Not with fists, but with words: the silent struggle of Mahmoud Sattari

Last summer, he faced Dutch kickboxing pride Thian de Vries. In the ring of K-1 Beyond, Mahmoud Sattari was outclassed.

The pace was too fast, the blows too sharp. The defeat was obvious and painful. But that night in the ring pales in comparison to the fight he is fighting now.

This time, Sattari is not fighting with fists.

For four days, he heard nothing from his family in Iran. No phone calls. No messages. No sign of life. The connections were down, the silence deafening. Only when he finally regained contact did he himself break the silence. Not as an athlete, but as a son, as a brother, as an Iranian.

Mahmoud Sattari Midori Boss

“This is not a protest. This is a revolution,” he wrote.

His words came from Tokyo, but his thoughts were thousands of kilometres away. In Iran, where unrest is growing and regime pressure can be felt right into living rooms. Sattari, living in Japan and active as a K-1 fighter, publicly sounded the alarm this week. Through social media, he called on the world not to look away. People are oppressed, communication is deliberately blocked, families are losing each other.

“I could not reach my family for four days,” he wrote on X. “The world needs to know what is happening.”

In simple Japanese, he tried to make his message as big as possible. He shared images, photos, short texts. No grand political analyses, but raw cries for help. Look, listen. Don’t forget us.

Mahmoud Sattari& Thian de Vries

Sporting honours will have to wait.

Back in 2025, Sattari faced De Vries, the top Dutch talent who ruthlessly upset him. That match showed there was work to be done. Technical, tactical, physical. But where fighters normally put their focus entirely on the ring, Sattari’s fight now plays out in a way that has nothing to do with sport.

As he prepares for his next appearance, his head is spinning. Is his family safe? Who else can he reach? How do you train, how do you stay sharp, when your heart is on fire?

Mahmoud Sattari

He returns to the ring on 8 February.

At the iconic Yoyogi Arena, Sattari will fight international opponents in the -90 kg K-1 tournament. The pressure is high, expectations are high. But this time there is more at stake than a spot on the roster or sporting revenge.

Perhaps that is precisely why he is fighting harder. Because this is not a night of kickboxing. But a moment of staying power. A way to stand tall, far from home, while his country cries out to be heard.

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