Philippine Daily Inquirer

FIGHT OF THE MOUNTAIN MEN

Cordillera mixed martial arts battlers are legends in the making

- By Kimberlie Quitasol @kquitasolI­NQ —With a report from EVEspiritu

BAGUIO CITY— When Eduard Folayang pinned his champion Japanese foe with a flurry of punches during their recent championsh­ip fight at Singapore Indoor Stadium, the Cordillera­s celebrated the coronation of an “Ulo ti Mangguguba­t,” or warrior chief.

Not a mere Ilocano honorific, the title means a lot to victorious fighters of Igorot origins like Folayang, the newly crowned One FC lightweigh­t champion.

The well-built, 5-foot-7 Folayang (17 wins, 5 losses) represents a fresh breed of tough-as-nail mixed martial arts fighters from the Cordillera­s who now fight internatio­nally with impressive results.

Generally proficient in wushu and armed with a unique style of grappling, the MMA mountain fighters are feared by foes and adored by their legions of local fans.

“Folayang is an interestin­g foe with a very unique style, like those in his team,” says the respected ground fighter Marat “Cobra” Gafurov, whom the Filipino wants to fight next after dethroning submission artist and MMA legend Shinya Aoki.

Unknown to many, fighters from the Cordillera­s have reaped honors for the country way before the sport caught national attention.

Mixed martial arts started undergroun­d here and gained followers only in the 1990s, when the Universal Reality Combat Championsh­ip (URCC) staged fights featuring foreign battlers.

Since 2004, Cordillera fighters from the “Team Lakay” stable have dominated the sport, taking off from the career of team founder Mark Sangiao, also Folayang’s coach.

Sangiao, who bagged the gold medal in wushu’s sanda 60-kilogram division at the 2001 Southeast Asian Games in Kuala Lumpur, was bitten by the MMA bug in 2002, when he qualified for the first time to fight in URCC.

“I lost my first fight but I learned a lot from that experience,” says Sangiao. “I realized what skills I lacked and what skills I needed to work on.”

Armed with better skills in 2004, he won the URCC bantamweig­ht title and became the toast of many Cordillera­ns who soon followed him in the sport.

Wushu athletes

That same year, Sangiao started Team Lakay with fellow enthusiast­s from the region. Initially, he wanted to call the group “Wushu Lakay” because it was composed of wushu athletes from Baguio City and surroundin­g towns.

Although “lakay” is Ilocano for old man, it is also a term of endearment among male friends. “At that time we called each other ‘lakay,’ to mean ‘brother,’” Sangiao says.

Starting out with 15 members, six of whom were active MMA fighters, Team Lakay has grown into a 200member outfit. Thirty of its active fighters are either champions or are ranked high up in MMA’s totem poles.

Before Folayang, another team stalwart, Dave Galera, captured the URCC bantamweig­ht belt and went undefeated until his retirement in 2010.

UFC fighter

Blessed with fine grappling and boxing skills, Galera also became the first Cordillera­n to qualify for the more prestigiou­s Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip (UFC). Roldan Sangcha-an and Mark Eddiva have since followed Galera in the United States.

Team Lakay recorded its finest years in the URCC in 2007, when its fighters won titles in the finweight, fly- weight and welterweig­ht divisions.

Among its most recent stars are Rey Docyogen, who held the finweight belt until he retired in 2015; Kevin Belingon, the reigning flyweight king; and Folayang, who ruled the welterweig­ht belt until he entered the internatio­nal arena via One FC in 2013. Honorio Banario won URCC’s lightweigh­t title in 2010 and went undefeated until 2013, when he followed Folayang overseas. Team mainstay Eddiva still holds the featherwei­ght title.

Team Lakay fighters are also making waves abroad. Banario won a featherwei­ght fight in One FC in Malaysia in 2013 and Crisanto Pitpitunge prevailed in a bantamweig­ht fight in the Pacific Extreme Championsh­ip in Guam in 2011.

Learning from mistakes

Perhaps because of the team’s success, foreigners now train with Team Lakay, which prides itself in using a program that has evolved “from the mistakes in the ring,” says Sangiao, a criminolog­y graduate and teacher.

“As head coach, I learned from my experience,” he says. “In every fight we enter, win or lose, there is always a lesson to be learned. When we were starting, our signature moves were [patterned after] kick boxing and wushu. Later, we realized we had to learn other martial arts discipline­s.”

Starting out without its own gym, equipment or sponsor, Team Lakay now operates gyms in Baguio, Benguet and La Union.

“I used to borrow money for my internatio­nal fights,” Sangiao recalls.

Compared to boxing, the MMA’s fan base pales. But “given the attention it is gaining and the fan base it has developed through the years, MMA has a bright future in the country,” says Sangiao.

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 ?? —EV ESPIRITU ?? One FC lightweigh­t champion Eduard Folayang shows his stuff. (Main picture) Five of Team Lakay’s best with coach Mark Sangiao (from left) Edward Kelly, Danny Kingad, April Osenio, Geje Eustaquio, Honorio Banario and Folayang.
—EV ESPIRITU One FC lightweigh­t champion Eduard Folayang shows his stuff. (Main picture) Five of Team Lakay’s best with coach Mark Sangiao (from left) Edward Kelly, Danny Kingad, April Osenio, Geje Eustaquio, Honorio Banario and Folayang.

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