Baguio City’s Team Lakay cleans out URCC
The 10th installment of the Universal Reality Combat Challenge (URCC X) couldn’t have gone any better for
After three one-sided main event fights, Team Lakay finished with nothing less than top honors. Eduard Folayang and Kevin Belingon were both crowned new champions after winning the welterweight and flyweight belts, respectively, while Rey Docyogen successfully defended his pinweight title. The competition had no chance.
The atmosphere inside the NBC Tent couldn’t have been more Manila-centered. A majority of the crowd attended the event to witness the fights of crowd favorites Richard Lasprilla and Allan Co, members of
URCC X’s three main event fights looked like a match-up between the more popular Team DEFTAC (URCC’s poster team owned also by URCC Chairman, Alvin Aguilar) and
Team Lakay is the brainchild of Mark Sangiao, head coach of the Cordillera chapter in
Combining Sanshou with mixed martial arts is Mark’s personal philosophy, and he explains why the two go naturally together. “Yung Sanshou kumpleto na, may striking at may takedown. Dagdagan mo na lang ng grappling, kumpleto na siya.” Mixed martial arts is a competition where being well-rounded in all aspects of fighting determines superiority in the ring, and in the case of Team Lakay, Mark makes sure that he and his fighters have all angles covered.
Before adding the mixed martial art aspect to the technique, however, Mark makes sure that the striking aspect is down pat. “Dapat inuuna yung striking, tapos susunod yung wrestling takedown; yung huli na lang yung grappling.” From a spectator’s perspective, this makes for a more exciting match because the fighters aren’t just on the ground wrestling each other. It is this aggressiveness in striking, as well as sheer strength, that won the matches for Team Lakay. This hybrid discipline of Sanshou and mixed marital arts has been especially effective for Mark and Team Lakay. He notes that, out of 30 fights since 2003, they have lost only one.
Mixed martial arts in the
As for going international, Mark says that Filipinos can make it and that, skill-wise, we can keep up with the best in the world. Weight, however, is a big problem for Filipino fighters who want to go international. We as a people aren’t exactly built large, and this poses a problem in the international arena. “Yung timbang na sikat sa UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship, an international fighting competition) ay mabigat talaga. Meron tayong isa o dalawang fighters na makaka-shoot sa UFC or sa Pride (another international competition). Sa Pride may Asians din naman na nag lalaban talaga doon. Usually ang televised sa UFC na lightweight ay 150 to 160 pounds. Yun na yung lightweight nila para sa TV.”
Before thinking internationally, however, we must realize that there is a lot of untapped talent in areas of the
For now, Mark and the rest of Team Lakay are going back up to the mountains of
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For more information about Team Lakay, visit their website at www.teamlakay.co.nr. E-mail me at enricomiguelsubido@yahoo.com.