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Art of War 12, Beijing

Monday, 25th May 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)

Michael Buffer, getting the crowd ready for the rumble
Michael Buffer, getting the crowd ready for the rumble

UPDATE: The next Art of War event takes place July 18, not July 11 as it says below.
Events in China often suffer from a bit of a disbelief syndrome, especially if they claim that some international VIP is going to attend. So I wasn't really surprised when friends of mine who follow mixed martial arts were skeptical about the promotion of this past weekend's Art of War Championship in Beijing. Were all of these legends of the sport really going to show up? Would Michael Buffer be there, or would it be his little brother Bruce, who isn't even licensed to say "Let's get ready to rumble"?

As it turned out, Art of War 12: Invincible, was the real deal. It was the second fully licensed event for the organizers, brothers Andrew and Konrad Pi. After working out the kinks with a show at the 3,500-seat Chaoyang Stadium two months ago, Saturday's event at the 6,000-seat Olympic Sports Center Gymnasium was a coming out party. MMA legends including Bas Rutten, referee "Big John" McCarthy and several members of Brazil's Gracie family were in attendance.
UAE citizens flown in for the fights
UAE citizens flown in for the fights

Art of War is backed by Sheik Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, and he footed the bill for journalists from all over the world to fly in to cover the event, as well as hosting a cheering section from the United Arab Emirates, outfitted in matching gear for the occasion. The sheik himself didn't show up, but a couple of young members of the royal family were there to hand out the award after the main event.

The night had pretty much everything you can expect from a full card of bouts--a boxing-style knockout punch (Ole Baguio Larson over Shawn David), that crazy young guy who just comes out with a flurry of crazy video game punches (19-year old Yao Qiang over 29-year-old Nemat Bobomukhamedov), a promising fight stopped by the doctors in the first round (Fransino Tirta over Malik Arash Mawlayi), and a referee jumping on a fighter who takes a cheap shot after the knockout bell (Ning Guangyou of China).
Wu Haotian accepts his check
Wu Haotian accepts his check

Wu Haotian of China won the main event in less than two minutes, beating Yutaka Kobayashi of Japan in a knockout. But the best fight of the night was between Rolles Gracie (Brazil, making his Asian MMA debut) and Baga Agaev (Russia), a pair of impressively fit and skilled super heavyweights. Gracie, weighing in at 110 kilograms (242 pounds) won with a rear naked choke after five minutes.

Oh, and what about Buffer? He emceed the last six fights of the night, delivering the trademarked catch phrase for the main event and nailing the fighters' Chinese, Japanese, Uzbeki and Indonesian names.

As an aside, ticketing seems to be an area in need of major improvement. Tickets available online through Emma Ticketmaster were sold out early. Sponsors that run Beijing businesses were said to have tickets for sale, but they were hard to track down. Perhaps the large contingent of special guests had something to do with it.

For an interesting look at Art of War's business position, from inside the MMA world, check out the podcast at the bottom of this entry on NoHoldsBarred.com. Once you get past (skip) the six minutes of really annoying ads, the show is interesting.

The remaining Art of War events this year take place July 11, September 5, October 31 and December 26. For more information, check out Artofwarfc.cn.

Related: MMA in Beijing: Art of War 12

Tags: Art of War, Beijing, martial arts, mixed martial arts, MMA, National Sports Center Gymnasium

Chinese investors buying stake in Cavs

Monday, 25th May 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (1)

UPDATE: According to Titan Sports news (in Chinese, here), Huang and company's stake is to be 15 percent. The same story says some overzealous Chinese speculators are musing on the chances of bringing Yao Ming to Cleveland.

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Forget about snapping up cheap U.S. real estate--Kenneth Huang and his cash-rich Chinese partners are about to make history and change the game for the Cleveland Cavaliers by purchasing a stake in the NBA franchise.

As first reported by Brian Windhorst of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, a group of Chinese investors has reached a deal to buy a stake in the Cleveland Cavaliers, pending league approval. The man behind the deal is Kenneth Huang (Huang Jianhua, or 黄健华). The best background reporting I've seen on Huang comes from the Plain Dealer (read it here). The report says that Guangzhou-born Huang studied at Columbia University, St. John's University and New York University, and gives this snapshot of his career in sports business:

"As a partner in Sportscorp China, which has a U.S. base in Chicago with well-known sports consultant Marc Ganis, Haung became a leading dealmaker with pro sports teams. He's worked deals with the New York Yankees, the Houston Rockets and USA Basketball by creating deals with Chinese sponsors."


If you're a Cleveland Cavaliers fan who wants to see your team keep its superstar, this looks like great news. It doesn't take much dot-connecting to understand that this deal could give James an excellent marketing platform in China, an opportunity that might be lucrative enough to keep him in Cleveland when his contract comes up in 2010. In addition to some guanxi in whatever industries, cities and government departments the new part owners are active, he'd benefit from the intangible benefit of pride and interest that lots of Chinese fans will no doubt take in this ownership situation.

Kobe Bryant has had a pretty good lead on Lebron in popularity in China over the past year or two, but it seems this deal could help this year's MVP squash that in a hurry. What could be cooler than Kobe and Lebron facing off in the NBA Finals this year? How about the league's two biggest stars facing off in the Chinese market over the next 10 years? I'll watch.

Kenneth Huang image: Hudong.com

Tags: basketball, Cleveland Cavaliers, Huang Jianhua, Kenny Huang, Kobe Bryant, Lebron James, NBA