Fencing-New league aims to drag ancient Olympic sport into entertainment era
Dec 2 : Fencing may be one of the Olympics' oldest events, but three-time Olympian Miles Chamley-Watson says it urgently needs a reboot, hoping his new World Fencing League (WFL) will drag the sport into the modern entertainment age.
The British-born American will unveil the league in Los Angeles in April 2026, complete with cinematic broadcasts and cutting-edge blade-tracking technology that turns lightning-fast sword work into real-time visuals.
"Why is fencing not on TV? It's simple, people do not understand what is going on," Chamley-Watson told Reuters. "Even my mother doesn't know what's going on because it's just two lights. This tech is going to change the entire sport forever."
The WFL's secret weapon is a blade-tracking system, originally built for the 2020 Tokyo Games.
The technology transforms fencing's ultra-fast actions into real-time visuals that broadcasters can overlay on screen, turning what often looks like frantic sword waving into comprehensible combat.
The league will debut with a one-day showcase featuring 12 elite athletes competing in mixed-gender teams, backed by what Chamley-Watson calls cinematic broadcast production.
"This has to be a mainstream sport," said the 35-year-old Rio 2016 bronze medallist.
"Fencing is an incredible combat sport, but if people only see it once every four years, they'll never understand what goes into it."
Technology is just one piece of what Chamley-Watson describes as a "full ecosystem". The league plans clearer rules, athlete-driven format adjustments and a developmental pathway for emerging talent.
"You take UFC, you take the WTA, you take Formula One - you put it all into one," he said. "This is about building a real professional lane where kids can dream of being


