This Cutie Uses ONLY Her Legs to Knock Everyone Out! – The Undefeated Mona Kimura
2025 · Wrestling · Wrestling
This Cutie Uses ONLY Her Legs to Knock Everyone Out! – The Undefeated Mona Kimura
This Cutie Uses ONLY Her Legs to Knock Everyone Out! – The Undefeated Mona Kimura
2025
23m
Wrestling
Mona Kimura fights only with her legs, just like the video game legend Chun-Li from Street Fighter. She is Japan’s undefeated sensation, turning every fight into a highlight reel of precision and speed. But how does she do it? Can she even fight with her hands? And most importantly… why does she fight only with her legs? The answers will surprise you. So, let’s rewind to where it all began. Watch our "20 Times MMA Fighters Messed With The Wrong Opponents" • 20 Times MMA Fighters Messed With The Wron... Watch our "15 Times Women's MMA Fighters Messed With The Wrong Opponents" • 视频 Watch our "10 Moments When Zebaztian Kadestam Shocked Everyone" • 10 Moments When Zebaztian Kadestam Shocked... Born on April 12, 2001, in Mizuho City, Japan, Mona grew up in a home where discipline came before dreams. Her parents weren’t professional fighters, but they valued precision, patience, and persistence — the very traits that later defined her. From an early age, Mona was different. Where other kids ran off to play, she practiced balance drills, standing on one leg until her muscles trembled. What started as a childhood exercise turned into the foundation of her signature control in the ring. Her first love was karate. She started when she was just four. The dojo floor was her world — the smell of pine wood, the sound of her own breathing echoing off the walls, the way her sensei demanded silence before every bow. She wasn’t the loudest student or the strongest, but she was the one who always came back the next day. Then came boxing. When most teens were learning to drive, Mona was learning to throw straight punches. She joined her school’s boxing club in the fourth grade and carried that dedication all the way to university. Her technique improved rapidly. Coaches described her punches as “mechanically perfect,” her timing “unnervingly consistent.” It wasn’t long before she was competing at a national level. At 18, she won gold at the 2019 Japanese Women’s Junior National Championships in the featherweight divis