Sun.Star Baguio

One Championsh­ip announces 1st show in Japan for March 2019

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TOKYO — One Championsh­ip will stage its first live event in Japan next year, extending the Asiabased mixed martial arts promotion’s reach into one of the sport’s ancestral homes.

The debut show will be held March 31, 2019, in Tokyo, One Championsh­ip chairman and CEO Chatri Sityodtong announced Thursday.

Sityodtong also unveiled dates and locations of 24 of the 30 events on One’s 2019 schedule. The promotion will hold two events in Japan, along with its debut events in South Korea and Vietnam.

One has gradually expanded its reach across Asia over the past seven years from its base in Singapore. Its 21-event schedule in 2018 stretches from Myanmar to China.

Sityodtong has been eager to get One’s shows into Japan, where several major MMA organizati­ons have risen and fallen in recent years in the nation’s crowded sports marketplac­e.

Japanese MMA was once led by the internatio­nally popular Pride promotion, but it was purchased and essentiall­y absorbed by the UFC in 2007. The UFC has staged occasional second-tier events in Japan, most recently in September 2017.

After starting in Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s, One debuted in China in late 2014 and moved into Thailand in 2016. Sityodtong has said he aspires to hold shows eventually in India, along with every significan­t market in Asia.

ONE will debut in Vietnam on Sept. 6, 2019, with a show in Ho Chi Minh City. The promotion’s first show in South Korea is scheduled for Seoul on Dec. 20, 2019. FORT YATES, N.D. — Standing on a bison pelt, Boston Celtics star Kyrie Irving was smudged with sacred grasses, presented with traditiona­l quilts and eagle feathers and given a Lakota name that means “Little Mountain” as he was welcomed Thursday into his mother’s Standing Rock Sioux tribe.

The All-Star guard and his sister, model Asia Irving, visited the tribe’s reservatio­n that straddles the North Dakota-South Dakota border for a daylong celebratio­n recognizin­g their tribal heritage and support for the tribe’s long battle against the Dakota Access oil pipeline.

In front of a packed auditorium, they were honored with Lakota names during a ritual that tribal spokeswoma­n Danielle Finn said “is a very special rite of passage for a Lakota person.”

Kyrie Irving’s Lakota name, Hela, is roughly pronounced (HAY’law) and means “Little Mountain.” Asia Irving’s name, Tatanka Winyan, (tuh-TONG’kuh WEE’-yun) means “Buffalo Woman.” Both are associated with their White Mountain family.

The Irvings’ late mother, Elizabeth Ann Larson, was a member of the tribe and lived on the reservatio­n until her adoption at a young age.

Irving, who won an NBA championsh­ip with the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2016, was born in Australia and grew up in West Orange, New Jersey. He played one season at Duke University before joining the Cavaliers as the first overall pick in the 2011 NBA Draft.

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