National athlete Mikail ‘Miki’ Ghazali does not ask for attention – he takes it.
At Rajadamnern Stadium, under the unforgiving lights of the Rajadamnern World Series (RWS) stage, the 17-year-old delivers a statement that echoes beyond the ropes, stopping Thailand’s Aekmongkol with a second-round knockout at the RWS April Inferno in Bangkok on Saturday (April 18).
This is no longer about promise. This is presence.
After grinding through a composed debut win in February, Miki returns sharper, more certain – and this time, more ruthless. The finish is clean, decisive, and loud in its message: he belongs.
The Sarawak-based fighter now stands at 2-0 in one of Muay Thai’s most demanding proving grounds, where experience often outweighs youth. Yet here he is not surviving, but imposing.

The rise also underscores the Ghazali family’s growing presence in Muay Thai, with brother Johan Ghazali competing at ONE Championship, while Elias Ghazali, who impressed with a win earlier this year, recently suffered a setback in his latest RWS outing.
Miki, who won SEA Games gold in the men’s 57kg category at just 16, continues to emerge as a key prospect, pairing strong fundamentals with growing confidence on the international stage.
His latest victory also earned him a 50,000 Baht (about RM6,200) performance bonus – further proof that his impact in Bangkok is not just seen, but felt.
For the 17-year-old, the sky’s the horizon.





