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ONE 85 Eternal Glory 1/19/19 Jakarta Istora Senayan
-4hr 50min. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Oscar Yaqut vs. Andreas Satyawan R2 2:36

Aziz Calim vs. Adi Paryanto R1 4:40

Niu Kang Kang vs. Sunoto Peringkat R1 0:31

Koji Ando vs. Rasul Yakhyaev 3R SD

Kwon Won Il vs. Anthony Engelen R1 1:07

Bruno Pucci vs. Kotetsu Boku R1 3:32

Robin Catalan vs. Stefer Rahardian 3R UD

Muay Thai: Jonathan Haggerty vs. Joseph Lasiri 3R UD

Puja Tomar vs. Priscilla Gaol 3R SD

Christian Lee vs. Edward Kelly R1 2:53

Muay Thai: Mongkolpetch Petchyindee Academy vs. Alexi Serepisos 3R UD

ONE Strawweight Title: Joshua Pacio vs. Yosuke Saruta 5R SD

ONE 86 Hero's Ascent 1/25/19 Manila Mall of Asia Arena
& WKA Kickboxing Classics 13 Howard Jackson vs. Yoshimitsu Tamashiro 1/26/80
-6hr. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Himanshu Kaushik vs. Egi Rozten 3:33 R1

Muay Thai: Hiroaki Suzuki vs. Mohammed Bin Mahmoud 2:53 R1

Kai Tang vs. Sung Jong Lee 1:14 R2

Muay Thai: Elias Mahmoudi vs. Yukinori Ogasawara 3R UD

Muay Thai: Bangpleenoi vs. Brown Pinas 3R UD

Kickboxing: Hiroki Akimoto vs. Josh Tonna 3R. An incredibly high paced, action packed competitive contest that never slowed down or had a dull moment. Tonna is an aggressive, high pressure fighter to begin with, but because Atsushi Onari called a standing knockdown 45 seconds in after Akimoto landed two liver kicks, he was forced to push even more because he felt he was always fighting from behind. That may not actually have been the case because 2 minutes in, Tonna knocked Akimoto down momentarily, countering the liver kick with an overhand right. Though Tonna pressed for the last minute, Akimoto immediately wobbled him, and probably took the round though it could have been scored even. Regardless of the scoring, Tonna had press & press because Akimoto had a huge edge in the kicking department, and would pick him apart at range if given the opportunity. Tonna wasn't going to make it easy for Akimoto no matter how much punishment he withstood in the process. Though he was in Akimoto's face most of the 2nd, Akimoto could seemingly land kicks no matter how close Tonna was, and was still able to work over his midsection. Akimoto did a great job of beating Tonna's arms up with middle kicks while he was coming in, and even when Tonna was in range, he wasn't having that much success because Akimoto's reflexes were so quick he was able to dodge most of Tonna's short range punches. Tonna showed some better strategy early in the 3rd, working over Akimoto's liver with the step knee & body hook and using these to try to set up the big overhand right. Akimoto reestablished distance though, and things truly went awry for Tonna as Akimoto began working the right low kick, offbalancing Tonna when he tried to check it. This opened up the right middle kick, with Akimoto getting another knockdown midway through the round. Tonna was still okay, but he was forced to defend the body more, and Akimoto was able to back him into the cage following each head punch with one to the body then catch Tonna off guard with a high kick for the 3rd knockdown. Akimoto tried for the finish, but Tonna remarkably still wasn't slowing down or going anywhere, so he had to settle for the unanimous decision. Excellent match.

Reinier de Ridder vs. Rong Fan 1:51 R1

Muay Thai: Rodtang Jitmuangnon vs. Fahdi Khaled 3R UD. Entertaining, high action brawl that unfortunately was never actually competitive. Khaled kept firing, but Rodtang had him on his back foot the whole match & was eating him up. Rodtang was just walking Khaled down in the 1st. Khaled did a better job in the 2nd of firing & circling so Rodtang couldn't just have his way with him against the cage. Still, Khaled was mostly missing or grazing, so there was nothing to deter Rodtang from just walking him down. Khaled's best offense was actually takedowns, which would have been great if they were legal.

Flyweight World Grand Prix Qualifier: Danny Kingad vs. Tatsumitsu Wada 3R UD. An extremely close contest where both had their moments in each round, and generally the fighter who won the first half of the round then lost the second half. Wada is the better grappler & Kingad is the better striker, but in round 1 Wada got the better of the striking, while Kingad got the better of the grappling. After that, the fight reverted more to what you'd expect, and I feel like the scoring comes down to how much you value the ground strikes because Kingad landed the more flashy shots on his feet, but I felt Wada's knees & elbows on the ground were much more damaging shots. Granted, Wada got a yellow card for elbows to the theoretical mohawk, which doesn't cost him a point since they don't use a points system but may have negated the whole lot from the judges consideration. Wada did a nice job of blasting the lead leg & moving early, but he really wasn't able to sustain this tactic moving forward because Kingad made some nice adjustments, using side kicks to extend the distance. Wada got inside with a punch combo & dropped into a takedown, taking Kingad's back, but Kingad managed to roll Wada when he was throwing a knee. Though Kingad didn't do any real damage, he advanced position & was in control for half the round with the crowd going nuts for their countryman. After that, Wada had almost all the control on the ground, but Kingad always kept himself out of real trouble and managed to take the top or escape eventually. Kingad definitely controlled the standup in the 2nd & 3rd rounds, pretty much forcing Wada to come forward with punches to get in on the body. Wada eventually got it to the ground in the 2nd after eating a bunch of hooks on the inside, and was able to land several punishing knees before taking Kingad's back. The third round was by far the closest. Again, Kingad was winning early in standup, but Wada got it to the ground. I thought Wada did enough in the grappling to slightly edge the decision, mainly because his ground strikes were more punishing than Kingad's standing strikes, but the hometown fighter got the nod on all the cards. Good match.

Lightweight World Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Lowen Tynanes vs. Honorio Banario 4:46 R1

ONE Flyweight Title: Adriano Moraes vs. Geje Eustaquio 5R UD. Moraes caught Eustaquio in this crazy banana split groin stretch that bent his knee back against the joint called the Suloev stretch in the 4th, but somehow Eustaquio accepted the injury & just refused to submit.

WKA 1/26/80 WKA World Welterweight Title: Yoshimitsu Tamashiro vs. Howard Jackson 10R. The late California Flash is mostly known today for his association with Chuck Norris, originally a member of his fighting team then working as his bodyguard & personal trainer & having bit parts in several of Norris' 80's movies, but Jackson was also a very significant figure in the barely documented early days of US foot fighting, the first African American to be ranked #1 in karate where he was champion in both semi & full contact and fighter of the year in 1973 & 1974, moving on to world titles in kickboxing & Muay Thai after returning from a debilitating knee injury that robbed him of 2 years. He was even a sparring partner for Joe Lewis, and eventually peaked at #6 in the WBA boxing rankings. Boxing was the big difference in this fight, as Tamashiro tried to savage Jackson's legs with low kicks to take away his speed, but Jackson would get inside & work the body and head with his punch combos. Early on, Tamashiro used knees on the inside to make Jackson pay for this, but as the fight progressed it was all about beating up the knee Jackson had surgery on. These guys fought at such a remarkably high pace & so aggressively for the first 3 rounds I had to keep reminding myself this wasn't the usual 3 rounder we get today. It felt like a brawl because both were just throwing & throwing, almost seeming without regard to what the other was doing. This definitely was not the style we are used to seeing where one fighter throws and the other fighter defends then counters. The fight felt a bit sloppy because they were just machine gunning each other, but the action and workrate were fantastic. Jackson had to somewhat break from the kamikaze style in the 4th because his lead leg had taken so much damage it was buckling on impact & he was beginning to hobble around. He was a lot more reactive going forward and it started looking more like a conventional modern fight with Jackson trying to time Tamashiro & react to him by either stepping back to avoid or stepping in to eat it but land the left hand. The more damage Jackson took to the leg, the less he kicked, to the point the second half of the fight was basically Jackson's punches against Tamashiro's low kicks. It was a very close, tough to score fight in my opinion. Jackson clearly had more athletic ability & talent, but as the fight progressed his athletic ability was severely compromised and Tamashiro started taking rounds on my card. Tamashiro was definitely hurt by never being able to use the low kicks to open up the high kicks or any other part of his offense despite his best attempts, but he did the one thing that was having success so well that Jackson could barely stand in the later rounds, and thus ha a far more difficult time fighting on his terms. American judges were likely to prefer the boxing of Jackson, which was flashier & looked more impactful, but in the 9th Tamashiro had a great run where he'd land 1 low kick after another because Jackson's leg would buckle from the 1st so he wouldn't be able to do anything quick enough to keep Tamashiro from just landing the second and the third. Jackson managed to stay on his feet though, and did a better job of walking Tamashiro down in the 10th despite the low kicks. Jackson won a unanimous decision 87-84, 90-76, 89-83. The first few half was off the charts with their frantic chaotic action then it got more tactical by necessity, but this was still quite entertaining as well. Excellent match.

ONE 87 Clash of Legends 2/16/19 Bangkok Impact Arena
-5hr 50min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Pengshuai Liu vs. Elipitua Siregar 4:15 R3

Nou Srey Pov vs. Rika Ishige 3R UD

Yoshiki Nakahara vs. Emilio Urrutia 2:50 R3

Muay Thai: Chamuaktong vs. Charlie Peters 3R UD

Muay Thai: Superlek Kiatmuu9 vs. Chetra Lao 3R UD

Gina Iniong vs. Jihin Radzuan 3R SD

Muay Thai: Jo Nattawut vs. Samy Sana 3R UD

Tsogookhuu Amarsanaa vs. Shannon Wiratchai 3R UD

Mark Abelardo vs. Daichi Takenaka 2:34 R3

Shuya Kamikubo vs. Dae Hwan Kim 3R UD

Muay Thai: Kongsak P.K. Saenchaimuaythaigym vs. Alaverdi Ramazanov 3R SD

Bantamweight Muay Thai World Title Decision Match: Nong-O. Gaiyanghadao vs. Han Zi Hao 5R UD. China's top Muay Thai fighter Hao planned to go hom for the Chinese New Year, but couldn't turn down a chance to become ONE's first Bantamweight champion. Hao had youth on his side, but Nong-O is an all-time great who is capable of things others can't do, for instance this great left inside leg kick/left high kick combo we saw in the 1st. One of the things I liked about the fight is it always seemed more like a kickboxing match with a wider rule set where getting in & out of the pocket was key rather than the usual Muay Thai fight that starts really slow & has a lot of grindy inside clinch work. Michael Schiavello kept talking about Hao's speed, and while that would probably carry the day against most opponents, one of his biggest problems here is that he wasn't quick enough to attack effectively, Nong-O's step or two back to avoid was quicker than his step or two forward to close the distance, so he was stuck being the counter fighter. Nong-O was able to establish a range that was just out of reach, and was really effective at getting through the pocket quickly behind a number of fakes, feints, and leads, so Hao might be able to get a shot in at the end of Nong-O's combination, but he could never really intercept him or do anything to make him think twice about darting in. Late in the 1st, Nong-O got inside with a left jab, right straight combo, but they were mostly blocked & Hao tried to answer with a right hook assuming Nong-O was done, but Nong-O beat him to it, knocking him down & the mouthpiece out with a short right elbow. Late in the 2nd, Hao avoided Nong-O's left hook/right middle kick entry & tried to counter with a right while Nong-O was regaining his balance, but then surprised Nong-O with a short elbow that looked like a knockdown, but the ref didn't score it as such even though Nong-O's hand touched the canvas. Hao almost certainly would have put Nong-O all the way down from his squat had he followed up, but the moment had passed as Hao stopped to celebrate instead of making the ref prevent him from landing the follow up. The final 75 seconds of the 2nd contained some of the best action of the fight as Hao tried to press his advantage, while Nong-O tried to answer the knockdown but not really. Hao went down from a right just before the round ended, but this was properly called a slip as Nong-O tried to throw a right hand inside Hao's left high kick and actually wound up accidentally blocking the kick with an elbow to the shin. The first two rounds were quite good, and while the rest of the fight was entertaining enough, Nong-O had really solved things & was just building upon his lead. Hao fought hard until the end and kept it competitive, but outside of his one big moment that earned him the second, was generally just outclassed by a fighter who is still fantastic despite having recently returned from a 3 year hiatus where he was just coaching in Singapore because ONE didn't have a division for him. Good match.

2/7/14 LFP Women's Featherweight Title: Tiffany van Soest vs. Caley Reece 5R SD. Very close fight. I agreed with Miletich's scoring of 48-47 van Soest, and was somewhat confident she'd get the decision until I heard Adalaide Byrd was the final judge...

ONE 88 Call to Greatness 2/22/19 Singapore Indoor Stadium
-4hr 15min. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Rudy Agustian vs. Khon Sichan R1 3:14

Masakazu Imanari vs. Kwon Won Il R1 0:53

Ayaka Miura vs. Laura Balin R1 1:13

Regian Eersel vs. Anthony Njokuani R2 1:03

Kickboxing: Zhang Chenglong vs. Kong Sambo 3R SD

Kickboxing: Petchdam Petchyindee Academy vs. Masahide Kudo R2 0:35

Dejdamrong Sor Amnuaysirichoke vs. Jeremy Miado R2 2:38

Kickboxing: Nieky Holzken vs. Mustapha Haida 3R UD

Lightweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Saygid Guseyn Arslanaliev vs. Ev Ting R1 0:25

Lightweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Ariel Sexton vs. Amir Khan R3 1:13

Inaugural ONE Muay Thai Women's Atomweight Title: Stamp Fairtex vs. Janet Todd 5R UD

ONE 90 A New Era 3/31/19 Tokyo Ryogoku Kokugikan
-6hr 25min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Chang Min Yoon vs. Bala Shetty 4:16 R1

Muay Thai: Panicos Yusuf vs. Mohammed Bin Mahmoud 3R UD

Garry Tonon vs. Anthony Engelen 4:12 R1

Mei Yamaguchi vs. Kseniya Lachkova 3:18 R3

Kickboxing: Joseph Lasiri vs. Hiroki Akimoto 3R MD. A really high level, razor close contest between world champions in other foot fighting disciplines. Muay thai world champion Lasiri has had a little tougher time making the transition to kickboxing than kyokushin karate world champion Akimoto, who is 20-0, because Lasiri really likes to use the clinch & work dirty boxing, but he only has 3 seconds under these rules. Though Lasiri was clearly the underdog against the Japanese phenom in Tokyo, he had a good game plan closing the distance aggressively & taking Akimoto's space to try to shut down his kicking game as much as possible. Lasiri pressured coming forward with a front or middle kick trying to set up following with the overhand right. Midway through the 1st, Lasiri faked the jab to set up pressing forward with the big right, and while Akimoto was able to avoid that, he couldn't back as quickly as Lasiri could move forward, so Lasiri was able to drop him with the subsequent left hook across the chin. Lasiri spent the rest of the round pouring it on, but while Akimoto developed a nasty bubble over his right eye, he was able to withstand the onslaught. Akimoto has been known to step it up after getting hurt, and he certainly had no time to spare giving up a 10-8 1st round. He came out determined in the 2nd, doing his best to be the fighter who was coming forward, which allowed him to find his rhythm & get his roundhouse kicks going. Lasiri wasn't gassed or ready to roll over though, and he still made some aggressive pushes forward, but now Akimoto was doing a much better job timing Lasiri's 1st step & throwing as soon as Lasiri tried to come in, which was keeping Lasiri at bay to some extent. It turned into something of a battle of wills with Lasiri doing some good work with hooks on the inside, but for the most part Akimoto dictated the 2nd and was the more consistent fighter, bloodying Lasiri's nose. As good as the 2nd round was, the 3rd was even better with Lasiri making the adjustment of forcing his own presses forward less & instead deciding if Akimoto was going to come at him, he was going to make it ugly by holding his ground or stepping in to force the inside fight. Neither fighter was really looking to counter or willing to back up in this round, and they pretty much exchanged combos in a phone booth. When Akimoto did create some space, Lasiri didn't come in behind a punch combo as he did early, but would instead just recklessly leap forward with a flying knee to force more short range fighting. I was leaning toward Lasiri getting the 3rd, but Akimoto gave it all he had in the final minute to make the round almost too close to call. The fight could very reasonably be scored 28-28, but there has to be a winner in ONE, so it was right that Lasiri got the majority decision. Very good match.

Muay Thai: Rodtang Jitmuangnon vs. Hakim Hamech 3R SD

Flyweight World Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Kairat Akhmetov vs. Reece McLaren 3R UD

Flyweight World Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Danny Kingad vs. Senzo Ikeda 3R. I don't know what got into the Japanese fans tonight, but they were tearing the house down for the natives rather than waiting for something exciting to happen, screaming "Sen-zo" much of the match. Ikeda is an easy fighter to get behind, with dynamic style darting in from the outside and also more heart & charisma than skill. That being said, after starting off 3-4, he's turned himself into a fighter to be reckoned with and is the current Pancrase Flyweight champion, though he was at a disadvantage here stepping in for Andrew Leone on short notice. Kingad looked to slow him down with leg kicks, and early on knocked Ikeda off his feet with one & followed with a flying knee. Kingad had a decided advantage in the grappling & would come in behind the leg kick and involve himself in a wild exchange hoping to find the opening to duck into a double leg takedown, threatening with the rear naked choke once he got Ikeda down, but Ikeda was difficult to lay on & was able to gain advantages or get back to his feet out of scrambles. Kingad was determined to figure out Ikeda's timing & crack him coming in, but Ikeda kept mixing up his entries, and still managed to do a good job sneaking the overhand right in. While Ikeda also landed a fair amount of left straights, his offense always tended to be one or the other, & he wasn't really able to find his combinations or any consistent offense. Kingad finally got a double leg in the 2nd when Ikeda got so overaggressive he was literally charging after him throwing haymakers, but they reversed back & forth before returning to their feet. Kingad wasn't able to gain traction with his second takedown of the round either, and if they were scoring by rounds, it would have come down to whether you prefered Ikeda's punches or Kingad's low kicks. Ikeda really wanted to brawl in the 3rd, but it was apparent from the start that Kingad's low kicks were effecting his ability to blitz and the short notice was also taking its toll. Kingad had a takedown midway through the 3rd, but Ikeda stood right up & took his back only to get shaken off as he was looking to secure the 2nd hook. Kingad seemed like he should be running away with this fight, but I felt like the fight was up for grabs all the way to the end, especially because the crowd was so excited for anything Ikeda did. Ikeda looked bad in the 3rd round because he was physically compromised, but in actuality neither really managed anything decisive until Ikeda got inside a spinning backfist and took Kingad's back, hooking a standing rear naked choke in the final seconds. If Ikeda had a little more time he might have got the submission, but in the end Kingad got the unanimous decision for being the better grappler & less compromised fighter. Good match.

Kickboxing: Yodsanklai Iwe Fairtex vs. Andy Souwer 0:51 R2

Lightweight World Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Timofey Nastyukhin vs. Eddie Alvarez 4:05 R1

Flyweight World Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Demetrious Johnson vs. Yuya Wakamatsu 2:40 R2

ONE Bantamweight Title: Kevin Belingon vs. Bibiano Fernandes R3 3:40

ONE Middleweight Title: Aung La Nsang vs. Ken Hasegawa 4:41 R2

ONE Women's Strawweight Title: Jing Nan Xiong vs. Angela Lee 1:37 R5. Lee managed to clean out the atomweight division in just 7 fights, but this was just her 2nd fight in the last two years, both of which were pushed back, first due to falling asleep at the wheel & now due to a herniated disc in her back. Even though she was coming up a weight class to face a more experienced champion with just one loss, she's the more talented fighter & diverse, the question was how much these setbacks would even things out or whether they would even shift things in the favor of the Punching Panda. Xiong's strategy was to test Lee physically, drag her into the deep waters & see whether the time she's lost in training would catch up to her. Xiong spent most of the fight letting Lee come to her, looking to counter punch but not rushing or forcing anything. This worked to an extent since she's the better boxer, but Lee did a good job of cutting off the ring, and it was too easy for her to get the clinch. Still, that most grueling aspect of MMA that Joe Rogan has talked about on 200 PPVs was going to test Lee in exactly the ways Xiong wanted to test her even though she'd obviously rather just be smashing face. The 1st 2 rounds weren't particularly decisive or entertaining. Lee probably would have got the rounds if they were scoring that way, but she wasn't having the kind of success with her takedown game that she wanted. The fight got good in the 3rd with Lee having better luck getting takedowns, but Xiong getting back to her feet when Lee tried to get her ground offense going. Xiong picked up her pace in the 2nd half of the round after sort of landing a spinning back kick (it caught the wrist), finally beginning to press forward & let her hands go. Xiong's technique is kind of awkward, but when she finally got in Lee's face & kept swinging she was landing because Lee would get trapped against the cage rather than angling off or circling away. Xiong finished this round strongly enough to pull ahead in the fight, but you felt she should just be doing this because Lee really didn't have the footwork or boxing technique to stop Xiong from just swarming on her. Lee got the trip to start the 4th, and went for an armbar or reverse triangle when Xiong gave her back to get to her knees & try to stand. Lee was finally able to straighten the arm with 90 seconds left, though they were against the cage & she never had the ideal leg position as her right thight was over Xiong, but her foot was at Xiong's waist. Still, the arm was at one point bent back about 10 degrees past the joint, so it was pretty gross looking even though without her legs securing Xiong, Lee couldn't really stop Xiong from rolling, bridging, or even bending the elbow with the joint. The triangle kept Xiong from escaping, and Lee landed some punches to soften her up before going belly down. Now the arm was straight, but Xiong was lying on her stomach on top of Lee, who was on her stomach, and with no cross position Lee was doing her best to manipulate an arm that wasn't in a much different position than it would normally hang at. This minute and a half until the bell was the only near finish so far, and quite dramatic. You figured this would propel Lee forward, she'd come out in the 5th and make a big push for the early takedown. Instead, Xiong got the adrenaline rush from surviving the armbar, and came out determined in the 5th while Lee seemed exhausted from expending so much trying to finish. Lee really wasn't doing anything in this round but waiting, and once she started standing against the cage, Xiong began taking her last bits of energy with body shots. Lee got off the cage after Xiong wobbled her, but just seemed to have no energy to go for a takedown, tie Xiong up, or even just stay away. It was really amazing how dramatically she'd faded in between rounds. Lee threw a punch here and there, but looked exhausted to the point of illness & could barely keep her hands up. Xiong finally landed a right straight to the midsection that buckled Lee and while to the opposite side of the liver, she shut down similarly & looked like she was on the verge of vomiting. From there it was just a matter of getting the ref to step in, and with a couple kicks to the same area Lee basically stopped fighting so the ref was forced to call it. Good match.

ONE Lightweight Title: Eduard Folayang vs. Shinya Aoki 2:34 R1

ONE Warrior Series 5 4/25/19 Singapore
-3hr 55min. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Philip Kim vs. Taeho Bak R3

Yuko Suzuki vs. Ji Yeon Seo R1

Neha Kashyap vs. Roshnee Khaira 1:59 R1

Ismael Bandiwan vs. Arif Izzudin 5:00 R2

Mohamad Norhidayat vs. Sanya Kongkatonk 4:10 R1

Ricky Alchin vs. Koji Shikuwa 3R UD

Kristy Obst vs. Claudia Diaz 3:57 R2

Kieran Joblin vs. JD Hardwick 2:47 R3

Punnya Sai vs. Shafkat Khodzhkulov 3R UD

Min Jong Song vs. Alan Philpott 4:38 R2

Jerry Olsim vs. Hiroyasu Sakurai 3R UD

Shinechagtga Zoltsetseg vs. Chan Samart 3R UD

Ahmed Faez Anuar vs. Pardeep Kumar 4:53 R2

Carlos Prates vs. Gunther Ngunza 4:45 R2

ONE 92 For Honor 5/4/19 Jakarta Istora Senayan
-5hr 55min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Angelo Bimoadji vs. Guntur R1 4:56

Adrian Mattheis vs. Himanshu Kaushik R1 4:42

Muay Thai: Andrew Miller vs. Mohammed Bin Mahmoud 3R UD

Chan Rothana vs. Rudy Agustian R2 2:50

Muay Thai: Kenta Yamada vs. Deividas Danyla 3R SD

Ryogo Takahashi vs. Keanu Subba R1 1:46

Dae Hwan Kim vs. Ayideng Jumayi R1 4:11

Sunoto Peringkat vs. Paul Lumihi 3R UD

Thanh Le vs. Yusup Saadulaev R2 0:12

Priscilla Gaol vs. Nou Srey Pov 3R UD

Muay Thai: Yodpanomrung Jitmuangnon vs. Tyler Hardcastle R3 2:11

Marat Gafurov vs. Tetsuya Yamada 3R UD

Kiamrian Abbasov vs. Yushin Okami R2 1:10

ONE Muay Thai Flyweight Title: Sam-A Gaiyanghadao vs. Jonathan Haggerty 5R UD

10/23/15 Muay Thai Women's World Welterweight Title: Jorina Baars vs. Martina Jindrova 5R UD

ONE 93 Warriors Of Light 5/10/19 Bangkok Impact Arena
-4hr 40min. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Getu Hexi vs. Ovais Shah 3R UD

Kickboxing: Janet Todd vs. Wang Chin Long R2 2:59

Pieter Buist vs. Kota Shimoishi 3:55 R2

Muay Thai: Superlek Kiatmuu9 vs. Rui Botelho 3R UD

Muay Thai: Savvas Michael vs. Singtongnoi Por Telakun 3R UD

Kazuki Tokudome vs. Adrian Pang 1:27 R2

Kickboxing: ChengLong Zhang vs. Panicos Yusuf 3R UD

Pongsiri Mitsatit vs. Robin Catalan 3:05 R1

Muay Thai: Rodtang Jitmuangnon vs. Sok Thy 1:36 R2

Shoko Sato vs. Mark Abelardo 1:58 R2

Inaugural ONE Kickboxing Flyweight Title: Petchdam Petchyindee Academy vs. Elias Mahmoudi 5R 0:29

Nong-O Gaiyanghadao vs. Hiroaki Suzuki 3R UD

ONE 94 Enter the Dragon 5/17/19 Singapore Indoor Stadium
-6hr. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Rahul Raju vs. Richard Corminal R1 4:43

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Alternate Bout: Daniel Dawson vs. Brown Pinas 3R SD

Iuri Lapicus vs. Shannon Wiratchai R3 3:10

Mei Yamaguchi vs. Laura Balin R1 3:46

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Alternate Bout: Dzhabar Askerov vs. Enriko Kehl 3R UD

Garry Tonon vs. Yoshiki Nakahara R1 0:55

Yoshitaka Naito vs. Alex Silva 3R UD

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Jo Nattawut vs. Sasha Moisa R3 1:24

Miao Li Tao vs. Dejdamrong Sor Amnuaysirichoke R1 4:09

Geje Eustaquio vs. Kim Kyu Sung 3R UD

Lightweight Grand Prix Semifinal: Saygid Guseyn vs. Amir Khan R1 2:56

Cosmo Alexandre vs. Sage Northcutt R1 0:29

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Samy Sana vs. Yodsanklai Fairtex 3R UD

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Phetmorakot Petchyindee Academy vs. Giorgio Petrosyan 3R NC

ONE Kickboxing Lightweight Title: Regian Eersel vs. Nieky Holzken 5R UD

ONE Lightweight Title: Shinya Aoki vs. Christian Lee R2 0:51

ONE 95 Legendary Quest 6/15/19 Shanghai Baoshan Arena
-6hr. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Phoe Thaw vs. Victorio Senduk 4:17 R1

Itsuki Hirata vs. Angelie Sabanal 2:59 R1

Chang Min Yoon vs. Trestle Tan 4:05 R1

Niu Kang Kang vs. Eric Kelly 3R UD

Rong Fan vs. Sherif Mohamed 3:50 R2

Lei Chen vs. Anthony Engelen 3R UD

Muay Thai: Rodlek Jaotalaytong vs. Liam Harrison 3R UD

Reinier de Ridder vs. Gilberto Galvao 0:57 R2

Kickboxing: Tarik Khbabez vs. Anderson Silva 3R UD

Koyomi Matsushima vs. Won Il Kwon 3R UD

Muay Thai: Han Zi Hao vs. Andrew Miller 2:36 R2

Kickboxing: ChengLong Zhang vs. Tyler Hardcastle 1:54 R1

Agilan Thani vs. Yoshihiro Akiyama 3R UD

ONE Muay Thai Women's Atomweight Title: Nong Stamp vs. Alma Juniku 5R UD

3/22/19 Eruption Women's Super Bantamweight Title: Alma Juniku vs. Brooke Farrell

ONE 96 Masters Of Destiny 7/12/19 Kuala Lumpur Axiata Arena
-5hr 35min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Kickboxing: Josh Tonna vs. Yoshihisa Morimoto 3R UD

Muay Thai: Sorgraw Petchyindee vs. George Mann 3R SD

Bozhena Antoniyar vs. Bi Nguyen 3R SD

Adrian Mattheis vs. Zhe Li 1:51 R2

Muay Thai: Mohammed Bin Mahmoud vs. Saiful Merican 3R UD

Aleksi Toivonen vs. Akihiro Fujisawa 3:27 R1

Dae Sung Park vs. Kimihiro Eto 1:59 R2

Kickboxing: Janet Todd vs. Kai Ting Chuang 3R MD

Kickboxing: Hiroki Akimoto vs. Kenny Tse 3R UD

Troy Worthen vs. Rui Chen 3:59 R2

Jihin Radzuan vs. Jomary Torres 3:07 R1

Gary Mangat vs. Abro Fernandes 3R UD

Ev Ting vs. Daichi Abe 4:44 R2

Michelle Nicolini vs. Angela Lee 3R UD

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal: Giorgio Petrosyan vs. Phetmorakot Petchyindee Academy 3R UD

ONE 97 Dawn Of Heroes 8/2/19 Pasay Mall of Asia Arena
-6hr 10min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Muhammad Airman vs. Sunoto Peringkat 3R UD

Ayaka Miura vs. Samara Santos R2 0:39

Miao Li Tao vs. Pongsiri Mitsatit 3R UD

Xie Bin vs. Edward Kelly R2 3:32

James Nakashima vs. Yushin Okami 3R UD

Daichi Takenaka vs. Leandro Issa R3 1:39

Flyweight Grand Prix Reserve Bout: Dae Sung Park vs. Honorio Banario 3R UD

Yuya Wakamatsu vs. Geje Eustaquio R1 1:59

Rodlek P.K. Saenchaimuaythaigym vs. Andrew Miller R3 0:49

Flyweight Grand Prix Semifinal: Danny Kingad vs. Reece McLaren 3R SD

Flyweight Grand Prix Semifinal: Demetrious Johnson vs. Tatsumitsu Wada 3R UD

Lightweight Grand Prix Semifinal: Eddie Alvarez vs. Eduard Folayang R1 2:16

ONE Muay Thai Flyweight Title: Jonathan Haggerty vs. Rodtang Jitmuangnon 5R UD

ONE Featherweight Title: Martin Nguyen vs. Koyomi Matsushima R2 4:40

ONE 98 Dreams of Gold 8/16/19 Bangkok IMPACT Arena
-5hr 50min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Zhikang Zhao vs. Paul Lumihi 4:08 R2

Muay Thai: Alaverdi Ramazanov vs. Ognjen Topic 2:25 R1

Ryuto Sawada vs. Aziz Calim 1:09 R1

Muay Thai: Bangpleenoi Petchyindee Academy vs. Liam Nolan 3R MD

Chan Rothana vs. Gustavo Balart 3R UD

Yusup Saadulaev vs. Dae Hwan Kim 3R UD

Muay Thai: Lerdsila Chumpairtour vs. Savvas Michael 0:29 R2

Thanh Le vs. Kotetsu Boku 1:28 R1

Muay Thai: Muangthai PK Saenchaimuaythaigym vs. Kenta Yamada 3R UD

Alex Silva vs. Stefer Rahardian 4:55 R2

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Semifinal: Samy Sana vs. Dzhabar Askerov 3R MD

Stamp Fairtex vs. Asha Roka 1:29 R3

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Semifinal: Giorgio Petrosyan vs. Jo Nattawut 2:50 R1

ONE Kickboxing Flyweight Title: Ilias Ennahachi vs. Petchdam R3

ONE 99 Immortal Triumph 9/6/19 Ho Chi Minh City Phu Tho Indoor Stadium
-6hr. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Muay Thai: Michael Pham vs. Mohamad Fakri Bin Yusoff UD

Muay Thai: Viktoria Lipianska vs. Amber Kitchen Split Dec

Muay Thai: Kohei Kodera vs. Singtongnoi Por.Telakun 0:41 R1

Kickboxing: Santino Verbeek vs. Juan Certvantes Majority Dec

Muay Thai: Mongkolpetch vs. Joseph Lasiri Majority Dec

Kickboxing: Panpayak Jitmuangnon vs. Masahide Kudo UD

Muay Thai: Bi Nguyen vs. Puja Tomar Split Dec

Muay Thai: Chris Nguyen vs. Yukinori Ogasawara UD

Kickboxing: Anderson Silva vs. Beybulat Isaev 2:19 R1

Muay Thai: Nguyen Tran Duy Nhat vs. Che Wil Azwan 2:45 R3

Muay Thai: Kulabdam Sor.Jor.Piek-U-Thai vs. Bobo Sacko UD

ONE Muay Thai Bantamweight Title: Nong-O Gaiyanghadao vs. Brice Delval 5R UD

4/15/17: Alma Juniku vs Britney Dolheguy

12/13/18: Zaza Sor Aree vs. Alma Juniku

ONE Warrior Series 8 10/5/19 Tokyo Bellesalle Shibuya Garden
-4hr 25min. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Kickboxing: Kanta Motoyama vs. Cep Holik 3R UD

Kickboxing: Shoa Arii vs. Lehe R3 1:54

Hiroyasu Sakurai vs. Shimamura Naoki 3R SD

Yuko Suzuki vs. Edilah Johany R1 2:12

Kickboxing: Sean Rush vs. Koki Shimokawa R2 2:11

Ahmed Faez Anuar vs. Ryuichi Yamashita R1 4:55

Asuka Tsubaki vs. Long La R2 4:27

Otgonbaatar Nergui vs. Takuya Nagata R1 4:10

So Yul Kim vs. Satomi Takano 3R UD

Hikaru Yoshino vs. Chan Samart 3R UD

Nobutaka Naito vs. Alex Schild 3R UD

Min Jong Song vs. Kodai Murata 3R UD

Sandra Godvik vs. Ayaka Miyauchi 3R UD

Ryoji Kudo vs. Jerry Olsim 3R UD

Emmanuel Onyedikachi vs. De'von Morris 3R UD

ONE 100 10/13/19 Tokyo Ryogoku Kokugikan
-9hr 55min. Q=Perfect. 5 DVDs

Won Il Kwon vs. Sunoto Peringkat 1:43 R1

Chang Min Yoon vs. Phoe Thaw 3:17 R1

Lito Adiwang vs. Senzo Ikeda 1:57 R1

Itsuki Hirata vs. Rika Ishige 4:41 R2

Yushin Okami vs. Agilan Thani 3R SD

Muay Thai: Sam-A Gaiyanghadao vs. Darren Roland 1:20 R2

Yuya Wakamatsu vs. Dae Hwan Kim 3R UD

Lightweight Grand Prix Final: Christian Lee vs. Saygid Guseyn Arslanaliev 3R UD

Muay Thai: Janet Todd vs. Ekaterina Vandaryeva 2:20 R2

Flyweight Grand Prix Final: Demetrious Johnson vs. Danny Kingad 3R UD

ONE Women's Atomweight Title: Angela Lee vs. Jingnan Xiong 4:48 R5

Pancrase vs. Shooto: Takasuke Kume vs. Koshi Matsumoto 3R UD

Pancrase vs. Shooto: Hiroyuki Tetsuka vs. Hernani Perpetuo 3R UD

Pancrase vs. Shooto: Shoko Sato vs. Rafael Silva 4:30 R2

Pancrase vs. Shooto: Yosuke Saruta vs. Daichi Kitakata 0:59 R2

Mei Yamaguchi vs. Jenny Huang 3R UD

Arjan Bhullar vs. Mauro Cerilli 3R UD

Shinya Aoki vs. Honorio Banario 0:54 R1

Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Final: Giorgio Petrosyan vs. Samy Sana 3R UD

ONE Muay Thai Flyweight Title: Rodtang Jitmuangnon vs. Walter Goncalves 5R SD

ONE Bantamweight Title: Bibiano Fernandes vs. Kevin Bellingon 2:16 R2

ONE Light Heavyweight Title: Aung La Nsang vs. Brandon Vera 3:23 R2

ONE 101 Dawn of Valor 10/25/19 Jakarta Istora Senayan
-6hr 25min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Adi Paryanto vs. Angelo Bimoadji 1:04 R1

Taiki Naito vs. Alexi Serepisos 2:25 R3

Elipitua Siregar vs. Egi Rozten 2:00 R1

Kazuki Tokudome vs. Johnny Nunez 3R UD

Abro Fernandes vs. Rudy Agustian 3R UD

Pieter Buist vs. Tony Caruso 3R UD

Stefer Rahardian vs. Adrian Mattheis 3R UD

Eko Roni Saputra vs. Kaji Ebin 0:19 R1

Mark Abelardo vs. Ayideng Jumayi 3R UD

John Lineker vs. Muin Gafurov 3R UD

Kickboxing: Junguang Wang vs. Federico Roma 2:59 R1

Priscilla Gaol vs. Bozhena Antoniyar 3R UD

ONE Kickboxing Lightweight Title: Regian Eersel vs. Nieky Holzken 5R UD

ONE Welterweight Title: Zebaztian Kadestam vs. Kiamrian Abbasov 5R UD

ONE 102 Masters of Fate 11/8/19 Manila Mall Of Asia Arena
-5hr 45min. Q=Perfect. 3 DVDs

Roshan Mainam vs. Khon Sichan 3:22 R1

Kyu Sung Kim vs. Akihiro Fujisawa 1:08 R1

Jae Woong Kim vs. Rafael Nunes 0:38 R3

Muay Thai: Tukkatatong Petpayathai vs. Hiroaki Suzuki 3R SD

Robin Catalan vs. Gustavo Balart 4:43 R2

Muay Thai: Kongsak PK. Saenchaimuaythaigym vs. Han Zi Hao 3R UD

Yoshitaka Naito vs. Pongsiri Mitsatit 3R UD

Kai Wen Li vs. Paul Lumihi 2:39 R1

Stamp Fairtex vs. Bi Nguyen 3R UD

Geje Eustaquio vs. Toni Tauru 2:11 R3

Muay Thai: Sangmanee Sathian vs. Azize Hlali 3R UD

Eduard Folayang vs. Tsogookhuu Amarsanaa R2 2:31

ONE Strawweight Title: Joshua Pacio vs. Rene Catalan 2:29 R2

12/18/15: Robin Catalan vs. Danny Kingad R2 4:21

ONE 103 Age of Dragons 11/16/19 Beijing Cadillac Arena
-4hr. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Getu Hexi vs. Ramon Gonzales 3R UD

Kickboxing: Enriko Kehl vs. Armen Petrosyan 1:55 R2

Yusup Saadulaev vs. Daichi Takenaka 3R SD

Kai Tang vs. Edward Kelly 3R UD

Kickboxing: Christina Breuer vs. Jorina Baars 3R SD

Jeremy Miado vs. Li Tao Miao 3:01 R1

Ritu Phogat vs. Nam Hee Kim 3:37 R1

Bo Meng vs. Laura Balin 2:45 R1

Muay Thai: Jamal Yusupov vs. Yodsanklai Iwe 0:39 R2

Inaugural ONE Kickboxing Light Heavyweight Title: Roman Kryklya vs. Tarik Khbabez 0:43 R2

ONE Kickboxing Flyweight Title: Ilias Ennahachi vs. Wenfeng Wang 5R SD

ONE 104 Edge of Greatness 11/22/19 Singapore Indoor Stadium
-4hr 30min. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Muay Thai: Liam Nolan vs. Brown Pinas 3R UD

Shuya Kamikubo vs. Bruno Pucci 3R UD

Muay Thai: Tran Duy Nhat Nguyen vs. Yuta Watanabe 0:30 R2

Muay Thai: Petchmorakot Sangprapai vs. Charlie Peters 1:48 R2

Alex Silva vs. Xuewen Peng 4:45 R2

Colbey Northcutt vs. Putri Padmi 3R UD

Dejdamrong Sor Amnuaysirichoke vs. Muhammad Imran 1:21 R3

Rahul Raju vs. Furqan Cheema 3:00 R2

Troy Worthen vs. Lei Chen 4:56 R2

Amir Khan vs. Ev Ting 3R SD

ONE Muay Thai Featherweight Title: Nong-O Gaiyanghadao vs. Saemapetch Fairtex 1:46 R4

ONE 105 Mark Of Greatness 12/6/19 Kuala Lumpur Axiata Arena
-6hr. Q=Perfect. 2 DVDs

Rayane Bastos vs. Sovannahry Em 2:40 R1

Muay Thai: Taiki Naito vs. Rui Botelho 3R UD

Chang Min Yoon vs. Rodian Menchavez 1:45 R2

Tial Thang vs. Woon Gyeom Kim 3R UD

Rui Chen vs. Muhammad Aiman 3R UD

Elias Mahmoudi vs. Lerdsila Chumpairtour 3R UD

Bokang Masunyane vs. Ryuto Sawada 3R UD

Kickboxing: Andrei Stoica vs. Anderson Silva 1:57 R1

Reece McLaren vs. Gary Mangat 4:35 R1

Agilan Thani vs. Dante Schiro 3R SD

Denice Zamboanga vs. Jihin Radzuan 3R UD

Inaugural ONE Kickboxing Bantamweight Title: Alaverdi Ramazanov vs. ChengLong Zhang 5R UD

Inaugural ONE Kickboxing Strawweight Title: Sam-A Gaiyanghadao vs. Junguang Wang 5R UD

12/7/12 (Ex VQ): Sam-A Gaiyanghadao vs. Pokaew Fonjangchonburi

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