SINGAPORE – The death of 18-year-old rising MMA star Victoria "The Prodigy" Lee, announced at the weekend, has prompted an outpouring of tributes from people associated with the sport.
Asia-based ONE MMA Championship chief Chatri Sityodtong said he was "heartbroken" by Lee's passing and that he would remember her "for the beautiful and precious soul that she was."
Lee came from a family of champion MMA fighters — her older sister Angela is the ONE Championship atomweight world title holder while her brother Christian holds the ONE lightweight title.
"I first met Victoria when she was 11 years old. I watched her blossom over the years as a martial artist and a human being," Sityodtong wrote on his Facebook page on Sunday.
Indian-Canadian mixed martial arts star Gurdarshan Mangat tweeted: "This one is tough. Her energy was felt whether you knew her or not.
"She was destined for greatness. I just pray she knew that before she left us. That she truly was a light."
Lee died on Boxing Day but was only announced late Saturday by her sister Angela on Instagram.
"We miss you so much sis. More than you could ever realise," Angela wrote.
"We're all broken. Because a piece of you was in each of us and when you left, those pieces were ripped out of us. We will never be the same."
The cause of death was not revealed by her family.
Lee was born and raised in Hawaii to a Singaporean father and South Korean-Canadian mother and fought under the Singapore flag.
She had her first MMA fight at 16 and her last bout was in September 2021.
According to the ONE website, the young Lee had put competition on the back burner in 2022 to focus on graduating from high school, but she had planned to make a big return in 2023.
Lee had a close relationship with her siblings, baking treats after each of their victories.
"This time he requested a banana cake. So, as soon as we finished watching the fight, I was in the kitchen baking for him," she was quoted as saying in the ONE website after her brother won a title match recently.