WANT TO FIGHT?
Do you live in Shanghai? Are you legally employed in China? Are you looking for a fight? If so, I can help you find one and train you to win.
NOTE: you must be legally employed in China in order to fight here. You must be a legal resident with a valid work visa in order to fight professionally in the People's Republic of China. No exceptions! That's the law. I cannot give you a visa, or pay your way to get here if you live outside of China.
I am not a fight promoter, headhunter, or agent. I do not get paid to scout out talent. I am first and foremost, a martial artists. My interest in competition is to offer my students a chance to test themselves in the most pragmatic arena possible: a real live fight.
If competition is your goal I will help you find a fight and get you the training you need to win.
PROFESSIONAL:
Fight promoters in China are constantly looking for foreign fighters to compete on their shows against some of the best pro fighters China has to offer in K-1 kickboxing, Muay Thai, Sanda, and MMA. I'll be honest, many of these promoters are simply looking for tough looking, but ultimately under-trained foreign faces to make their local champ look good by comparison. I don't believe in sending my students out to lose. If you want to play in this league, you must be ready to stand tall when the cards are stacked against you, and believe me, they will be.
AMATEUR:
Over the last few years, students from several of Shanghai's martial arts clubs have hosted amateur invitational tournaments and exhibitions for the sports of MMA, Muay Thai, Boxing, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, No-Gi Submission Grappling, Karate, Taekwondo, and Kickboxing. The links below list some of the stats from those competitions. If you are interested in gaining competition experience for the first time, or simply competing as a hobby , few things are stronger teaching tools for a martial artist than competition. If you have results from local amateur competitions, please contact me so I can update my database.
NOTE: you must be legally employed in China in order to fight here. You must be a legal resident with a valid work visa in order to fight professionally in the People's Republic of China. No exceptions! That's the law. I cannot give you a visa, or pay your way to get here if you live outside of China.
I am not a fight promoter, headhunter, or agent. I do not get paid to scout out talent. I am first and foremost, a martial artists. My interest in competition is to offer my students a chance to test themselves in the most pragmatic arena possible: a real live fight.
If competition is your goal I will help you find a fight and get you the training you need to win.
PROFESSIONAL:
Fight promoters in China are constantly looking for foreign fighters to compete on their shows against some of the best pro fighters China has to offer in K-1 kickboxing, Muay Thai, Sanda, and MMA. I'll be honest, many of these promoters are simply looking for tough looking, but ultimately under-trained foreign faces to make their local champ look good by comparison. I don't believe in sending my students out to lose. If you want to play in this league, you must be ready to stand tall when the cards are stacked against you, and believe me, they will be.
AMATEUR:
Over the last few years, students from several of Shanghai's martial arts clubs have hosted amateur invitational tournaments and exhibitions for the sports of MMA, Muay Thai, Boxing, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, No-Gi Submission Grappling, Karate, Taekwondo, and Kickboxing. The links below list some of the stats from those competitions. If you are interested in gaining competition experience for the first time, or simply competing as a hobby , few things are stronger teaching tools for a martial artist than competition. If you have results from local amateur competitions, please contact me so I can update my database.