Close X
Thursday, February 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver-Born Angela Lee And Brother Christian Featured In MMA Title Fights

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2018 10:48 AM

    Vancouver-born Angela "Unstoppable" Lee defends her atomweight crown against Japanese veteran Mei (V.V) Yamaguchi in the main event at the Singapore Indoor Stadium. And Christian "The Warrior" Lee, Angela's younger brother, will challenge Australian Martin (The Situ-Asian) Nguyen for his One Championship featherweight title.

     

    The “One: Unstoppable Dreams” card will mark Angela Lee's first fight since May 26, 2017. Yamaguchi (17-10-1) has fought twice since then, winning both times.

     

    And it is the first bout for Angela Lee since a car crash that derailed a Nov. 24 fight against the 35-year-old Yamaguchi, whom Lee had beaten in May 2016 to win the Asia-based MMA promotion's first female title.

     

    The atomweight division covers 105 to 115 pounds.

     

    Lee’s car accident occurred Nov. 6 in Hawaii when she left her home at around 4:30 a.m. to drive to her nearby gym. The 21-year-old dozed off and hit the guardrail before flipping over some six times.

     
     

    Lee (8-0-0) escaped serious injury, returned to training in January.

     

    Nguyen (10-2-0) is coming off a split-decision loss in March to bantamweight champion Bibiano Fernandes, a Brazilian-born fighter who now calls Vancouver home.

     

    Christian Lee is look to avenge a 2016 loss to Nguyen, the only man to ever defeat him. The 19-year-old Lee (9-1-0) has won his last four bouts at 145 pounds.

     

     

    Christian and Angela Lee, who divide time between the Hawaiian island of Oahu and Singapore, come from a fighting family. Father Ken and mother Jewelz are decorated martial artists who teach at their United MMA gym in Waipahu, Hawaii, where Angela and Christian are instructors.

     

    Ken was born in Singapore and Jewelz in South Korea. She moved to Hawaii at a young age while he came to Canada at the age of four. They met in Hawaii when Ken went there for high school, moving to Canada after graduation and eventually marrying.

     

    Angela lived in Vancouver and elsewhere in Canada until she was seven, when the family returned to Hawaii. Angela, who has dual Canadian-American citizenship, graduated from high school in 2014.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nova Scotia University's Probe Of Controversial Professor Intensifies Free-Speech Debate

    Nova Scotia University's Probe Of Controversial Professor Intensifies Free-Speech Debate
    A small-town university in Atlantic Canada has been thrust into the epicentre of a national debate about free speech on campus, amid new allegations a controversial professor has made "racist and transphobic comments" in class.

    Nova Scotia University's Probe Of Controversial Professor Intensifies Free-Speech Debate

    Self-Driving ‘Sailbot' Returns Home To Vancouver After Being Lost At Sea

    Self-Driving ‘Sailbot' Returns Home To Vancouver After Being Lost At Sea
    She lost her sail and has a few scratches, but a robotic sailboat has returned home in relatively good condition after being lost at sea.

    Self-Driving ‘Sailbot' Returns Home To Vancouver After Being Lost At Sea

    Liberals Pour More Money Into Tax Filing Program For Homeless, Newcomers

    In just over a week, six volunteers will start filing up to 500 tax returns for people with little to no income at the Shepherds of Good Hope homeless shelter in downtown Ottawa.

    Liberals Pour More Money Into Tax Filing Program For Homeless, Newcomers

    Regulator Rejects B.C. Government's Promised Hydro Rate Freeze

    Regulator Rejects B.C. Government's Promised Hydro Rate Freeze
    VICTORIA — Hydro rates in British Columbia will increase three per cent in April after the province's independent energy regulator overruled a government promise to freeze rates for one year.

    Regulator Rejects B.C. Government's Promised Hydro Rate Freeze

    Alberta Man Found Guilty Of Killing Family Appealing Conviction, Sentence

    Alberta Man Found Guilty Of Killing Family Appealing Conviction, Sentence
    CALGARY — An Alberta man found guilty earlier this year in the murders of his parents and sister is appealing his conviction and sentence.

    Alberta Man Found Guilty Of Killing Family Appealing Conviction, Sentence

    Trump Tariffs On Steel, Aluminum Would Have 'Significant, Serious' Impact: PM Trudeau

    Trump Tariffs On Steel, Aluminum Would Have 'Significant, Serious' Impact: PM Trudeau
    Trudeau, however, was not clear Friday about whether or not he's spoken to the American president since Trump announced the planned tariffs on Thursday.

    Trump Tariffs On Steel, Aluminum Would Have 'Significant, Serious' Impact: PM Trudeau