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WATCH" ONE 169 LIVE Streams Free On TV Channel

ONE 169 Live Results & Highlights – Malykhin vs. Kane, Rodtang vs. Smith 2. Check out results and highlights from all the action at ONE 169 On Nov. 8, ONE Championship will showcase a stacked event, ONE 169, inside Lumpinee Boxing Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand. Friday’s action features three world title fights – Anatoly Malykhin vs. ‘Reug Reug’ Oumar Kane (heavyweight MMA), Rodtang vs. Jacob Smith (flyweight Muay Thai), and Jackie Buntan vs. Anissa Meksen (inaugural women’s strawweight kickboxing).
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ONE Championship is set to return in U.S. primetime on Friday, November 8.

The world’s largest martial arts organization is bringing ONE 169: Malykhin vs. Reug Reug to Lumpinee Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand, and the card is topped by a trio must-see World Title fights.

In the main event, undefeated three-division king Anatoly Malykhin will defend his ONE Heavyweight MMA World Title against bruising Senegalese Wrestling Champion “Reug Reug” Oumar Kane.

There haven’t been many fighters who have found more success in ONE Championship than Anatoly Malykhin. The three-division MMA world champion now looks to continue his reign of terror by taking out Senegalese powerhouse ‘Reug Reug’ in the ONE 169 main event.

As for the co-main event, Rodtang returns to potentially extend his flyweight Muay Thai title reign. ‘The Iron Man’ will face a familiar opponent, as Jacob Smith has received a rematch. They first fought in May 2022, with Rodtang securing a dominant unanimous decision win. However, Rodtang missed weight, and was stripped of his belt, so only Smith is eligible to win the title.

ONE 169: Malykhin vs. Reug Reug Live On USTV

ONE Championship offers the best MMA live streaming online. Watch ONE Championship's live Mixed Martial Arts, Grappling, Kickboxing, and Muay Thai fights The main event of ONE 169: Malykhin vs. Reug Reug on Prime Video will see reigning three-division MMA kingpin Anatoly “Sladkiy” Malykhin put his ONE Heavyweight MMA World Title on the line against Senegalese sensation “Reug Reug” Oumar Kane live in U.S. primetime on November 8.

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Also, ONE Flyweight Muay Thai World Champion Rodtang Jitmuangnon will look to extend his five-year reign when he puts his gold on the line against fearless British striker Jacob Smith in a hard-hitting rematch.

That blockbuster event goes down at Bangkok’s historic Lumpinee Stadium, and before the heavyweight behemoths lock horns in the headlining attraction, the card will feature no shortage of pivotal matchups.

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The main event of ONE 169: Malykhin vs. Reug Reug on Prime Video will see reigning three-division MMA kingpin Anatoly “Sladkiy” Malykhin put his ONE Heavyweight MMA World Title on the line against Senegalese sensation “Reug Reug” Oumar Kane live in U.S. primetime on November 8.

That blockbuster event goes down at Bangkok’s historic Lumpinee Stadium, and before the heavyweight behemoths lock horns in the headlining attraction, the card will feature no shortage of pivotal matchups.

A fight fan to his core, Malykhin recently took some time away from his busy training schedule to break down some of ONE 169’s biggest fights.
Amir Aliakbari Vs. Marcus “Buchecha” Almeida

“Sladkiy” will undoubtedly be paying close attention to the heavyweight MMA clash between heavy-handed Iranian Amir Aliakbari and legendary Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu icon Marcus “Buchecha” Almeida.

The winner of that bout will likely be next in line for a crack at the ONE Heavyweight MMA World Title.

In 2021, Malykhin scored an unforgettable knockout win over Aliakbari, so he’s familiar with the 36-year-old’s world-class wrestling and terrifying punching power. He’s also aware that “Buchecha” is the division’s most talented submission artist, making him a threat to finish fights at any given time.

++How To Watch North-South Shootout Live On USTV

Fans can watch the 22nd Annual John Blewett III Memorial North-South Shootout in Memory of Charles Kepley from Caraway Speedway on November 8-9 live on Racing

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The 22nd Annual John Blewett III Memorial North-South Shootout in Memory of Charles Kepley takes place at Caraway Speedway this weekend on November 7-9. Fans can watch racing on Friday and Saturday, November 8-9, live on RacingAmerica.TV.

As always, the North-South Shootout is headlined by the Tour-type Modifieds, as they'll do battle for 125 laps around the Sophia, North Carolina facility.
WATCHING ON RACINGAMERICA.TV

Both days of racing during the North-South Shootout weekend are available on RacingAmerica.TV via pay-per-view broadcast. The two-day pay-per-view broadcast is available for $39.99, allowing fans to watch Friday's and Saturday's racing from Caraway Speedway.

Monthly and Annual Subscribers can save $10 off the 2024 North South Shootout All Access PPV option with their exclusive discount code. Subscribers should receive their discount code via email before the event. Your discount unfortunately does not apply automatically, and we suggest reaching out for your code as early as possible to avoid missing any racing action.

22nd Annual North South Shootout at Caraway (NC) Live Streams Free

Fans can watch the 22nd Annual John Blewett III Memorial North-South Shootout in Memory of Charles Kepley from Caraway Speedway on November 8-9 live on Racing

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The 22nd Annual John Blewett III Memorial North-South Shootout in Memory of Charles Kepley takes place at Caraway Speedway this weekend on November 7-9. Fans can watch racing on Friday and Saturday, November 8-9, live on RacingAmerica.TV.

As always, the North-South Shootout is headlined by the Tour-type Modifieds, as they'll do battle for 125 laps around the Sophia, North Carolina facility.
WATCHING ON RACINGAMERICA.TV

Both days of racing during the North-South Shootout weekend are available on RacingAmerica.TV via pay-per-view broadcast. The two-day pay-per-view broadcast is available for $39.99, allowing fans to watch Friday's and Saturday's racing from Caraway Speedway.

Monthly and Annual Subscribers can save $10 off the 2024 North South Shootout All Access PPV option with their exclusive discount code. Subscribers should receive their discount code via email before the event. Your discount unfortunately does not apply automatically, and we suggest reaching out for your code as early as possible to avoid missing any racing action.

Watch North-South Shootout Live on RacingTV

On Friday, coverage will start at 5 PM ET. Coverage will include qualifying for the ISMA Supermodifieds, Tour-Type Modifieds, 602 Modifieds, and Challengers.$39.99 North-South Shootout Event Details November 7-9, 2024 Race Day Event Nov 8 & 9th, 2024

WATCHING ON RACING TV

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The 22nd Annual John Blewett III Memorial North-South Shootout in Memory of Charles Kepley takes place at Caraway Speedway this weekend on November 7-9. Fans can watch racing on Friday and Saturday, November 8-9, live on RacingAmerica.TV.

As always, the North-South Shootout is headlined by the Tour-type Modifieds, as they’ll do battle for 125 laps around the Sophia, North Carolina facility.

Both days of racing during the North-South Shootout weekend are available on RacingAmerica.TV via pay-per-view broadcast. The two-day pay-per-view broadcast is available for $39.99, allowing fans to watch Friday’s and Saturday’s racing from Caraway Speedway.

Monthly and Annual Subscribers can save $10 off the 2024 North South Shootout All Access PPV option with their exclusive discount code. Subscribers should receive their discount code via email before the event. Your discount unfortunately does not apply automatically, and we suggest reaching out for your code as early as possible to avoid missing any racing action.

Update: Thursday, Nov. 7

It's a busy day for me with two stories to write for NOLA.com (hoops and football), so I will transcribe my interviews with Sumrall and Greg Gasparato later, but just wanted to pass on the news that Sam Howard is doubtful for the Temple game. It has not been determined whether Dickson Agu or Chris Rodgers would start in his place, but Tulane is deep at linebacker and likely would not miss Howard much against an opponent like Temple. It might be an opportunity for Makai Williams to get some reps at linebacker. He is talented but has not worked his way into the rotation so far in his career.

"The deal with Sam is I probably could have been a jerk and pushed the gas on him, but the reason he's doubtful probably has much to do with if you're not ready, we've got guys that can play," Sumrall said. "Don't do anything dumb. Those guys (Agu and Rodgers) make plays, man. They're pretty good."

Thursday is a walkthrough in Sumrall's system, so there is very little to report from practice. I'll be back later with the quotes from Sumrall and Gasparato on the unprecedented defensive depth and balance.

SUMRALL

On if he's ever had a team with this much defensive balance and depth:

"I haven't. We're playing a lot of guys. We're trying to be fresh. You've seen different guys step up. The pick-sixes being a different guy each time is kind of exemplary of there's a lot of guys that can make plays. It's a lot of fun. I haven't been around defenses where the number is so spread out. Usually you have a leading tackler or two in the top group in the conference and a sack guy who's usually the top guy in the conference or close. That is very unique. It's a testament to the depth our defense. It's also a testament to the number of guys that are able to play when we're rolling like this."

On using a lot of guys on defensive line and being effective:

"There's been a lot of guys. Even like Terrell Allen last week had the one that was a big play. Gerrod Henderson had his game against South Florida. They've all had moments. Fobbs-White's flashed the past few weeks. Pat (Jenkins)'s Pat. (Eric) Hicks is Hicks. Adin (Huntington)'s kind of come on the last three games, so you're seeing a lot of guys. Patrick Peterson. Who saw that coming? It's a great tip of the cap to our team because they love watching each other's success on defense. I've had a lot of fun just seeing them be fired up about another guy making a play. That's what great teams do."

On moving guys around:

"We make mistakes as coaches all the time believe it or not. So we had Adin at field end and TA at bandit. That was off of body type. You look at a guy's body and think they should fit there, but really their experience and their comfort level were better suited in the other direction so we moved TA to field (actually tackle) and Adin to bandit, and both of them are playing better. It was us being dumbass coaches for a while."

On this being ideal:

"It's great. What I'm really excited about is we knew coming into the year Pat Jenkins and Eric Hicks up front. We knew coming into the year Tyler Grubbs. We knew coming into the year Slim Despanie. It's fun watching the younger players find themselves and grow in confidence and just improve their game."

On depth maybe hurting chance for all-conference selections:

"I've never put a whole lot of stock in those lists anyway. I played in college with a guy named Dwayne Robertson, who never made all-conference but was the fourth pick in the NFL draft. Most of the time nobody knows what they're picking. It's who made the most tackles. Well that guy might suck. He just fell into a lot of tackles. I led my team in tackles. I wasn't a good player. I was average."

On his making 17 interceptions in high school:

"Yeah. I played corner and safety as a sophomore and junior. I had 10 picks as a sophomore because the corner on the other side of me was like a real player and they thought they were going to throw at this skinny white kid and I just picked a lot of passes off."

GREG GASPARATO

On if he's ever had a defense with this much balance and depth:

"If we did, I think maybe myself and the coaches maybe didn't give them a chance to have it. We've got a lot of good players. Some guys have more experience than others. A lot of the experienced players haven't played together, so there's no substitution for game reps. There's none, so we had some growing pains early in the season maybe not fitting a gap or not running with a wheel route, but you've got to learn from that and these guys have done a great job. A lot of these young guys that maybe made some mistakes early have made some huge plays for us down the stretch, and that's why you continue to do that. They've earned it. They've done it in practice. They've showed intentionality. They love football, and as the season goes we've been getting better and better, but I probably have not been running a defense where the production is spread out as much as this one is."

On giving starters a rest and not worrying:

"It's a testament to the players and it's also a testament to the coaches on the staff. They've done a really good job preparing their guys whether it's reps during practice, extra film study, whatever that means. Everybody's got something they're not good at and they need to improve on, so they try to address those issues every week and get a little bit better, and that's the goal this week, to be better than we were last week."

On Jack Tchienchou and Kevin Adams' development:

"That's a very cerebral position. There's a lot of checks and adjustments based on the calls. Some are easier than others, but they've got to know what's going to happen before it happens. If this motion happens, we're going to this. They've got to process that before the ball's ever snapped. Again, when the bullets are live, it becomes a little bit difficult, but they've got so many accumulated reps throughout the season both in practice and in games, and we're running a lot of the same stuff week to week, so it's been just the cumulative effect of getting reps, seeing it, making a mistake, learning from it, getting better and they've done that."

On Dickson Agu and Chris Rodgers:

"I can't say enough how proud I am of them. Their ceilings are unbelievably high. I still don't know if they know how good they can be, but they are continuing to get better every week, they are making plays when they're asked to. We can move guys around. They can play multiple positions, so they'e learned this defense really well. They know the ins and outs. They know where the stress points are. They know how they've got react to certain things, and that's what this game is. It's a formation adjustment game and everybody's got a job to do. Those guys have continued to get better and they've got elite athleticism and length. They just do so many things really well. I"m excited to see them as the season goes and as the future goes."

Of if Agu or Rodgers will start if Sam Howard cannot play against Temple:

"Don't know yet. We'll see as we get closer to the game and we'll make that decision probably tomorrow."

On depth on defensive line:

"Again, that's a testament to the players and a testament to coach (Landius) Wilkerson getting them ready with. no drop-off. I tell everybody all the time I don't want to be hamstrung from call standpoint because there's a player on the field that can't execute. They've done a really good job. Now I'm going to be smart and understand who I do have on the field and use them to their strengths, but I can't protect everybody, so they've done a good job of taking ownership and doing their job--pass rush, run fits, stunts, whatever that is and when you do your job and are in position to make plays, that's when plays happen. When you're in the gap and the ball carrier runs into it, that's when you make your play. When you get a 1-on-1 pass rush, you've got to go win. If we call a stunt and you run it correctly, you're going to win. It's just the cumulative effect of these guys getting reps together and playing. They've all gotten better."

On good numbers across the board defensively:

"We're getting there. It's never as good as you think and never as bad as you think on tape, and that's what I've seen. Statistically it was good last week and score-wise it was good last week, but there was very poor tackling. There were very poor run fits at times. A couple of times coverage was not as clean as it needed to be, and that's what football is. If it would have mattered in a loss, it better matter in a win. You can't be oh, well, they didn't hit it. You better learn from them because everybody is watching that same play and is going to take advantage of it. Defense is about elite execution all the time. You don't get plays off. You can play 67 out of 70 plays perfect and three bad ones, and you just lost the game 21-20. We've got a lot of little things we can continue to get better at."



"

Update: Wednesday, Nov. 6

Jon Sumrall left practice early to attend the funeral of Patrick Jenkins' mom, but it ended in the same way as all of the Tulane's Wednesday workouts with a two-minute drill pitting the first-team offense against mostly the second-team defense. Starting at the defense's 45-yard line with 49 seconds left, Darian Mensah completed a 7-yard pass to Mario Williams on a quick out that gained 7 yards and went out of bounds. He then rolled out to his right and fired a 19-yard strike to Yulkeith Brown before the offense called a timeout. A 5-yard gain I missed preceded a run that was stopped at the line of scrimmage and a spike to stop the clock, setting up Bobby Noel for last-second field goal. Unlike the previous four weeks, though, he missed the 33-yard kick, banging it off the outside of the left upright. They gave him a do-over and he hit the second one.

The second-team defense was Adin Huntington, Deshaun Batiste, Adonis Friloux and Gerrod Henderson from left to right on the line, Chris Rodgers and Dickson Agu at linebacker, Javion White at nickelback, Johnathan Edwards and Jaheim Johnson at cornerback and Jack Tchienchou and Joshua Moore at safety.

The only significant injury question this week is whether Sam Howard will play at linebacker after spraining an ankle against Charlotte. I will find out from Sumrall what his status is tomorrow.

I've brought this up before, but Tulane's depth defensively is off the charts. The Wave has no player among the AAC's top 25 in tackles or tackles for loss but is one of the best units across the board, ranking second in scoring defense, third in total defense, fourth in rushing defense, first in pass defense efficiency, third in sacks, second in interceptions, fourth in fumbles forced, third in fumbles recovered, second in third-down conversion defense, first in fourth-down conversion defense and first in fewest touchdowns allowed per red zone possession. Tyler Grubbs, who has a team-high 39 tackles (no other AAC team's top player has fewer than 45), would need to make 34 more tackles the rest of the way to match Macon Clark's 73 tackles from 2021, the Wave's low total for a leading tackler in a media guide chart that goes back to 1969.

Tulane has 21 players with double-digit tackles, 28 with at least one tackle for loss and goes at least two deep everywhere. Tyler Grubbs and Howard are backed up by Agu, who is ninth on the team in tackles, and Rodgers, who has an interception return for a touchdown. There is arguably zero drop-off from safeties Bailey Despanie (35 tackles) and Jalen Geiger (16 tackles) to their backups, Jack Tchienchou (27 tackles) and Kevin Adams (28 tackles). The trio of Rayshawn Pleasant, Micah Robinson and Johnathan Edwards are all starter quality at cornerback, with Lu Tillery a serviceable No. 4. Caleb Ransaw at nickel has a playmaking backup in Javion White, with Jayden Lewis a decent third option. Adin Huntington, the leading tackler among the lineman with 17, does not even start anymore. Patrick Jenkins is right behind him with 15, and Terrell Allen, who struggled at end before finding a home at backup tackle, is next with 14. Kam Hamilton, who has been more effective at end than tackle, is tied with Jenkins for most tackles for loss (five) among the front four. Backup end Gerrod Henderson has 13 stops, and starting bandit Matthew Fobbs-White has 12. Nose tackles Eric Hicks and Adonis Friloux each have five tackles, and another backup, Parker Peterson, has eight. That's nine significant contributors, and I'm not even including Batiste, Michael Lunz, Elijah Champaigne (interception against UAB) and situation pass rusher Shi'Keem Laister.

I talked to Despanie, Agu and Pleasant about the defensive depth.

BAILEY DESPANIE

On depth at safety:

"It helps a lot. We have so much depth, we are able to get fresh legs in anytime we want to. If we are having a long drive, we can get fresh legs in and there's no drop in energy, no drop in play, so I felt like that's one of the strengths of our team."

On so many different tacklers:

"It takes a lot of stress off the guys out there, being able to trust the guy next to you that he's going to be able to make that play, make that tackle. I feel like we play with a lot of great effort, so that plays a big role in that, too."

On pushing each other:

"We definitely compete with each other. That's just built into the culture of the defense, the culture of the program, to compete every day, to compete for the brother beside you. That's just our motto."

On how much D has improved during the year:

"I would say we definitely got a lot better. You could check the film. You could check the stats throughout the games. We definitely learned the ins and outs of the defense, the things that we needed to learn to be established as a great defense in this league, and I feel like we've done that."

On having championship defense:

"Definitely. That's the mindset throughout the program and throughout the entire team, but we try to stay focused on just next game, being 1-0 that week and just doing everything we can to accomplish that goal."

On Tchienchou:

"He brings a lot of energy. He's one of those high-motor guys that doesn't stop. It spreads throughout the defense."

DICKSON AGU

On defensive depth:

"With this new staff, they came in and brought in a few new people and also gave everyone who's been here a new chance, so me being a redshirt freshman, coach believed in me and put me out there and I just do my job, produce. There's other people like Chris Rodgers, they took from Troy, he played last year and he produces, too. But that's at every position. Jack Tchienchou at safety comes in and produces also."

On frustration last year:


"It gets a little frustrating knowing that you could go out there and play with those guys. You got a few reps, but you're not getting the full-game experience, so this year really being able to get some game experience boosts your morale and it helps the guys around you feel better."

On what he does best:

"I do my job consistently. I might have a few missed assignments every now and then, but whatever call it is, I'm going to do my best to go play it and I'm going to make a play on the ball."

On defense being able to stay fresh:

"Having Sam and Grubbs go in there first and having me being able to go in and take a drive or two really helps keep everyone fresh, so while the other team is really tired and frustrated, you're going in there fresh with new bodies ready to hit you and come at you again, it really helps our team."

On how much D has improved:

"We were talking about this in the meeting with Polk earlier. From Southeastern to now we've gotten so much better just in understanding our defense and knowing our assignments and just overall playing well together. If one person makes a play, we're all hype and we're ready to go change the momentum of the game and make another play for one another."

RAYSHAWN PLEASANT

On defensive depth:

"It helps a lot. We have a lot of guys that can go in and keep us fresh, so when the fourth quarter comes we are playing our best ball, so it just really means a lot having a lot of people we can rely on and go in and don't have a drop-off."

On pushing each other:

"We all know we've got one goal at the end of the year, so we just hold each other accountable knowing whatever it takes for us to make that goal, we've got to do it. We get along very well. We love each other, and we just hold each other to a higher standard."

On Micah Robinson and Johnathan Edwards coming in after spring and defense improving as guys got comfortable with each other:

"It got so much better like you said. As the year went on, guys got comfortable knowing how Gas and Summie wanted the defense to be played. It just makes us a better team in general."

On same scheme as last year with different head coach:

"It helped a lot for sure. I feel like we put the work in each and every day. We've been doing this since spring, so it's up to us to go out and execute every Saturday."
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