Sun.Star Baguio

Edward Kelly: ‘Martial arts gave me more than just a dream’

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FOR THE longest time, all Edward Kelly wanted to do was become a police officer, and help to save the lives of those around him.

After all, the streets he lived in were filled with gangsters and hooligans who got into fights, some of whom included his cousins and other extended family members. That led Kelly to his dream of cleaning up those streets and helping the innocent.

“My focus before joining the police was to defend the people,” the 32-year-old says. “I came from a province where a lot of people are pickpocket­s, and they were making illegal money instead of taking legal jobs. So, I wanted to apprehend them and put them in prison.”

During his teenage years, Kelly pursued his boyhood fantasy. While studying Criminolog­y at the University Of Cordillera­s, he took an internship with the local police department, both to fulfill his degree requiremen­ts, and take the first step on his law enforcemen­t journey.

It was a memorable internship for the wrong reasons, because it made him realize it was a career path he no longer wanted to pursue.

“Police morale was low back in 2007,” he recalls. “I remember during my internship, I asked four or five officers, ‘How is police life?’ Almost all of them that I asked already had five to ten years of service. All of them suggested to me to take another course.”

Kelly discovered he could not make the impact he wanted as a policeman, and that it was beyond his control. With his childhood dream in shambles, he found inspiratio­n in his older brother, Eric, now a fellow ONE Championsh­ip athlete.

Growing up in Mariveles, the

southern-most municipali­ty in the Bataan province, Kelly’s parents instilled a strong sense of hard work into their children. This holds especially true for Edward and Eric, who are two of seven children.

Although brothers don’t always get along with one another, the two took things to another level. They fought all the time, sometimes even resulting in injury.

Fortunatel­y, when the brothers entered high school, Eric discovered martial arts, and everything would change for both of them. The elder Kelly soon started kickboxing, and later in 2000, even competed on the Philippine­s Wushu Team. Edward paid attention to these growing accolades, and was heavily motivated.

“I noticed after he started martial arts that it taught him the discipline not to fight me as a brother. Instead, he started giving me advice through what he had learned,” he remembers. “I also joined martial arts, because it teaches you discipline, and a lot of other positives, too.”

Following his graduation from Baguio City National High School’s St Tomas Annex in 2001, Kelly spent the next year and a half competing in amateur kickboxing. Three years later, he entered the University of Cordillera­s to study Criminolog­y.

There, he met Mark Sangiao, a national teammate of his brother Eric, as well as the school’s head coach in wushu, who recruited him into the discipline. Though he had a kickboxing background, Kelly seamlessly adapted his talents for wushu and made the varsity team.

After graduating with his Bachelor of Science in 2007, he had already passed the necessary board exams to be licensed as a criminolog­ist. However, after that aforementi­oned internship experience, he decided not to pursue a life of crime fighting, and instead, decided to become a profession­al martial artist. To him, it only felt right.

“Martial arts speak to my heart. It taught me a lot — not only in competitio­n, but even outside the cage,” he says. “Unlike my cousins, who easily get into fights, martial arts taught me discipline. I don’t get into street fights or anything like that.”

Kelly continues to train under the tutelage of Sangiao at Team Lakay in Baguio City, and the ONE Championsh­ip featherwei­ght is currently enjoying great success with a threebout win streak. In his next bout, he goes up against Emilio Urrutia, a ONE Championsh­ip newcomer with a 9-4 record, at ONE: Quest for Greatness.

Although the man known as “The Ferocious” is a contender trending towards a title shot, that does not seem to be his ultimate goal. While becoming a ONE world champion would be the pinnacle of his career, helping people through martial arts is still more important. After all, it allows him to do what becoming a police officer couldn’t

More importantl­y, Kelly’s main purpose is to provide for his family, and to be a positive role model to his oneand-a-half year old son.

“After being in martial arts for such a long time, my goal now is to share this with my family,” Kelly states. “If my son grows up and sees that I am a martial artist and also wants to be one, I would fully support him. Even if he does not become a profession­al, it would still give him discipline in his life.” PR

 ?? One Championsh­ip photo ?? MARTIAL ARTS DREAM. From dreaming of becoming a policeman, MMA fighter Edward Kelly turns to martial arts to propel his dreams.
One Championsh­ip photo MARTIAL ARTS DREAM. From dreaming of becoming a policeman, MMA fighter Edward Kelly turns to martial arts to propel his dreams.

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