ONE Fight Night 14 live results

ONE Fight Night 14 takes place Friday and features Stamp Fairtex, John Lineker, Danielle Kelly, and more.

ONE Championship returned Friday with a mixed event filled with some of the promotion’s best competitors.

ONE Fight Night 14 took place at Singapore Indoor Stadium in Kallang, Singapore and streamed on Amazon Prime.

In the main event fan-favorite [autotag]Stamp Fairtex[/autotag] (11-2) fought former UFC fighter [autotag]Seo Hee Ham[/autotag] (26-9) for the vacant 115-pound title. The championship bout was one of three on the card, but the only that was MMA.

The co-main event featured a 125-pound muay thai title bout between champion [autotag]Smilla Sundell[/autotag] and [autotag]Allycia Rodrigues[/autotag], who battled after rising sensation [autotag]Danielle Kelly[/autotag] went up against [autotag]Jessa Khan[/autotag] in a championship grappling bout.

Former UFC standout [autotag]John Lineker[/autotag] (37-10) also competed on the card, as he battled [autotag]Stephan Loman[/autotag] (17-3) in a matchup that was originally scheduled to take place in 2021.

Check out the full results below:

Video: ONE Championship: Battleground II highlights include brutal one-punch, 10-second KO

Eko Roni Saputra delivered the highlight of the night with a vicious right hand at ONE: Battleground II in Singapore.

ONE Championship: Battleground II took place Friday at Singapore Indoor Stadium and streamed on B/R Live.

In the main event, [autotag]Zhang Lipeng[/autotag] won a unanimous decision against former ONE lightweight champion [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag], who dropped his fourth consecutive fight.

The highlight of the card, however, belonged to [autotag]Eko Roni Saputra[/autotag], who needed just 10 seconds to knock out [autotag]Liu Peng Shuai[/autotag] with a vicious right hand.

(Photo courtesy of ONE Championship)

You can watch the highlights from the event in the video above.

Complete ONE Championship: Battleground II results:

  • Zhang Lipeng def. Eduard Folayang via unanimous decision
  • Alex Silva def. Miao Li Tao via unanimous decision
  • Thomas Narmo vs. Alain Ngalani ruled no contest (accidental low blow)
  • Eko Roni Saputra def. Liu Peng Shuai via knockout (punch) – Round 1, 0:10
  • Rahul Raju def. Otgonbaatar Nergui submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 3:54

How to watch ‘ONE Championship: Battleground II’ – Fight card, start time, live stream

Here’s how to watch the ‘ONE Championship: Battleground II’ card from Singapore, which includes Zhang Lipeng vs. Eduard Folayang.

ONE Championship is back Friday with a key lightweight bout atop the bill.

Here’s how to watch the card from Singapore, which includes [autotag]Zhang Lipeng[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag].

ONE on TNT IV results: Reinier de Ridder gets champ-champ status; Eddie Alvarez comes up short in epic brawl

Dutchman Reinier de Ridder is now a two-division champion, adding ONE’s light heavyweight belt to the middleweight title he already owns.

Undefeated Dutchman [autotag]Reinier de Ridder[/autotag] is now a two-division champion, adding ONE’s light heavyweight belt to the middleweight title he already owns with a decision win in the main event of ONE on TNT IV, which aired Wednesday in the U.S.

And de Ridder (14-0) earned both belts by taking them away from [autotag]Aung La N Sang[/autotag] (26-12) – the latest in a one-sided decision win at Singapore Indoor Stadium.

At the opening bell, de Ridder moved immediately forward and was able to drag the action to the canvas, scrambling through a seres of attempted escapes before setting up on top of N Sang’s half-guard. After advancing to mount shortly after, de Ridder was able to take the back when his opponent rolled. The body triangle came in immediately after, and de Ridder went to work on a potential choke.

To his credit, N Sang defended his neck well despite being in a bad position. In reply, de Ridder simply punched away to soften things up before beautifully transitioning to an arm-triangle attempt. N Sang defended it perfectly and was able to move back to the feet and deliver a few big punches before perhaps surprisingly choosing to engage again on the floor.

In the second frame, de Ridder again shot inside immediately, but N Sang was able to defend the initial effort. As de Ridder continued working in tight, he did get the occasional takedown, but he wasn’t able to keep the fight on the canvas until past the halfway mark of the frame, when he was finally able to secure top position and step quickly to mount.

N Sang rolled to escape and did get back to his feet, but de Ridder took him down again and finished the frame on top.

The third saw de Ridder get the fight to the floor with relative ease, where he dominated the positioning. N Sang kept himself out of submission trouble, but he wasn’t able to muster any offense of his own. He worked back to his feet late in the round, but even then, he was simply stuck against the cage.

The fourth round was a carbon copy of the first three, and the final frame started out exactly the same. N Sang was able to sweep to the top with three minutes left, but he was unable to muster any offense in the position, and de Ridder cruised to a one-sided decision win, claiming his second ONE Championship belt – and announcing his intention to get a third by coming after current heavyweight titleholder Brandon Vera.

The ONE Championship struggles continue for [autotag]Eddie Alvarez[/autotag] (30-8), who fought his heart out in an all-out brawl but ultimately suffered a unanimous-decision loss to [autotag]Rae Yoon Ok[/autotag] (15-3).

Alvarez attacked the legs of the taller Ok in the early going before driving forward and taking the fight to the floor. Ok stood quickly, and the battle in the clinch began. Ok was up to the challenge, and Alvarez was forced to back away and strike with the bigger man. It proved to be a dangerous proposition.

As they engaged on the feet, a massive two-punch combination from Ok sent Alvarez to the floor and seemed destined to end the fight. The South Korean set up on top and unleashed a non-stop barrage of hammerfists and straight punches. The referee gave Alvarez every opportunity to recover, and he did, taking an unbelievable amount of damage but refusing to quit.

Sensing he wasn’t going to be awarded the finish, Ok returned to the feet in the final 30 seconds, and Alvarez unbelievably was able to mount some offense just before the bell.

Alvarez was quick to the takedown in the second, but Ok remained up to the challenge. Even when Alvarez did get his opponent briefly down, Ok would work right back to his feet. Alvarez struggled to really get any effective offense logged, but he was the aggressor, even if Ok was able to defend most of it by simply setting up on the cage and staying upright.

Alvarez seemed the fresher man in the third, and he started mixing up his attacks, faking a few takedowns and driving in uppercuts and overhands depending on the read. Clearly fatigued, Ok dug deep and found the energy for a few knees and kicks up the middle while continuing to defend the takedown. In the closing seconds, the two stood toe-to-toe and took turns checking the chin to end an absolute brawl of a fight. In the end, though, the early damage proved too much to overcome for Alvarez, and judges awarded Ok the win via unanimous decision.

Viral star ‘Reug Reug’ suffers odd defeat

In a battle of undefeated heavyweights [autotag]Kirill Grishenko[/autotag] (4-0) was able to earn a somewhat bizarre victory over Senegalese wrestling sensation [autotag]Oumar Kane[/autotag] (3-1), better known as “Reug Reug.”

It was Grishenko who was the aggressor early, and he showed solid takedown defense when Kane immediately changed levels and worked from the clinch for a takedown. The position proved a stalemate, and the two would eventually reset, where Grishenko would score a couple of quick strikes before being forced to defend a takedown once again.

Kane clearly slowed as the round wore on, and Grishenko scored with a big kick to the thigh and a spinning backfist before the bell.

The second round was more of the same, with Grishenko landing big strikes when given space and then capably defending takedown attempts in the clinch. A frustrated Kane tried to land a few clubbing shots each time he would release the clinch, but he found himself unable to cause any real damage.

Controversy surrounded the ending sequence of the frame, as Grishenko landed a right hand to his opponent’s throat just after the bell, and Kane protested before dropping to the canvas. When Kane couldn’t answer the bell for the third, Grishenko was awarded a TKO win.

Shinya Aoki, Colbey Northcutt pick up submission wins on prelims

Submission wizard [autotag]Shinya Aoki[/autotag] (47-9) closed out his trilogy with fellow former ONE champ [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag] (22-11) in style, scoring a first-round submission via armbar.

After a brief feeling out process to start the contest, Aoki was able to work inside to the clinch and eventually trip the action to the canvas, working quickly to mount. Once there, the end seemed almost inevitable, with Aoki controlling from the top before setting up the armbar and turning for the submission, cranking on the limb until earning the stoppage with 40 seconds left in the first round.

In the night’s first prelim, vaunted striker [autotag]Colbey Northcutt[/autotag] (2-1) showed off some grappling skills in a first-round submission win over the debuting [autotag]Courtney Martin[/autotag] (0-1).

Martin did her best to avoid the standup game by clinching and bringing the action to the floor early, but Northcutt was game from her back, chaining submission attempts together before locking in an armbar and extending the limb to earn a tap at the 2:28 mark of the first frame.

ONE on TNT IV results include:

  • Reinier de Ridder def. Aung La N Sang via unanimous decision – to win light heavyweight title
  • Rae Yoon Ok def. Eddie Alvarez via unanimous decision
  • Kirill Grishenko def. Oumar Kane via TKO (punch) – Round 2, 5:00
  • Shinya Aoki def. Eduard Folayang via submission (armbar) – Round 1, 4:20
  • Colbey Northcutt def. Courtney Martin via submission (armbar) – Round 1, 2:28

Sage Northcutt withdraws from ONE on TNT IV bout vs. Shinya Aoki; Eduard Folayang steps in

Sage Northcutt has withdrawn from ONE on TNT IV due to lingering effects from COVID-19.

[autotag]Sage Northcutt[/autotag]’s highly anticipated return to ONE Championship has been delayed.

Northcutt (11-3) is out of his April 28 welterweight fight vs. [autotag]Shinya Aoki[/autotag] (46-9) at ONE on TNT IV due to lingering effects from COVID-19, officials announced on Monday morning after an initial report from ESPN.

Northcutt, who tested positive for COVID-19 in January, hasn’t competed since May 2019 when he suffered a 29-second knockout to kickboxer Cosmo Alexandre at ONE Championship 96. The damage sustained in the knockout loss to Alexandre was heavy, forcing Northcutt to undergo surgery to repair eight facial fractures.

Stepping in for Northcutt to face Aoki will be [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag] (22-10), who was scheduled to fight Yoshihiro Akiyama on the same card, but Akiyama was forced out due to injury.

Aoki and Folayang have already competed against each other twice, splitting their two appearances. Folayang captured the ONE lightweight title from Aoki in November 2016 when he scored a third-round TKO win. But Aoki exacted his revenge less than three years later when he took his title back by submitting Folayang in the first round at ONE Championship 92 in March 2019.

Aoki would go on to lose his title to Christian Lee, but has since won three straight, most recently submitting James Nakashima in the first round in January. Meanwhile, Folayang dropped four of his past five, including stoppage losses to Aoki and former UFC lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez.

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‘ONE Championship 118: Inside the Matrix’ set for Oct. 30, features four title fights

ONE Championship 118 is now official for Oct. 30, and four championship fights headline the card.

ONE Championship 118 is now official for Oct. 30, and four championship fights headline the card.

ONE Championship CEO Chatri Sityodtong recently revealed the promotion’s plans, though he declined to name a location for the behind-closed-doors event, which will stream live on B/R Live.

In the night’s main event, two-division champion [autotag]Aung La N Sang[/autotag] (26-10) puts his light heavyweight title on the line against undefeated Dutch challenger [autotag]Reinier de Ridder[/autotag] (12-0).

Additionally, welterweight title holder [autotag]Christian Lee[/autotag] (13-3) puts his belt on the line against undefeated challenger [autotag]Iuri Lapicus[/autotag] (14-0), lightweight champion [autotag]Martin Nguyen[/autotag] (13-3) faces “The Ultimate Fighter 22” cast member [autotag]Thanh Le[/autotag] (11-2), and women’s flyweight champ [autotag]Jing Nan Xiong[/autotag] (14-2) faces [autotag]Tiffany Teo[/autotag] (9-1).

Additional fights are expected to be announced shortly.

“You know, I hate to sound trite but the show must go on, and what I have learned personally is that my team at ONE Championship, the resilience, the passion, the excellence, has far exceeded my expectations,” Sityodtong said on a recent media call promoting the event. “I will tell you that the morale internally in ONE Championship is at all-time high. People are just fired up.

“I always say that in crisis, you really discover who you are as a person, who you are as an individual, and as a team, and one quote that comes to mind, always is, you know, ‘Ships are not made for the calm waters of the harbor, ships are made for the rough seas in search of new horizons,’ and, ‘Great captains are made in rough seas, never in the calm of the harbor.’ That’s why I said, you know, I think, I genuinely believe that the best companies in the world will not only survive, they will thrive in the same way ONE Championship is thriving in this environment. The show must go on.”

ONE Championship hasn’t hosted a title fight since January’s ONE Championship 107 event in the Philippines.

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic forced ONE Championship officials to halt live events from March until late July, when the company set up shop for a string of six fight cards in Thailand.

Ahead of the Oct. 30 event, the promotion will host two cards in Singapore, starting with Friday’s “ONE Championship 116: Reign of Dynasties,” which streams on B/R Live.

The lineup for “ONE Championship 118: Inside the Matrix” currently includes:

  • Champ Aung La N Sang vs. Reinier de Ridder – for light heavyweight title
  • Champ Christian Lee vs. Iuri Lapicus – for welterweight title
  • Champ Martin Nguyen vs. Thanh Le – for lightweight title
  • Champ Jing Nan Xiong vs. Tiffany Teo – for women’s flyweight title
  • [autotag]Antonio Caruso[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag]

ONE Championship 107 results: Joshua Pacio not impressed after split-decision win

Joshua Pacio defended his title on home soil in Manila, but he wasn’t fully satisfied with his display against former champ Alex Silva.

ONE strawweight champion [autotag]Joshua Pacio[/autotag] edged out former champ [autotag]Alex Silva[/autotag] by split decision, then declared he was “not really impressed” with his performance.

Pacio went back and forth with former Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion Silva in a hard-fought, five-round main event at “ONE Championship 107: Fire & Fury” at Mall of Asia Arena in Manila, Philippines. But despite holding his own on the ground with the world-class former grappling ace, he said he feels he can still do better.

“It’s really hard,” he told the crowd after his victory. “I just fought two months ago and I needed to go back immediately to training camp for this fight. It’s the one thing we’ve been working on – our ground game.”

Pacio held the clear striking advantage and connected with a plethora of eye-catching strikes throughout the fight, but Silva’s relentless forward pressure ensured the defending champion was never fully comfortable during the matchup.

While Pacio dominated on the feet, Silva had the clear edge on the ground. But, despite pulling guard and securing takedowns throughout the fight, Silva found himself unable to lock up the submission he needed to pry the championship belt away from the Filipino.

Silva attempted a host of submissions during the bout, most notably a tight-looking arm-triangle choke, but Pacio always seemed to have the answers to whatever grappling offense “Little Rock” threw his way.

But with Silva on the attack on the mat and Pacio pushing forward on the feet, the judges were split on the outcome when the scorecards were gathered at the end of the bout.

The result left Pacio elated, but also slightly disappointed, as he explained after his victory.

“For me, I’m not really impressed with my performance,” he said. “I need to work more on my combinations and, of course, on my grappling skills.”

Buist bursts into title contention

In the night’s co-main event, Dutch striking specialist [autotag]Pieter Buist[/autotag] scored his eighth successive victory when he defeated former ONE lightweight champion [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag] for the biggest win of his MMA career.

Buist stepped in on short notice to replace Ahmed Mujtaba and produced a superb display of striking, while also highlighting his submission threat on the ground, as he earned the nod from two of the three cageside judges.

Buist made the first big breakthrough of the fight in the first round when connected with a big head kick, then a follow-up punch, midway through the opening round. The towering Dutch striker then stepped in and looked to lock up a tight guillotine choke, but Folayang kept his composure and eventually took his man to the mat, where he threatened with a guillotine of his own. Buist briefly escaped, but Folayang kept the pressure on and forced “The Archangel” onto the back foot for the remainder of the round.

Buist threatened again in Round 2 when he locked up a tight triangle armbar on the former lightweight champion. But, once again, Folayang managed to extricate himself from the predicament and finish up on top, where he landed offense of his own.

It set up a crucial final round and, after a quick show of respect as they hugged in the center of the cage, the battle recommenced. After a few range-finding kicks from both men, Buist connected with a right high kick to the head that briefly had Folayang on wobbly legs. The Dutchman then moved in and looked for another guillotine but, yet again, Folayang escaped. The pair then went toe to toe for the remainder of the fight, with Buist appearing to have the edge in with his range and accuracy.

That superiority in the stand-up, combined with his pursuit of submissions on the ground, was enough to earn the split-decision verdict and put him within striking distance of a shot at reigning ONE lightweight champion Christian Lee.

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Kingad wins on the cards

Filipino flyweight contender [autotag]Danny Kingad[/autotag] had the fans on their feet with a typically energetic performance, as he overcame a third-round head butt from opponent [autotag]Xie Wei[/autotag] and secured a unanimous decision victory.

Kingad started fast and appeared to have the edge in both speed and technique in the first two rounds as he edged the scrambles on the mat while holding the clear striking advantage on the feet.

But in the third round the Chinese athlete turned up the pressure and threatened with submission attempts. But his improved performance in the final frame was offset by a pair of fouls – a head butt and an illegal knee to the back of Kingad’s head – that twice saw him lose a dominant position.

It cost Wei crucial momentum just when he appeared to be working his way into the fight, and it eventually cost him any chance of the victory, as Kingad’s hand was raised at the end of three well-contested rounds.

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Adiwang delivers breakout performance

The event also marked the arrival of Team Lakay’s newest star, “The Thunder Kid” [autotag]Lito Adiwang[/autotag], who finished Thailand’s [autotag]Pongsiri Mitsatit[/autotag] with a Kimura to cap a hugely impressive display.

Adiwang came out all guns blazing, dropped Mitsatit and threatened to overwhelm Mitstit with a blistering salvo of punches, but somehow the Thai was able to weather the storm and get the fight back to the feet.

“The Thunder Kid” would not be denied, however, and showed that he had submission skills to match his heavy hands as he locked up a nasty Kimura to force the gritty Mitsatit to tap midway through the opening round.

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Iniong turns to grappling to claim victory

Team Lakay’s big night kicked off with a dominant victory from women’s atomweight contender [autotag]Gina Iniong[/autotag], who defeated India’s [autotag]Asha Roka[/autotag] on the preliminary card.

Roka had secured all four of her professional MMA wins inside the opening round, but was outgrappled by ONE muay Thai and kickboxing champion Stamp Fairtex in her last outing.

Iniong clearly paid attention to that matchup, as she abandoned her usual wushu striking in favor of a grapple-first approach that saw her cruise to a unanimous decision win after three dominant rounds.

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ONE Championship 107 results:

MAIN CARD

  • Champion Joshua Pacio def. Alex Silva via split decision – for strawweight title
  • Pieter Buist def. Eduard Folayang via split decision
  • Danny Kingad def. Xie Wei via unanimous decision
  • [autotag]Shoko Sato[/autotag] def. [autotag]Kwon Won Il[/autotag] via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 1, 4:05

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • [autotag]Tatsumitsu Wada[/autotag] def.[autotag] Ivanildo Delfino[/autotag] via unanimous decision
  • Lito Adiwang def. Pongsiri Mitsatit via submission (Kimura) – Round 1, 3:02
  • Gina Iniong def. Asha Roka via unanimous decision
  • [autotag]Jenny Huang[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jomary Torres[/autotag] declared no contest (accidental groin strike) – Round 1

‘ONE Championship 107: Fire & Fury’ live results

Stay up to date with MMA Junkie’s live results as Filipino strawweight champion Joshua “The Passion” Pacio puts his title on the line against former champion Alex “Little Rock” Silva in Manila.

The second big event of ONE Championship’s 2020 calendar, “Fire & Fury” sees the Asian promotion return to Manila’s Mall of Asia Arena with a card featuring eight MMA bouts, with six of the eight matchups featuring Filipino athletes.

Headlining the card is a battle for the ONE strawweight title, as local hero and reigning champion [autotag]Joshua Pacio[/autotag] (18-3) puts his title on the line against Brazil’s former champion [autotag]Alex Silva[/autotag] (9-4), while Filipino fan-favorite and former two-time lightweight champion [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag] (22-8) will look to move one step closer to a shot at his old title when he faces Dutch contender [autotag]Pieter Buist[/autotag] (16-4) in the night’s co-main event.

Two former victims of Demetrious Johnson are set for action in separate matchups as [autotag]Danny Kingad[/autotag] (13-2) and [autotag]Tatsumitsu Wada[/autotag] (22-11-2) take on [autotag]Xie Wei[/autotag] (5-2) and [autotag]Ivanildo Delfino[/autotag] (8-0), respectively.

The card also features a pivotal bout in the ONE bantamweight division, as South Korean knockout artist [autotag]Kwon Won Il[/autotag] (8-2) returns to action against former Shooto bantamweight champion [autotag]Shoko Sato[/autotag] (34-16-3), who is riding a five-fight, five-finish win streak and has lost just once since 2015.

“ONE Championship 107: Fire & Fury” live results include:

MAIN CARD (B/R Live, 7:30 a.m. ET)

  • Champion Joshua Pacio vs. Alex Silva – for strawweight title
  • Pieter Buist vs. Eduard Folayang
  • Danny Kingad vs. Xie Wei
  • Kwon Won Il vs. Shoko Sato

PRELIMINARY CARD (5 a.m. ET)

  • Ivanildo Delfino vs. Tatsumitsu Wada
  • [autotag]Lito Adiwang[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Pongsiri Mitsatit[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Gina Iniong[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Asha Roka[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Jenny Huang[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jomary Torres[/autotag]

ONE Championship 107: Team Lakay’s Filipino quartet set to fly the flag on home soil

The Filipino stars of Team Lakay will take center stage in Manila as ONE Championship returns to the Mall of Asia Arena for “Fire and Fury.”

The ONE Championship cage returns to the Mall of Asia Arena in Manila on Friday, with Filipino champion [autotag]Joshua Pacio[/autotag] (18-3) set for top billing.

The two-time ONE strawweight champion will take on a former champ, Brazil’s Alex Silva (9-4), in the main event of a fight card that is packed with some of the biggest martial arts stars from the region.

The co-main event features Pacio’s teammate and former two-time lightweight champion [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag] (22-8), who takes on dangerous late replacement Pieter Buist (16-4) from the Netherlands, while further main card support comes from another Filipino star, flyweight [autotag]Danny Kingad[/autotag] (13-2), who takes on China’s Xie Wei (5-2).

The trio, along with women’s atomweight contender [autotag]Gina Iniong[/autotag] (8-4), are set for action on home soil as they look to produce another big night for their gym, Team Lakay.

The team, based in Baguio City and run by head coach Mark Sangiao, identifies talented wushu prospects from the city’s University of the Cordilleras and builds their skillsets in preparation for a career in the cage. It’s a successful formula, with the team producing a host of notable champions in recent years, with Pacio (strawweight), Folayang (lightweight), Honorio Banario (featherweight), Geje Eustaquio (flyweight) and Kevin Belingon (bantamweight) all capturing championship gold in ONE Championship, while fellow teammate Stephen Loman currently holds the Brave CF bantamweight title.

With such a strong roster of athletes, Team Lakay always figures prominently whenever ONE brings a fight card to the Philippines, and the success of their fighters on the big stage has led to the collective becoming one of the most well-regarded camps in Asia.

If there was one criticism of Team Lakay’s fighters a couple of years ago, it was the fact that they lacked the grappling acumen to effectively compete on the mat, but over the last 18 months, the team has made great strides, and their top fighters now possess solid scrambling ability, with the likes of Pacio in particular showing a real talent for submissions. Indeed, his modified kimura finish of Pongsiri Mitsatit in July 2018 became known as “The Passion Lock” in his honor.

Now the man known as “The Passion” makes his return to the cage on Friday as he looks to complete the second successful defense of the strawweight title.

Pacio captured the strap with a unanimous decision win over Japan’s Yoshitaka Naito in September 2018, then lost a razor-thin split decision to Naito’s compatriot Yosuke Saruta in January 2019. The Filipino bounced back in the rematch and finished Saruta by knockout three months later to reclaim the title, then cemented his status as the premier strawweight in Asia with an arm-triangle finish of Filipino veteran Rene Catalan last November.

Now Pacio faces former champion Silva, a former Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion who has claimed seven of his eight ONE Championship victories by submission. Four of those wins have come via armbar, and a pair of back-to-back finishes with the technique has propelled him back into title contention once again as he bids to become a two-time champion.

Former lightweight champ Folayang faces a tough road back to the top of the super-competitive ONE lightweight division, but it’s a journey he has successfully completed before. The spectacular striker, known for his spinning back kicks, defeated Japanese legend Shinya Aoki to win the title back in November 2016, then, after losing the belt the following year, reclaimed it in 2018 to become a two-time champion. A loss to an inspired Aoki at ONE’s first event in Japan saw him lose the belt again, and now “Landslide” is looking to build momentum and work his way back to the belt once more.

Ably supported by flyweight contender Kingad and women’s atomweight contender Iniong, Pacio and Folayang will receive the lion’s share of the support on fight night when they return to action in front of their fellow countrymen at the Mall of Asia Arena on Jan. 31.

The latest “ONE Championship 107: Fire & Fury” fight card includes:

MAIN CARD (B/R Live, 7:30 a.m. ET)

  • Champion Joshua Pacio vs. Alex Silva – for strawweight title
  • Pieter Buist vs. Eduard Folayang
  • Danny Kingad vs. Xie Wei
  • Kwon Won Il vs. Shoko Sato

PRELIMINARY CARD (5 a.m. ET)

  • Ivanildo Delfino vs. Tatsumitsu Wada
  • Lito Adiwang vs. Pongsiri Mitsatit
  • Gina Iniong vs. Asha Roka
  • Jenny Huang vs. Jomary Torres

Joshua Pacio defends 125-pound title vs. Alex Silva in ONE Championship 107 main event

TheΒ 125-pound title will be on the line when ONE Championship returns to its regular stomping grounds in the Philippines in January.

TheΒ 125-pound title will be on the line when ONE Championship returns to its regular stomping grounds in the Philippines in January.

“ONE Championship 107: Fire & Fury” is set for Jan. 31 at Mall of Asia Arena in Manila, the promotion announced Thursday. The card will stream on the B/R Live app.

In the headliner, strawweight (125 pounds for ONE) champion [autotag]Joshua Pacio[/autotag] (18-3) will defend his title in front of his home fans against former champion [autotag]Alex Silva[/autotag] (9-4). And former lightweight champion [autotag]Eduard Folayang[/autotag] (22-8) gets a home fight when he takes on [autotag]Ahmed Mujtaba[/autotag] (8-2).

The 23-year-old Pacio won the title in September 2018 with a unanimous decision over Yoshitaka Naito. But in his first defense four months later, he lost a split call to Yosuke Saruta and surrendered the belt.

He got a rematch three months later, though, and took Saruta out with a fourth-round knockout. Then, just a month ago, he defended the title with a second-round submission of Rene Catalan in Manila.

Silva beat Naito to win the title in December 2017, but lost it to him in a split decision in May 2018. He then dropped a decision to Saruta for the first consecutive losses of his career, and after Naito had lost the title to Pacio, Silva fought him in a rematch and lost a unanimous decision in May.

But he’s been on the upswing the past few months and has back-to-back second-round armbar wins over STefer Rahardian and Xuewen Peng to cement himself back into the title picture. Eight of the Brazilian’s nine career wins have come by submission.

The ONE Championship 107 lineup includes:

  • Joshua Pacio vs. Alex Silva – for strawweight title
  • Eduard Folayang vs. Ahmed Mujtaba
  • [autotag]Danny Kingad[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Wei Xie[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Won Il Kwon[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Shoko Sato[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Lito Adiwang[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Pongsiri Mitsatit[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Gina Iniong[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Asha Roka[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Jenny Huang[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jomary Torres[/autotag]

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