From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search

World Lethwei Championship (also known as WLC) is a Lethwei promotion based in Yangon, Myanmar.[5]

The promotion revolutionized the millennia-old Burmese martial of Lethwei with new innovations to showcase it to the world.[6][7] WLC events combine the historic traditions of Lethwei with live entertainment, pyrotechnics, enticing fighter entrances, music and dancers.[8]

The first World Lethwei Championship event was held on in Yangon, Myanmar. The promotion has produced events all around Myanmar with shows being held in Hpa-an, Yangon, Naypitaw and Mandalay.

History

Formation

The success of ONE Championship's mixed martial arts events in Myanmar caught the eye of Zaykabar Company Vice-Chairman Zay Thiha, who decided to bring world-class Lethwei events the world.[9] The businessman started Lekkha Moun Co in 2015[2] and the World Lethwei Championship was officially founded in August 2017 by Zay Thiha and investors, as a subsidiary of Lekkha Moun Co.[10]

Inaugural event

In 2017, WLC signed Myanmar's top Lethwei fighters Tun Tun Min & Too Too.[11] The first WLC event, titled WLC 1: The Great Beginning, was held on 3 March 2017 at Mingalardon Event Zone in Mingaladon Township, Yangon, Myanmar.[12][13]

Signing Dave Leduc

In March 2019, the promotion announced that it had signed Lethwei superstar Dave Leduc[14] to an exclusive contract.[15] The exclusive contract would make it impossible for him to defend his various titles from other promotions.[16] Leduc held a press conference at the Karaweik Palace in Yangon to announce that he was vacating three of his four Lethwei world titles.[17][18]

For Leduc's promotional debut at WLC 9: King of Nine Limbs, the WLC signed former UFC welterweight Seth Baczynski.[19] Leduc knocked out Baczynski with punches to win the inaugural WLC Cruiserweight Championship.[20] Since the event had a significant viewership success on UFC Fight Pass and won awards in Asia, Leduc received a $50,000 bonus for his performance and marketing efforts.[21]

International expansion

While on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, Dave Leduc announced that the organization had plans to host an historical event in the United States.[22] At the pre-fight press conference for WLC 11: Battlebones, WLC executive director Sein Phyo Hlaing revealed plans to expand globally in 2020,[3] beginning with Cambodia,[23] Thailand, Japan and the United States.[24][25] As the promotion expands internationally, it plans to sign even more free-agents with recognizable names to compete in Lethwei.[1]

ONE Championship partnership

In 2017, the WLC entered into a partnership to share fighters with the mixed martial arts promotion ONE Championship.[26]

Women division

Cambodia's Nou Srey Pov became the first female winner in World Lethwei Championship, defeating Shwe Sin Min and Shwe Nadi in 2018. [27]

In 2019, WLC announced it will commit to the female Lethwei division with a dedicated female match at every event. It held its first female fight after the announcement featuring France's Souris Manfredi and Eh Yanut from Cambodia at WLC 9: King of Nine Limbs on 2 August in Mandalay, Myanmar.[28] Manfredi became the first winner of the newly created women’s division by defeating Yanut.[29]

Broadcast

Myanmar

Sky Net was the first television channel to broadcast the WLC events live in Myanmar and were then delayed telecast in over 40 countries worldwide.[30]

In 2018, WLC signed a broadcasting deal with international broadcaster Canal+ for exclusive broadcasting rights in Myanmar.[31][32]

Outside Myanmar

The end of 2018, the WLC marked Lethwei history by signing a deal with the Ultimate Fighting Championship[33] and having its first Lethwei event broadcast live on UFC Fight Pass.[34][35]

World Lethwei Championship is also available in over 100 countries through broadcast deals with Fight Network,[36] Arena Sport, Fox Sports, Star Sports, Bayon Television, Titan Channel, Sport Extra and StarTimes.

Sponsorship

  • Fuso
  • AGD Bank
  • UFC Fight Pass
  • Canal+
  • SPEED Energy Drink
  • 5BB Broadband
  • Max Myanmar Group and Consumer Goods Myanmar Co.[2][37]
  • Fightbro
  • Sogo Plastics

Events

Champions

World Champions

Myanmar National Champion

World championship history

Cruiserweight Championship

Weight limit: 79 kg (174.2 lb) to 83 kg (183.0 lb)

Middleweight Championship

Weight limit: 71 kg (156.5 lb) to 75 kg (165.3 lb)

Light Middleweight Championship

Weight limit: 67 kg (147.7 lb) to71 kg (156.5 lb)

Light Welterweight Championship

Weight limit: 60 kg (132.3 lb) to 63.5 kg (140.0 lb)

Women's Bantamweight Championship

Weight limit: 51 kg (112.4 lb) to 54 kg (119.0 lb)

Rules

The WLC uses the modern Lethwei rules also known as tournament rules first established in 1996 by the Myanmar Lethwei Federation.

Rounds

Each bout can be booked as a 3, 4 or 5 round fight with 3 minutes per round and a 2-minute break in between rounds. Championship bouts are 5 round fights with 3 minutes per round and a 2-minute break between rounds.

Judging

In the event that a bout goes the distance, it will go to the judges decision. The 3 judges will score the bout based on number of strikes per round. Fighters have a maximum of 3 knockdowns per round and 4 knockdowns in the entire fight before the fight is ruled a knockout.

Weight classes

Awards

  • Lethwei World
    • 2019 Lethwei Promotion of the year[38]
    • 2019 Event of the Year WLC 9[38]
  • Spia Asia Awards
    • 2019 Best Sport Tourism Destination Campaign of the Year - Bronze WLC 9[39]
  • Asian Academy Awards
    • 2019 Best Sport Program - National Winner WLC 9[40]

Notable fighters

  • Tun Tun Min
  • Dave Leduc
  • Too Too
  • Soe Lin Oo
  • Mite Yine
  • Saw Ba Oo
  • Sasha Moisa
  • Artur Saladiak
  • Naimjon Tuhtaboyev
  • Nguyễn Trần Duy Nhất
  • Umar Semata
  • Seth Baczynski

See also

  • Myanmar Traditional Lethwei Federation
  • List of Lethwei fighters

References

  1. ^ a b John Morgan (31 January 2020). "World Lethwei Championship plans 2020 debut in U.S., eyes free-agent signings". APMMA.
  2. ^ a b c Kang Wan Chern (25 May 2018). "The economics behind World Lethwei Championship".
  3. ^ a b Leon Jennings (31 January 2020). "THE WORLD LETHWEI CHAMPIONSHIP PLANS TO GO GLOBAL IN 2020". APMMA.
  4. ^ "Local Company List For Registration On (22-6-2016)In Yangon Region" (PDF). DICA. 16 May 2017.
  5. ^ "World's Largest Bareknuckle Fighting Organization Sets Event for 10,000 Seat Indoor Stadium". mymmanews.com. 23 May 2017.
  6. ^ Eric Kowal. "World's largest bareknuckle fighting organization sets event for 10,000 seat indoor stadium". My MMA News. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  7. ^ Ismail Vorajee (28 September 2018). "Cambodians test Lethwei mettle". Khmer Times.
  8. ^ Matt Eaton (16 May 2017). "World Lethwei Championship 1: The Great Beginning". The Fight Nation.
  9. ^ "Zay Thiha: Bringing Lethwei to the World". ROUGH Magazine. 11 August 2017.
  10. ^ "World Lethwei Championship: Biggest Int'l. Lethwei Competition in Myanmar". myanmaritv. 25 May 2017.
  11. ^ "၂၀၁၇ တြင္ က်င္းပမည့္ ျမန္မာ့႐ိုးရာ လက္ေ၀ွ႔ပြဲတြင္ ထိုးသတ္ရန္ ႏိုင္ငံျခားသားႏွစ္ဦးႏွင့္ စာခ်ဳပ္". DVB.com. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  12. ^ "World Lethwei championship to be held in Myanmar". sports360. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  13. ^ "ကမာၻ႕ခ်န္ပီယံရွစ္ ရိုးရာလက္ေ၀ွ႕ၿပိဳင္ပြဲ အဓိကတြဲဆိုင္းတြင္ ျမန္မာျပည္ခ်န္ပီယံထြန္းထြန္းမင္း အဂၤလန္ ႏိုင္ငံသား နီကိုးလက္စ္ကာတာကို အလဲထိုးအႏိုင္ရ (ရုပ္သံ)". Eleven Broadcasting. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  14. ^ Eaton, Matt (10 March 2019). "DAVE LEDUC SIGNS WITH WLC: "I WANT ALL THE BELTS"". The Fight Nation.
  15. ^ Misah Norouzi (13 March 2019). "DAVE LEDUC SIGNS WITH WLC, BARE-KNUCKLE FIGHTING ORGANIZATION". Fight Mag.
  16. ^ Thiha (25 March 2019). "မြန်မာ့ရိုးရာလက်ဝှေ့ချန်ပီယံ ဒေ့ဗ် (Dave Leduc) နဲ့ စာနယ်ဇင်းမီဒီယာများတွေ့ဆုံပွဲ". Yoyarlay.
  17. ^ Eaton, Matt (26 March 2019). "DAVE LEDUC CLEARS THE DECKS FOR WLC". The Fight Nation.
  18. ^ Rae, Steven (28 March 2019). "Dave Leduc vacates three Lethwei titles; will fight exclusively for World Lethwei Championship". The Body Lock.
  19. ^ Jason Burgos (2 May 2019). "UFC VETERAN SETH BACZYNSKI SIGNS MULTI-FIGHT DEAL WITH WORLD LETHWEI CHAMPIONSHIP". Sherdog.
  20. ^ "Leduc lifts wlc cruiserweight belt by ko against baczynski". www.fightmag.com.au. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  21. ^ Matthew Carter (2 January 2020). "WLC 9 Bonus : Dave Leduc Scores Belated $50,000". Lethwei World.
  22. ^ Matt Eaton (29 October 2019). "DAVE LEDUC SAYS LETHWEI IS COMING TO THE USA". The Fight Nation. Archived from the original on 2 February 2020.
  23. ^ Steven Rae (13 June 2019). "The WLC is looking to expand its horizons, and Cambodia may be the first stop". The Body Lock.
  24. ^ Nyi Min Han (15 May 2020). "The Next Four Countries to Host World Lethwei Championship". Combat Overload.
  25. ^ Matt Eaton (30 January 2020). "WORLD LETHWEI CHAMPIONSHIP IS GOING GLOBAL IN 2020". The Fight Nation.
  26. ^ "World Lethwei championship to be held in Myanmar". Sport 360. 16 February 2017.
  27. ^ "Srey Pov wins again in Burmese Lethwei". Khmer Times. 4 June 2018.
  28. ^ Gerald Ng (21 January 2020). "SOURIS MANFREDI EYES HISTORY AS THE FIRST FEMALE LETHWEI CHAMPION". FightMag.
  29. ^ "Yanut comes up short in WLC debut". Khmer Times. 4 August 2019.
  30. ^ "WLC Lethwei Challenge In Naypyidaw To Be Broadcast Live". MyanmarDigitalNews. 1 June 2018.
  31. ^ "WLC-7: "Mighty Warriors" to take place in Mandalay". Myanmar Digital News. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  32. ^ Eric Kowal (11 August 2017). "Middleweight World Lethwei Champion Too Too to defend against Ukrainian star Vasyl Sorokin". MyMMANews.
  33. ^ TFN Staff (4 January 2019). "Lethwei Is Coming To UFC Fight Pass". The Fight Nation.
  34. ^ "2019 UFC Fight Pass schedule includes PPV prelims, boxing, Lethwei". MMAfighting. 31 December 2018.
  35. ^ "World Lethwei Championship Lines Up Big Card for UFC Fight Pass Debut". The Fight Nation. 31 January 2019. Archived from the original on 2 February 2020.
  36. ^ [World Lethwei Championship] Anthem Sports Entertainments Fight Network inks distribution in middle east, retrieved 17 September 2020
  37. ^ Callum McCarthy, Europe office (15 October 2019). "Lethwei, Myanmar's best-kept secret, is preparing for the global stage". Sports Business.
  38. ^ a b Matthew Carter (2 January 2020). "2019 Lethwei World Awards". Lethwei World.
  39. ^ "SPIA Asia 2019 Winners". Spia Asia. Retrieved 2 January 2020.
  40. ^ "NATIONAL WINNERS 2020" (PDF). Asian Academy Awards. Retrieved 15 October 2020.

External links

  • World Lethwei Championship on Facebook
  • WLC Official Website
  • WLC YouTube channel