Mixed
Martial Arts: One Championship pushes into Thailand despite
challenges
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[March 27, 2018]
By Chayut Setboonsarng
BANGKOK (Reuters) - As someone who has
practiced Thai boxing (Muay Thai) for 30 years, Chatri Sityodtong
knows very well the challenges he faces as he tries to bring his
version of Mixed Martial Arts to the Southeast Asian nation.
Chatri, who left a Wall Street career to start the ONE Championship
in 2011, said the first major problem was a Thai misconception about
the series born of televised western versions of cage fighting.
"Thais have a misconception, they think ONE Championship is about
MMA," the ONE Championship chief executive, who has Thai and
Japanese parentage, told Reuters in an interview.
"MMA is what our western counterparts use to promote violence. Real
martial arts is about respect, humility and discipline."
Given the long history of martial arts in Thailand, the country
should be a fruitful recruiting ground for fighters and audiences
alike.
But getting Muay Thai boxers to take up MMA has been a challenge
with the fighters reluctant to learn new rules and techniques,
especially around ground fighting, which does not feature in the
local codes.
Muay Thai fighter Thaweechai Chatarasuk underwent some MMA training
before deciding to stick to what he knew.
"Muay Thai is better, you can learn more from it," he said.
The chairman of the Kru Muay Thai Association, Chinawut Sirisompan,
says MMA has good promotion and media but Thais prefer stand-up
striking techniques and are "bored" by ground fighting.
ONE Championship's CEO is no stranger to Muay Thai, having trained
with legendary Muay Thai coach, the late Master Yodtong Senanan, who
gave him the ringname, Chatri.
His familiarity with its old traditions and rituals that pay homage
to masters and respect for opponents, is helping ONE Championship
connect with Muay Thai fans and practitioners.
The ONE Championship is seeing more Muay Thai athletes joining its
kickboxing and MMA league, Chatri said.
Muay Thai-to-MMA convert, Dejdamrong Sor Amnuaysirichoke, says it
helps if Muay Thai fighters understand MMA rules, especially around
ground fighting.
"Muay Thai gives us an advantage in MMA," he said. "Thais should
keep an open mind and give MMA a chance."
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Chatri Sityodtong, CEO of ONE Championship a martial arts fights
promotor talks during an interview with Reuters in Bangkok March 24,
2018. REUTERS/Prapan Chankaew
Female ONE Championship athlete, Rika Ishige, said that if Thais
took time to understand the rules, they would see it was not
barbaric.
"The thing that will bring (Muay Thai) further on in the future is
MMA," she said.
Chatri's vision is to build a sports property that will bring Asia
together through martial arts and believes the rags-to-riches
stories of its athletes can help.
"Ninety five percent of our athletes come from incredible
backgrounds of tragedy and poverty," Chatri said.
"Their spirit to overcome adversity represents authentic martial
arts."
They are stories also familiar to fans of Muay Thai with those
fighters typically having impoverished beginnings in rural Thailand.
After training in wrestling and ju jitsu, MMA can give Muay Thai
fighters a chance to make a little bit more money, Muay Thai coach
Chinawut said.
Chatri hopes to give his fighters more and more opportunities to
make money with plans to hold 24 flagship live events in major Asian
cities in 2018 and bringing that number to 52 over the next three
years.
He compares ONE Championship to Formula One and the NFL and said the
company will conclude its Series D investment round by year-end and
reach its $1 billion valuation "imminently".
That is just a start of his ambitions, though, with plans to expand
the broadcasting footprint, build a movie studio, launch a TV series
and video games.
(Additional reporting by Prapan Chankaew, editing by Nick Mulvenney
and John O'Brien)
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