Everything that went down during the first half of this week's Asia primetime spectacle from Bangkok, Thailand.
By Kriel Ibarrola
Feb 6, 2026, 15:31 UTC

Johan “Jojo” Ghazali returned to where it all started and handed Ye Yint Naung a rude welcome at ONE Friday Fights 141 on February 6.
The Malaysian-American dazzler showcased refined counterstriking and ironclad defense to secure a unanimous decision victory in his flyweight Muay Thai clash, live in Asia primetime, inside Bangkok’s iconic Lumpinee Stadium.
Both fighters traded low kicks early, but the debutant seized momentum by attacking Ghazali’s lead leg. Building confidence, the Myanmar striker pressed forward with powerful looping hooks that tested the teenager’s guard.
But the 19-year-old remained composed under pressure. Each time his opponent threw wild haymakers, Ghazali countered with pinpoint punches to the body.
“Jojo” increased his output in round two with slick head movement and damaging body kicks. Crisp jabs –sharpened at Superbon Training Camp – repeatedly tagged Ye Yint Naung before calculated elbows opened a cut on the Team Mehdi Zatout representative.
The difference in levels showed in the final frame.
Ghazali unleashed fluid punch combinations reminiscent of his mentor, ONE Featherweight Kickboxing World Champion Superbon. He shelled up when his dance partner stung and countered with a thunderous right cross.
From there, he bombarded the Myanmarese warrior with punishing short-range combinations until the horn sounded. After three rounds, the judges awarded the Malaysian-American a unanimous decision win.
“Jojo’s” record improved to 27-9 and set the tone for his 2026 campaign.

In lightweight MMA action, undefeated Filipino dynamo Hero Marco Manguray survived an early submission scare to score a come-from-behind TKO victory against Myke Ohura.
Ohura hunted for a quick finish in the featured bout, executing an Imanari roll straight into a kneebar attempt. Manguray defended well, but the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt beautifully transitioned into a tight triangle, which put his enemy in danger. However, the former freed himself near the ropes.
Back on his feet, Manguray repeatedly tagged his foe with slick combinations before sprawling to thwart a takedown attempt to land on top. From there, the Elorde Davao representative unloaded a violent barrage of hooks and hammer fists, which eventually forced the referee to halt the action at 2:36 of round one.
Everything else you need to know about ONE Friday Fights 141: Komawut vs. Samingdam.
