IMG]
    April 18, 2016
    Jake Hughes
    FIXED? HONG MAN CHOI STIRS UP MORE CONTROVERSY
    At the tail end of last year it was reported that South Korean fighter Hong Man Choi was in trouble with the nation's authorities over an unpaid debt.

    An arrest warrant was issued for the "Techno Goliath" after he was accused of borrowing 710,000 HKD ($92,000) from a former associate to help him buy his girlfriend watches before later refusing all acknowledgement of receiving those funds. He then ignored multiple demands to hand himself in for questioning and had a series of lawsuits filed against his name. But, Hong Man Choi roundly ignored them.

    With the authorities baying for the 7-foot-2ins giant's blood, his scheduled appearance for ROAD FC's Christmas show was in doubt. However, Hong Man Choi was able to compete in the organisation's inaugural event in China—beating little-known Chinese fighter Quanchao Luo, who now owns a record of 0-1.

    continued next post
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  15. #30
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    Continued from previous post


    Hong Man Choi's fight against Luo was in the quarter finals of ROAD FC's openweight tournament. After minutes of flailing arm punches and stalling against the cage, assigned referee Herb Dean went to break up and restart the action. However, Luo had other ideas and simply chose not to comply, appearing to refuse to adhere with Dean's restart. The fight was ruled in the Korean's favour—a TKO win by way of retirement of his opponent.

    Securing the Techno Goliath's signature was a massive coup for ROAD FC as they attempt to imprint their status among other top East Asian promotions such as ONE FC and Rizin FF. After all, promotions such as Pride and K1 also saw fit to use Hong Man Choi against top-class fighters including the likes of Fedor Emelianenko, Mirko Cro Cop, Badr Hary, Remy Bonjasky, Jerome Le Banner and Semmy Schilt. Freak show fights have always been big bucks in kickboxing and MMA.

    Four months on, the openweight tournament's semi finals took place in Beijing, China. It was Hong Man Choi's chance to shine once again. This round's opponent? A tubby Chinese brawler named Aorigele who beat the brakes off Kim Jae-Hun in the first round and refused to relent even after the fight had been waived off by the referee.



    Standing a foot shorter than his foe and weighing in at over 300lbs, Aorigele found early success against the Techno Goliath. It wasn't pretty, with the wide, winging shots of the Chinese Aorigele being thrown with enough vigour to trouble the giant.

    The aggression of Aorigele was paying dividends. However, the fight promptly ended in strange circumstances as the pair were once again fighting against the cage following the referee's earlier break in action. The aggressor in Aorigele was once again getting the better of his bigger opponent, before a missed knee and an innocuous glancing blow led the Chinaman to collapse unsettlingly as if he were knocked out.

    With confusing finishes in recent fights such as in Bellator's bout between Kimbo Slice and Dada 5000, which could have easily been a fatal ending to that particular contest with the benefit of hindsight, it's hard to say if the knockdown was genuine or not. Also, it's rather uncomfortable to say if a fighter threw a fight. But, it does look like Aorigele fell down on his own accord and that Hong Man Choi "finishes" the fight with some sloppy blows to his opponent's chest.

    The replays provided by ROAD FC, rather inexplicably, only showed the ending of the contest once and at the worst possible camera angle to tell what had exactly happened. This finish, in addition to Hong Man Choi's first outing in the openweight tournament, which ended with his opponent bizarrely retiring in the middle of the fight for no reason whatsoever, reeks of fishiness. We'll let you decide what went on in both fights – ROAD FC is leaving us to our own devices, anyway.

    Hong Man Choi's fighting career—coupled with his questionable exploits outside of combat sports, which has also seen him arrested for assaulting a woman over an unpaid bar tab—has been farcical since its inception and ROAD FC's latest event shows no sign of that changing any time soon.
    I could get those vids to play.
    Gene Ching
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