Some nights write their own headlines. On 29 May at Lumpinee Stadium, Ramadan "The Scorpion" Ondash headlined The Inner Circle card with a unanimous decision over Suriyanlek Por Yenying — and by the time the dust settled, his elder brother Abdallah had also won, giving Lebanon a night it will not forget.
Ramadan was relentless. Sweeps, a spinning backfist, punches to the head and body — he brought new dimensions to his game and backed every one of them up. A left overhand wobbled Suriyanlek in round two, a knockdown followed, and three judges agreed at the final bell. Thirteenth career win. The Scorpion called for Johan Ghazali next.
Kongsuk Sitsarawatsuer does not just beat opponents. He dismantles them. The two-time Lumpinee Stadium Muay Thai World Champion spent three bantamweight Muay Thai rounds systematically destroying Khakimov Anisjon's body — catching kicks, landing punches to the ribs, and laying the groundwork for what was coming.
What came was two knockdowns in round three from a single left body kick — and a TKO at 2:17 that made it back-to-back highlight-reel finishes in ONE Championship. Anisjon had offered a clean right hand in round two that briefly threatened to change the story. Kongsuk rewrote it anyway. Record: 70-21.
Mongkoldetlek Por Pim-on walked back into Lumpinee Stadium after four years away and immediately looked like he belonged. Against a fast, physical Ruslan Tuktarov, the 30-year-old Lumpinee Muay Thai World Champion absorbed an aggressive opening before imposing his will with the kind of clinch dominance that built his reputation.
Knees, teeps, and superior positioning drained Tuktarov's aggression across the final two rounds. The Russian had his moments — a spinning high kick in round one was the highlight — but Mongkoldetlek's experience was simply too deep. Unanimous decision. Win number 125. The comeback is complete.
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