Art of War 15 in Beijing Saturday
Friday, 27th November 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
Art of War, China's most established mixed martial arts brand, puts on its fifth event of the year this weekend at the Olympic Sports Center Stadium in Beijing (the Olympic handball venue, across the Fifth Ring Road from the Bird's Nest and the Water Cube. For Saturday's fight card, check out the Art of War Web site.The main event pits Ao Hailin (China) against Ueyama Ryuki (Japan). Ueyama's international resume includes appearances in Pride Bushido and K-1 Heros. Ao is 8-0 as an MMA fighter with Art of War. His last fight was a win in Art of War 11.
Ueyama says of his opponent: "Ao Hailin has never faced an opponent of my caliber. I have competed against the best fighters in the world and I am looking forward to putting on a great show for the Chinese audience. They will remember Ueyama Ryuki."
Ao, in an interview posted on the Art of War Web site, says that "The Mongolian blood flowing in my bones makes me a born fighter," and adds that "This will be a harsh battle. Whoever has the most energy and who can take advantage of openings will win the fight."
Other fights of interest include:
Wu Haotian (China) vs. Arthit Hanchana (Thailand)
Wu has something to prove after losing his main event fight in Art of War 13--Shukrat Minavarov of Uzbekistan knocked him out just 21 seconds into the first round. And Hanchana will be looking for his own revenge, as he lost to Wu the last time the two fought.
Vaughn Anderson (Canada) vs. Ivan Ivanov (Bulgaria)
Anderson is still looking for his first win since making his return to the ring after breaking his arm in Art of War 11 last March. The Mandarin-speaking Canadian fought Korean Kim Dong Hyun to a draw in Art of War 14. He faces a younger opponent in Ivanov, who has a record of 5-3 according to Sherdog.com.
Tickets range from 30 to 100 RMB and are available from Piao.com. Fights start at 4:00 p.m. on Saturday, November 28.
Related:
Art of War 13: Results
Art of War 12, Beijing
Tags: Ao Hailin, Art of War, Arthit Hanchana, Beijing, Ivan Ivanov, martial arts, MMA, Olympic Sports Center Stadium, Ueyama Ryuki, Vaughn Anderson, Wu Haotian
Black Tiger Hero Club brings black tie bouts to Beijing
Thursday, 12th November 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
Part of a minority that adhered to the dress code, this group from the U.S. Embassy enjoyed a photo op with the requisite barely dressed xiaojie.
The night featured 11 five-round, two-minute fights, with all but two going the distance. Nations represented included China, the Philippines, France, Thailand and Germany. Guests chose between a beef tenderloin, roast chicken breast and pan-fried sea bass for the entrée to go with their high kicks, leg sweeps and elbows to the head.
The Battlefield X series is put on by Black Tiger Hero Club, a martial arts club in Beijing's Central Business District. Their future plans include more black tie events, as well as some more casual shows. Like their major Beijing competitor, Art of War, Black Tiger uses a training facility and highly respected trainers to grow grass roots support between events.
Here are some more photos from the night:
One of the 11 fights was a mixed martial arts bout
Some sweat and blood with your cheesecake?
The winner of the night's one female fight observing the pre-fight Muay Thai ritual
A silent auction also benefited charity.
Tags: Beijing, Black Tiger Hero Club, mixed martial arts, MMA, Muay Thai
Art of War 13: Results
Tuesday, 21st July 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
The most recent installment of the Art of War fighting series, Art of War 13: Rising Force, was a bit quieter than the big-time coming out party that was Art of War 12, but still featured plenty of drama.The third Art of War MMA event this year, Rising Force went down at the Olympic Sports Center Auditorium in Beijing. Here are some of the results and a few observations: (Full results here)
Champ goes down hard
Wu Hao Tian, winner of the main event at Art of War 12, was matched against the shaggy Shukhrat Minovarov from Uzbekistan, who looked like he'd been grabbed out of a pool hall and tossed into the ring. Minovarov came out like a street fighter with a flurry of punches, including a tap to the sweet spot that put Wu on the canvas and ended the fight at 21 seconds into the round. Those 21 seconds felt more like 8, and now the 23-year-old Wu definitely has something to prove next time around.
The Main Event
The main event featured China's Wang Sai, who faced Claes Beverlov of Sweden. Beverlov came in with seven fights under his belt and a record of 5-2; the much less experienced Wang was 2-0. It wasn't the night's most exciting fight, but both
fighters clearly showed up confident and well prepared. Neither Beverlov nor Wang was overwhelmingly dominant, and the Swede won with an arm bar about three minutes into the second round. It was one of those fights that could have gone either way, but it was Beverlov who was able to take advantage of an opportune moment and force his opponent to submit.
Still no win for Dai
The next fight was the complete opposite, pitting Art of War 11 main event fighter Dai Shuanghai (an Inner Mongolian who makes one of the more entertaining entrances among the fighters) against Polish judo champion Marcin Pionke. Neither of the two fighters has much punching or kicking skill, so there was a lot of stalking around the ring waiting for the other guy to swing first. The fight was better when it got to the ground, and Dai opened up a huge gash that had Pionke's left eye bloody red and swollen shut for much of the fight. As no one tapped out before time expired and Art of War uses no judges, the fight ended in a draw. It was Dai's third tie out of three fights, a fact he expressed frustration with in the post-fight interview.
Is this stuff fixed?
That question is still floating around among the general public, mainly due to skepticism about fighting in general and China in particular. The fights look legit to me, and the results seem to support that. Only one Chinese fighter won on Saturday, and that man, Zhang Li Peng, got his win at the expense of his own countryman, Yao Qiang. China went 1-7, with one draw. While rigging the matches in favor of the home team is only one way to fake it, not letting them get one international win wouldn't seem a wise strategy for attracting local fans.
A welcome addition: Mongolia
Art of War 13 introduced two new fighters from Mongolia, Dorjderem Munkhayasgalan and Jadambaa Narantungalag. Mongolia has a strong wrestling tradition, and both fighters showed superior skill and killer instinct en route to wins over much younger opponents. The South Koreans also put in a strong performance, winning all three of their fights.
Watch it all online
The Art of War Web site carries all of its past matches online, beginning with Art of War 1 here.
The next event, Art of War 14: Ground Zero, takes place September 26, moving from Beijing to The Venetian in Macao.
Tags: Art of War, Art of War 13, Beijing Olympic Sports Center Auditorium, Dai Shuanghai, martial arts, mixed martial arts, MMA, Wu Hao Tian
Art of War 13, Beijing
Friday, 17th July 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
China's top MMA show comes back to Beijing this weekend. Art of War 13: Rising Force, starts at 4 p.m. at Beijing Olympic Sports Center Auditorium. This is the third Art of War event this year, and the main event pits China's Wang Sai against Claes Beverlov of Sweden. Wu Hao Tian and Dai Shuang Hai, the Chinese fighters featured in the main event of the last two shows, will also be stepping into the ring. Other countries represented in this international event will include Poland, France, South Korea and Uzbekistan (to name a few). See the complete fight card here.Tickets are available online here and venue information can be found here.
Related:
Art of War 12, Beijing (report)
MMA in Beijing: Art of War 12 (preview)
Tags: Art of War, Beijing, martial arts, MMA
Art of War 12, Beijing
Monday, 25th May 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
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
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 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
