Business World

Conquering challenges and delivering at ‘ONE: Century’

- By Michael Angelo S. Murillo Senior Reporter

TOKYO — If staging a never-been-done-before offering of two full shows in one day was not challengin­g enough, ONE Championsh­ip’s 100th live show “Century” on Oct. 13 faced the possibilit­y of being washed out altogether with a super-typhoon hitting Japan less than 24 hours before the event itself as an added hurdle.

The two-pronged ONE: Century eventually pushed through, drawing positive response from the crowd who trekked to the famed Ryogoku Kokugikan in Sumida City to catch the action live and from those who caught the event broadcast on various platforms, including for the first time people in the United States where Century was beamed on prime time over TNT and B/R Live, something company officials took special pride in and had them going away with a sense of accomplish­ment.

“Up to the last minute we had emergency and emergency meetings because of the typhoon. We actually did not get the generators for the stadium until 4 a.m. this (Sunday) morning. Without the generators the show would have been cancelled,” shared ONE chairman and CEO Chatri Sityodtong in the post-event press conference.

The ONE official was alluding to super-typhoon “Hagibis” which made its presence felt on Saturday, wreaking havoc on a large part of Japan with heavy rains, strong winds and flooding.

The country was also hit by a 5.3-magnitude earthquake just as Hagibis was pounding with much ferocity.

Having weathered such challenges, Mr. Sityodtong could not help but be grateful to all the people who helped make Century happen and be a success.

“So that was how tight for us because of the typhoon, the earthquake and the flooding, I don’t think anyone can throw two full events in the middle of the typhoon. Credit to our athletes and our whole team, It’s just amazing. We’re just very happy,” Mr. Sityodtong said.

Mr. Sityodtong added that after ONE: Century bigger things are still in store for the organizati­on as it moves forward to its many plans to bring true martial arts anchored on solid life values to the fore.

“I think when we look back a year from now, two years from now, three years from now at the Century event we can say it was a huge inflection point in the growth not only of ONE Championsh­ip but also in the major acceptance of martial arts. But we will also look back at this moment and be surprised how small it was in the grand scheme of things because I have a bigger and bolder plans for ONE Championsh­ip that will make ONE: Century a small tiny dot in time,” said Mr. Sityodtong.

“So while I’m grateful and celebratin­g today what we have achieved, and something no other organizati­on in the world had accomplish­ed, bigger things will come. Mark my word,” he added.

CHAMPIONS STAY CHAMPS

Meanwhile, reigning ONE champions got to keep their hardware on Sunday after gutsy performanc­es against highly determined challenger­s.

ONE world atomweight champion Angela “The Unstoppabl­e” Lee of Singapore exacted payback on China’s “The Panda” Xiong Jing Nan, the women’s strawweigh­t champion, in the main event of Part One of Century.

Loss in her bid to seize the strawweigh­t belt from the Chinese champion last March, Ms. Lee held tough in her division and dug deep to outlast and beat her opponent (rear-naked choke) in the closing seconds of the final round and keep her title.

Brazilian world bantamweig­ht champion Bibiano “The

Flash” Fernandes, for his part, put the dot on his rivalry with Filipino Kevin “The Silencer” Belingon by forcing a submission (rear-naked choke) in the second round of their fourth clash in ONE in the co-main event of Part Two of Century.

In the main event of Part Two, light heavyweigh­t champion Aung La “The Burmese Python” N Sang won a slugfest with Brandon “The Truth” Vera, emerging on top with a second-round technical knockout victory due to strikes to keep his belt. Despite the loss, Mr. Vera remains as the ONE heavyweigh­t champion.

Other notable winners were lightweigh­t champion Christian Lee who bucked two weeks’ notice as replacemen­t in the world lightweigh­t grand prix

final to beat Saygid Guseyn Arslanalie­v of Turkey by unanimous decision and claim the GP belt; Demetrious Johnson over Filipino Danny Kingad to win the flyweight grand prix title; Italian Georgio Petrosyan over Samy Sana of France in their featherwei­ght kickboxing world grand prix joust; and Thai Rodatang Jitmuangno­n over Brazilian Walter Goncalves in their flyweight muay thai world championsh­ip.

ONE-debuting Lito Adiwang of Team Lakay was the lone winner in Century after defeating Japanese Senzo Ikeda by technical knockout (injury) in the first round.

Next for ONE Championsh­ip is “Dawn of Valor,” happening on Oct. 25 in Jakarta, Indonesia.

 ??  ?? DESPITE MANY HURDLES it had to face, including a super-typhoon, ONE Championsh­ip’s landmark “Century” event in Tokyo Japan pushed through with much success that also saw champions Aung La N Sang, Bibiano Fernandes and Angela Lee keep their titles with impressive performanc­es.
DESPITE MANY HURDLES it had to face, including a super-typhoon, ONE Championsh­ip’s landmark “Century” event in Tokyo Japan pushed through with much success that also saw champions Aung La N Sang, Bibiano Fernandes and Angela Lee keep their titles with impressive performanc­es.
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