Lone Chaw

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Lone Chaw
Born (1976-10-30) October 30, 1976 (age 47)
Ayeyarwady, Myanmar
Native nameMaung Naing Lin
Other namesလုံးချော
NationalityMyanmar Myanmar
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight80 kg (176 lb; 12 st 8 lb)
StanceOrthodox
TeamThut Ti Lethwei Gym, KLN
TrainerSaw Ayeyar
U Daung Nyo
Win Zin Oo
Years active1995-2012
SpouseMa Zin Zin Mya
Medal record
Men's Lethwei
Representing  Myanmar
Myanmar Interstate Tournament
Winner 1999 Yangon, Myanmar 75kg

Lone Chaw (Burmese: လုံးချော) is a retired Burmese Lethwei fighter and former Openweight Lethwei World Champion.[1][2]

Personal life

Lone Chaw is of Karen descent. He was born in a humble village in the Ayeyarwady division in Myanmar. He dropped out of school in the ninth grade and started working at the family farm full-time. In 1995, he started training Lethwei and became determined to be a successful professional fighter when he learned his hometown did not boast a Myanmar Lethwei champion.[3] He moved to Yangon in 1999 to pursue that goal. His first fight was at a traditional festival.[4]

In 2004, he joined Thut Ti Lethwei Gym under Win Zin Oo. In 2012, at 36 years old, Lone Chaw retired from fighting and started coaching.[5][6][7]

Lethwei career

Lone Chaw made a name for himself by fighting local and international international competition.[8] Notably, he was one of the first Lethwei fighter to go fight in Japan.[9]

Lone Chaw won the Myanmar Interstate Division Title in 1999 and the Golden Belt Championship in 2005 and 2007. His most notorious fight was against the legendary Shwe War Tun in 2004, whom he had admired before he became a professional fighter. In an interview, Lone Chaw said "Shwe War Tun is an idol for me because of his fighting capability. I really respect him."[3]

On April 26, 2008, the fight against Win Tun ended in a bloody draw. The result was a big blow to Lone Chaw's reputation, as the 63 kg challenger Win Tun controlled most of the fight.[10]

On July 27, 2008, Lone Chaw who was coming from 10 consecutive draws, defeated Lethwei rising star Wunna by TKO in Yangon. Wunna was dropped by a fury of punches and wasn't able to answer the count.[11]

On March 1, 2009, Lone Chaw lost the Lethwei Openweight World title to Saw Nga Man in Yangon, Myanmar.[12]

Championships and accomplishments

Championships

Lethwei record

Lethwei record

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes


References

  1. ^ Justin Calderon (24 September 2014). "Lethwei boxing in Myanmar: Asia's new martial arts sensation". CNN Travel.
  2. ^ Goyder, James (22 July 2015). "Inside a Burmese Lethwei Gym". VICE Fightland.
  3. ^ a b Tin Moe Aung (9 September 2007). "From a rice farmer to king of the ring". Myanmar Times.
  4. ^ Pinky (16 July 2012). "Kick-boxer drawn into fighting for a living". Myanmar Times.
  5. ^ Leena Salim (1 April 2015). "A Gentle Legend - A Lethal Fighter". Myanmore.
  6. ^ Kyaw Zin Hlaing (15 January 2016). "Lone Chaw's protégé". Myanmar Times.
  7. ^ Htet Moe Thu (20 November 2019). "MMA မွာ ျမန္မာရိုးရာ လက္ေဝွ႕ ကို ခ်ျပေတာ့မဲ့ ေအာင္လအန္ဆန္း". Real Than.
  8. ^ Tin Moe Aung (17 November 2008). "Myanmar's traditional boxers thrash Thai fighter in Yangon". Myanmar Times.
  9. ^ Andre Malerba (22 September 2013). "Traditional kickboxing, an ancient sport makes a revival". Myanmar Times.
  10. ^ Tin Moe Aung (28 April 2008). "Underdog steals the show, misses KO". Myanmar Times.
  11. ^ Tin Moe Aung (4 August 2008). "Lone Chaw defeats Wunna by TKO". Myanmar Times.
  12. ^ Aung Sithu Hein (9 March 2009). "Saw Nga Man topples freeweight king Lone Chaw". Myanmar Times.

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Golden Belt – Openweight Lethwei World Champion
May 21, 2006 – February 28, 2009
Succeeded by