Pang Draws Korea’s Nam Yui Chul at Legend FC’s Inaugural Event
January 11th, 2010January 11, 2010 – Hong Kong, PRC
MMA has continued to take its initial steps into southern China at the first Legend FC event, held at the Star Hall in Kowloon. The card featured a truly international roster, with fighters from Australia, Korea, Thailand, New Zealand, China, Mongolia, Japan, and the Philippines testing their skills and putting on an exciting show for the fans in attendance.
In the main event of the evening, Australia’s Adrian Pang took Korea’s Nam Yui Chul to a very hard-fought majority draw. The fighters engaged in quick and heated exchanges early, with Nam landing the harder and more effective shots. As the fight went to the floor the Korean showed his ground skills as he controlled Pang and was able to land some heavy top-position punches. Pang was able to return the fight to the feet, where he began to land solid knees from the clinch and effective kicks to the body and legs of Nam. As the first frame ended Pang was the worse for wear, his right eye swollen shut from Nam’s punches.
Despite the damage taken in round one, Pang began the second frame with renewed vigor as he landed crisp combinations on the feet. A short right hook from Pang staggered his Korean opponent and proved to be his most significant strike of the fight. After a few furious exchanges, Nam was able to score a takedown and control from top position for the remainder of the round.
Perhaps feeling he had done enough to win on the scorecards, Nam played a cautious game in round three as he evaded Pang and picked his shots. Pang pressed the action and landed some effective kicks to the lead leg and body of Nam, but was unable to put his opponent in any danger as the fight ended. After prolonged deliberation by the judges, Nam and Pang entertained the crowd with an arm wrestling match in the center of the ring. The decision came back 28-28, 28-28, and 29-28 for a majority draw.
Zhao Zilong Destroys Vicente Pajaro
It did not take long for former King of Sanda Zhao Zilong to dispatch Filipino fighter Vicente Pajaro. Pajaro is trained in Hybrid Yaw-Yan, a style developed in his home country of the Philippines. The style did not serve him well as he came forward with slow, loose, sloppy punches and kicks while his Chinese opponent picked him apart with straight one-two combinations. After 90 seconds of taking heavy shots to the face, Pajaro was completely gassed and did not react as Zilong threw the headkick that finished the fight at barely two minutes of the first round.
“No Contest” Declared for Andrews and Munkhbayasgalan
An interesting matchup ended early and unfortunately as Australia’s Dylan Andrews was struck in the back of the head while attempting a takedown on Mongolian grappler Dorjderem Munkhbayasgalan. Andrews immediately flopped to his back and was unconscious for several minutes while the doctors attempted to revive him. Once he regained consciousness he was clearly unaware of where he was or what happened, but was eventually able to leave the ring on his feet. As the infraction occurred early in the fight, the bout was ruled a “no contest.” A rematch at the next Legend FC event is surely in order.
Watanabe Taps With One Second Remaining
Japan’s Yoshitomo Watanabe succumbed to a triangle choke with just one second remaining in round two of his bout with South Korea’s Bae Myung Ho. The Japanese fighter was on the defensive from the opening bell as Bae’s superior grappling skills allowed him to control the fight on the ground for the duration of round one. Round two again belonged to the Korean grappler as he took Watanabe’s back and controlled position while attempting submissions. Bae was rolled to his back but sunk a triangle choke for the win at 4:59 of the second frame.
Preliminary Bouts
Hong Kong’s own Kenny Yeung weathered an early storm to come back and finish Mongolia’s Khuukhenkhuu Amartuvshin. Yeung was staggered with a wild right hook and went on the defensive as he took heavy shots from his opponent for the first few minutes of the opening frame. Yeung began to find success when he started using crisp leg kicks and jabs to keep his opponent at bay. A stiff double jab by Yeung put Amartuvshin on the defensive and the Hong Kong native was able to find success in the clinch with hard knees and elbows.
Both fighters were gassed as they came out for round two, but Yeung continued his assault of leg kicks and stiff one-two combinations. The corner of Amartuvshin decided that their fighter had taken enough damage as they threw in the towel at 2:29 of round two.
Exciting Thai striker Arthit Hanchana logged another submission loss onto his record as he taps to a knee bar from Australian Matt Cain. Hanchana, coming off a submission loss to China’s up-and-comer Wu Hao Tian at Art of War 15, showed good takedown defense early but was eventually put on his back. In response to Hanchana’s improved guardwork, Cain dropped back for a heel hook. Hanchana turned the wrong way to escape, which allowed Cain to transition to the knee bar for the win at 3:32 of round one.
Korea’s Kwon A Sol outclassed Japan’s Masaya Doi to win a unanimous decision. After a tentative first round, Doi began throwing wild hooks and pushing the pace while the more disciplined striker from Korea landed effective counters and strikes from the clinch. By the third frame Kwon was the fresher fighter, but was unable to land the finishing blow, the final scorecards reading 30-26, 30-27, and 29-28 in favor of the Korean.
Someone clearly forgot to invite China’s Yang Jian Ping to the rules meeting, as his repeated fouls eventually led to his disqualification in round two. Yang repeatedly struck his opponent, Takuma Wakabayashi, to the back of the head as the Japanese grappler dove for takedowns. After the referee finally issued a warning, the young Chinese fighter then switched to grabbing the ropes to defend the takedown attempts. After four minutes of continuous rule-breaking, the referee finally issued a yellow card. In round two, Yang Jian Ping attempted to kick his opponent to the head while he was on the ground, which earned him a well-deserved red card. After a few minutes of deliberation the referee decided to go ahead and disqualify the Chinese fighter.
In the opening bout of the evening, Korea’s Jo Nam Jin submitted Australia’s Michael Mortimer with a triangle choke at 3:22 of round one.
Adrian Pang vs. Nam Yui Chul, Majority Draw
Zhao Zilong def. Vicente Pajaro by TKO, R1
Dylan Andrews vs. Dorjderem Munkhbayasgalan, No Contest
Bae Myung Ho def. Yoshitomo Watanabe by Submission (Triangle Choke), R2
Kenny Yeung def. Khuukhenkhuu Amartuvshin by TKO, R2
Matt Cain def. Arthit Hanchana by Submission (Knee Bar), R1
Kwon A Sol def. Masaya Doi by Unanimous Decision
Takuma Wakabayashi def. Yang Jian Ping by DQ, R2
Jo Nam Jin def. Michael Mortimer by Submission (Triangle Choke), R1


