China Daily Global Weekly

Celebratin­g a knockout success

ONE Championsh­ip marks 10th anniversar­y with Chinese market firmly in its sights

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

With a Chinese fighter stealing the show at an event to celebrate ONE Championsh­ip’s 10th anniversar­y, the Singapore-based mixed martial arts promotion has vowed to keep punching its way into China’s sports mainstream.

Despite being pushed back for a year amid the COVID-19 pandemic, ONE: X lived up to the hype as “the biggest MMA event ever” on March 26, with a massive night of 20 bouts on three cards serving up a real treat for fight fans at Singapore Indoor Stadium.

From Angela Lee’s successful defense of her atomweight world title to the mixed-rules super-fight between decorated MMA star Demetrious Johnson and Muay Thai legend Rodtang Jitmuangno­n, the adrenaline-fueled action across a variety of discipline­s, including MMA, kickboxing and Brazilian jiujitsu, blew away the combat sports world.

ONE chairman and CEO Chatri Sityodtong believes the event will go down in MMA folklore.

“I think this is one of those events for the martial arts community where five, 10 and 20 years from now everyone will still be talking about it,” Chatri told China Daily in an exclusive online interview on March 25.

“Because it’s so rare and unique in terms of the scale of the event, global viewership numbers and also the fact that you have the best in the world from all combat styles coming together. No organizati­on ever tried to do this before,” added the Thaiborn entreprene­ur and Muay Thai instructor.

As the only Chinese fighter on the 20-bout card, striker Tang Kai represente­d the birthplace of ancient martial arts in style by knocking out top-ranked Kim Jae-woong in their heated featherwei­ght matchup on March 26.

Tang, a product of Shandongba­sed Sunkin Internatio­nal Fight Club, opened the bout conservati­vely by exchanging jabs and low kicks with Kim, known as the “Fighting God”.

But when the South Korean lunged in with a right hand, Tang countered with a devastatin­g cross-hook combinatio­n that dropped Kim to the canvas. Tang followed up with two ground strikes to seal the deal with about a minute left in the first round.

By taking out the division’s No 1 seed and securing his sixth straight win since signing up with ONE in 2019, Tang (13-2) earned a shot at featherwei­ght world champion Thanh Le, who appeared to accept a call-out after the fight.

“I always keep my word. I proved that I am the better fighter with my punches rather than talking trash,” Tang said of Kim’s dismissive prefight comments about him. “I am super confident in my striking skills and the power of my punches.”

Addressing Chatri, who watched from the stands, Tang added: “Boss, I want to fight the title fight. I want to fight Thanh Le. I will not just win, I will crush him.”

Underlined by Tang’s rise, the untapped potential of Chinese MMA athletes has convinced ONE Championsh­ip that China deserves a more prominent place on the world stage than it has now.

“China is the birthplace of martial arts and it should play a big role in ONE given that we’re an Asian-based promotion,” said Chatri.

“I think Chinese athletes have the talent and potential to be world champions and they are very close.

“I’m very confident that, with the culture and history of martial arts in China, the future is very bright.”

In a statement of intent from ONE, Chinese-born Annie Li was appointed president of ONE Championsh­ip China in August last year.

Creating appealing online and TV content — in particular encouragin­g fighters to connect with fans on social media — are key strategies for ONE to navigate through the challenges live sport face due to the pandemic, according to Li.

“The growing appetite for combat sports in China has been significan­t, highlighte­d by the popularity of combat classes at gyms among young urbanites and the trending content on social media,” said Li.

“Combined with the cultural heritage of martial arts in China, this paves the way for MMA to make deeper inroads in a sustainabl­e way in China,” she added.

As the first major internatio­nal MMA promotion to host live fights in China, ONE has staged 12 live events in six Chinese cities since its debut in Beijing in 2014 until the outbreak of COVID-19 in late 2019.

From four fighters in 2016, ONE has so far signed 67 Chinese MMA athletes to official contracts and keeps expanding its talent developmen­t system in the country with cooperatio­n from sports schools, MMA gyms and media partners.

The Chinese version of its Road to ONE talent selection reality show, produced with SMG and streaming website Migu, proved a huge hit when released last year on multiple platforms. On Douyin alone, the show’s content was viewed 7.25 million times.

The program has also produced promising talents, such as 18-yearold Zhang Peimian, who defied long odds in his ONE debut to defeat the experience­d Josh Tonna of Australia with a second-round TKO in a strawweigh­t bout on March 11.

Despite the current pandemicre­lated challenges of staging live events, Chatri is taking a long-term view of helping to develop MMA in China.

“We believe at ONE we celebrate the same values that China celebrates — integrity, honor, humility, respect, courage and discipline,” he said.

“For us to honor and showcase Chinese culture, Chinese heroes, Chinese stories is the essence of ONE.”

“China is the birthplace of martial arts and it should play a big role in ONE given that we’re an Asian-based promotion. I think Chinese athletes have the talent and potential to be world champions and they are very close.” CHATRI SITYODTONG ONE chairman and CEO

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? China’s Tang Kai knocks out Kim Jae-woong of South Korea with a left hook in the first round of their featherwei­ght bout at ONE: X — an event that marked the 10-year anniversar­y of ONE Championsh­ip — on March 26 at Singapore Indoor Stadium. Tang secured a title shot at the division’s current world champion, Thanh Le, with a sixth straight win.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY China’s Tang Kai knocks out Kim Jae-woong of South Korea with a left hook in the first round of their featherwei­ght bout at ONE: X — an event that marked the 10-year anniversar­y of ONE Championsh­ip — on March 26 at Singapore Indoor Stadium. Tang secured a title shot at the division’s current world champion, Thanh Le, with a sixth straight win.

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