China aims to knock out ‘unsafe’ freestyle and MMA fights
- Country’s top sports body says rules are needed to improve organisation of the bouts
- Proposal follows series of one-sided match-ups between traditional martial artists and MMA fighters
In a notice on Thursday, the General Administration of Sport said regulation was needed to improve the safety of competitions with the emergence of free fighting, MMA fighting and professional boxing.
“[Some competitions] have unclear rules, unregulated organisation and faulty safety measures on site,” the notice said.
It said standards needed to be set for fights, and organisers who flouted the rules would be blacklisted and punished.
Chinese MMA fighter Xu Xiaodong slams tai chi master for threatening Wuhan Diary author Fang Fang
The Chinese Wushu Association, which oversees and promotes martial arts as a form of cultural heritage, followed the announcement with a call on Friday urging wushu practitioners to not take part in unregulated competitions and not represent their martial arts traditions in MMA fighting.
The association had called a stop to a total of 16 “unauthorised competitions” since June, China Sports Daily reported.
A spokesman for the association said it would push for standardised and regulated martial arts competitions; an improved registration system for MMA fighters, coaches and referees; as well as safety assessments and ratings for these competitions.
05:11
Meet Xu Xiaodong, the MMA fighter on a mission to expose 'fake' martial arts
Wei had earlier bragged about his skills and showed his “inner energy” smashing a watermelon in an interview with state broadcaster CCTV.
But he was knocked out in less than 10 seconds in his match-up with Xu, prompting many commentators to say the fight was a clear victory for modern combat techniques over traditional styles.
Weeks later, Xu and three other MMA fighters planned to take on four tai chi experts in a “group brawl”, but the fight was broken up by police.
Xu then embarked on a mission to “expose fake kung fu” by beating up “frauds” in sanctioned fights in China.
He publicly called these masters “liars” and said traditional kung fu needed to be improved.
Other MMA fighters have since taken on practitioners of traditional martial arts.
Days before the fight, Ma had publicly challenged Ultimate Fighting Championship gold belt winner Zhang Weili, saying he could take her “for three whole minutes without panting”.
Tai chi and other types of martial arts remain popular in China as morning exercises and themes for TV shows.