W.A.K.O. European Championships 2002

W.A.K.O. European Championships 2002 in Jesolo was the sixteenth European championships to be held by the W.A.K.O. It was the second championship to be held in Jesolo and the seventh (including world championships) to be held in Italy. W.A.K.O. had originally hoped to have a joint event that year like they had with the last world championships, with an event in Greece in October and another in Hungary (and then Slovakia) in November, but due to the difficulties involved they scrapped the idea and resorted to Jesolo which had held a successful event two years previously.[1][2]

W.A.K.O. European Championships 2002
The poster for W.A.K.O. European Championships 2002
Information
PromotionW.A.K.O.
DateNovember 22 (Start)
November 27, 2002 (End)
VenuePalasport Cornaro
CityItaly Jesolo, Italy
Event chronology
W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 (Belgrade) W.A.K.O. European Championships 2002 W.A.K.O. World Championships 2003 (Paris)

The event was open to amateur men and women from across Europe (with Iran rather unusually participating at a Euro championships) and there were seven styles available; Full Contact, Low-Kick (men only), Thai-Boxing (men only), Light-Contact, Semi-Contact, Musical Forms and Aero-Kickboxing (making its W.A.K.O. debut). Each country was allowed one competitor per weight division in all styles expect Musical Forms and Aero-Kickboxing, although some contestants were allowed to participate in more than one style (mainly the case with Semi and Light-Contact). By the end of the championships Russia was the strongest nation overall, with the hosts Italy in second and Belarus in the third. The event was held over six days in the Palasport Cornaro in Jesolo Italy, beginning on Friday November 22 and ending on Wednesday, November 27th, 2002.[3][4]

Full-Contact edit

Full-Contact is a style of kickboxing where punches and kicks are allowed to be thrown by the participants at full force, with strikes below the waist prohibited. Most fights result in a judge’s decision or stoppage victory and as with most other forms of amateur kickboxing, head and various body protection must be worn. More information on Full-Contact and the rules can be found at the official W.A.K.O. website.[5] At Jesolo the men had twelve weight divisions ranging from 51 kg/112.2 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs, while the women had seven ranging from 48 kg/105.6 lbs to over 70 kg/+143 lbs. Notable winners included a young Muamer Hukić (more commonly known as the cruiserweight boxing champion Marco Huck) and there were a number of repeat winners from the last world championships in Belgrade with Ramadani Besnik, Fouad Habbani, Olesya Gladkova, Oxana Vassileva, Barbara Plazzoli and Marjut Lappalainen all picking up gold medals. By the end of the championships Russia were easily the top nation in Full-Contact winning eight gold, one silver and two bronze medals.[6]

Men's Full-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-51 kg Dmitry Ayzyatulov   Francisco Fernandes   Mario Basic  
-54 kg Bruno Manca   Andrej Kutlesa   Vardan Sahakyan  
-57 kg Fouad Habbani   Youness Bouignane   Boris Klimenko  
Damian Ławniczak  
-60 kg Vladimir Pykhtin   Michal Tomczykowski   Giampaolo Spanu  
Giampaolo Spanu  
-63.5 kg Movsar Kodzoev   Malik Mangouchi   Alexandru Pogorelov  
Jere Reinikainen  
-67 kg Sergey Uspensky   Dietrich Streckert   Adriano Ferrari  
Ibrahim Cicek  
-71 kg Rafael Gazayev   Jens Lintow   Adam Tutaev 
Robert Arvai  
-75 kg Ramadani Besnik   Tomasz Walenski   Markus Hakulinen  
Marco Novelli  
-81 kg Allan Kotsoev   Radev Svetoslav   Marcin Rogozik  
Sergei Baranov  
-86 kg Muamer Hukić   Yohann Le Maire   Anders Gustavsson  
Slobodan Marinkovic  
-91 kg Dmitri Guerassimov   Maugeri Piero   Pavlon Velin  
Sobin Mijo  
+91 kg Duško Basrak   Florentin Pintescu   Jimmy Upton  
Zsolt Sarosi  

Women's Full-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-48 kg Olesya Gladkova   Veronique Legras   Rita Takacs  
Cinzia Vargiu  
-52 kg Oksana Vasilieva   Fatma Akyüz   Galina Ivanova  
Mette Solli  
-56 kg Barbara Plazzoli   Bianca Hermansen   Edyta Olewniczak  
Goranka Blagojevic  
-60 kg Julia Kiblawi   Milijanka Cenic   Nadine Lemke  
Stina Olsen  
-65 kg Maria Karlova   Edith Tati Kiss   Deryan Nalkiran  
Csilla Csejtei  
-70 kg Marjut Lappalainen   Siren Soras   Ivana Derdic  
Kiymet Karpuzoglu  
+70 kg Anja Renfordt   Galina Ivanova   Daniela Lazzareska  
Eleonore Coutelas  

Low-Kick edit

Low-Kick is a style of kickboxing wherein punches and kicks are allowed to be thrown by the participants at full force, only differing from Full-Contact in that kicks to the leg are also allowed. Most fights result in a point's decision or stoppage victory and as with most other forms of amateur kickboxing, head and various body protection must be worn. More information on Low-Kick rules can be found at the W.A.K.O. website.[7] Available to men only there were twelve weight divisions in Jesolo, ranging from 51 kg/112.2 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs. While there were few notable winners Evgeniy Khil and Ivan Sočo were double winners having also won gold at the last world championships in Belgrade and future K-1 MAX and SuperLeague fighter Luis Reis won a silver medal. By the championships end Russia was the strongest nation in the style, amassing four golds, three silvers and one bronze.[8]

Men's Low-Kick Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-51 kg Gianpietro Marceddu   Pavel Isinbaev   Denis Karyavy  
-54 kg Bodan Marinkovic   Alexander Sidorov   Francesco De Luca  
Vardan Sahakyan  
-57 kg Evgeniy Khil   Mariusz Cieśliński   Gabor Kiss  
Toni Vegee  
-60 kg Viatcheslav Tislenko   Eduard Mammadov   Nikola Petrovic  
Shkan Kharakhanov  
-63.5 kg Toma Tomov   Sami Tomann   Nikola Mladenovic  
Luca Carta  
-67 kg Ioussoup Issaev   Luis Reis   Franco Lazzaro  
Csaba Molnár  
-71 kg Fouad Ezbiri   Konstantin Beloussov   Attila Nagy  
Milan Cvetkovic  
-75 kg Hrvoje Jukic   Ali Khanjari   Akos Panak  
Stefano Paone  
-81 kg Drazenko Ninic   Stjepan Glavica   Mohammed Reza Doudeh  
Dénes Rácz  
-86 kg Dejan Milosavljevic   Gabor Meiszter   Ilko Makshutov  
Teppo Laine  
-91 kg Ivan Sočo   Dmitri Vorobjov   Anton Volkov  
Hamza Aouad  
+91 kg Ruslan Bisaev   Dragan Jovanović   Ivica Perkovic  

Thai-Boxing edit

Thai-boxing (more commonly known as Muay Thai is the most physical style of kickboxing in which the contestants use punches, kicks, elbows and knees to attempt to defeat their opponent, often by referee stoppage or via a point's decision. As with other forms of amateur kickboxing, participants must wear head and body protection. At Jesolo the category was open to men only with just nine weight divisions ranging from 57 kg/125.4 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs - three down from Belgrade where there were twelve. The lower than anticipated number of contestants can be explained due to the emergency moving of the W.A.K.O. event, originally a joint event, to Jesolo on a weekend which also included two other international amateur Muay Thai events – the I.A.M.T.F. European championships in Portugal and the I.F.M.A. World Championships in Paris.[9] Despite missing some of Europe's top fighters the event had several notable winners in Dmitry Shakuta and Ivan Tolkachev who had won gold at the last world championships in Belgrade, as well as Vasily Shish who like the two mentioned before would win multiple world and European titles. By the end of the event Belarus were easily the top nation in Thai-Boxing winning five golds and one silver.[10]

Men's Thai-Boxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-57 kg Emin Suleymanov   Sergei Shimanski   Vinko Dirlic  
-60 kg Vahidin Tufekcic   Paolo Barvero   No bronze medallists recorded
-67 kg Vasily Shish   Nebojsa Denic   Morgan Lundkvist  
Sergey Zaharchuk  
-71 kg Kirill Ostrouhov   Ibrahim Zaibak   Raafat Fares  
Hassan Ali Mohammadi  
-75 kg Dmitry Shakuta   Milan Maljkovic   Kassem Daher  
Emilio Mansione  
-81 kg Lorenzo Borgomeo   Mario Milosavljevic   No bronze medallists recorded
-86 kg Stanko Pavlovic   Mohamed Zaidan   No bronze medallists recorded
-91 kg Ivan Tolkachev   Hasan Mansour   No bronze medallists recorded
+91 kg Eduard Voznovich   Milan Rabrenovic   Kiril Pendzurov  

Light-Contact edit

Light-Contact is a form of kickboxing where points are scored on speed and technique and strikes must be thrown with moderate (not full force). It is less physical than Full-Contact but more so than Semi and is often seen as a transitional stage between the two and as with other forms of amateur kickboxing head and body protection must be worn. More detail on Light-Contact and the rules can be found on the W.A.K.O. website.[11] Both men and women participated in the style with the men having eight weight divisions (one less than at Maribor) ranging from 63 kg/138.6 lbs to over 94 kg/+206.8 lbs while the women had six ranging from 50 kg/110 lbs to over 70 kg/154 lbs. Although not full of recognisable names there were a number of repeat winners at Jesolo with Marcel Pekonja, Zoltan Dancso, Wojciech Szczerbinski, Szilvia Csicsely and Nadja Sibila all having won gold medals at the last world championships in Maribor. By the end of the event Poland was the strongest nation in the style winning five golds, three silvers and two bronze medals.[12]

Men's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-63 kg Dmitri Kozlov   Chris Collymore   Jorge Coelho  
Maciej Dominczak  
-69 kg Marcel Fekonja   Christian Bauer   Philipe Schmid  
Sead Pejmanovic  
-74 kg Rafal Petertil   Mikhail Sorin   Oliver Stricz  
Christian Piras  
-79 kg Zoltan Dancso   Andrea Primitivi   Marat Pukhaev  
Hugo Matos  
-84 kg Martin Albers   Bogumil Polonski   Marco Tagliaferri  
Vladimir Blagodiyr  
-89 kg Wojciech Myslinski   Bernd Reichenbach   Uros Urleb  
Colin O'Shaughnessy  
-94 kg Michal Wszelak   Ivan Caprio   Aleksandre Stokovski  
+94 kg Wojciech Szczerbiński   Drazen Glavas   Yuri Abramov  
Matej Lepenik  

Women's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-50 kg Szilvia Csicsely   Julita Tkaczyk   Ekaterina Dunbrava  
Mateja Rabotek  
-55 kg Alessia Gaietto   Zaneta Kruk   Sabine Seifert  
Christina McMahon  
-60 kg Julie McHale   Sonia Biancucci   Caiado Funanda  
Damiris Favre-Rochex  
-65 kg Maike Golzenleuchter   Szilvia Linczmayer   Sanja Stunja  
Helen Barnhard  
-70 kg Karolina Lukasik   Nusa Rajher   Sarah Martin  
Pierina Guerreri  
+70 kg Nadja Sibila   Oxana Kikakh   Ellen McAllister  
Beata Lawrynowicz  

Semi-Contact edit

Semi-Contact is the least physical of the contact kickboxing styles available at W.A.K.O. events. It involves the participants throwing controlled strikes at targets above the waist, with point's scored on the basis of speed and technique with power prohibited. Despite the less physical nature all contestants must wear head and various body protection - more detail on the Semi-Contact and the rules can be found on the official W.A.K.O. website.[13] Both men and women participated in the style with the men having nine weight divisions ranging from 57 kg/125.4 lbs to over 94 kg/+206.8 lbs and the women having six ranging from 50 kg/110 lbs to over 70 kg/154 lbs. Not full of noticeable names there were a number of repeat winners with Dezső Debreczeni, Samantha Aquilano, Luisa Lico and Nadja Sibila all having won gold at the last world championships in Maribor. By the championships end Great Britain were the strongest country in Semi-Contact winning four golds, one silver and one bronze medal.[14]

Men's Semi-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-57 kg Dezső Debreczeni   Rolf Leipert   Alberto Martini  
Andrzej Maciazek  
-63 kg Nico Thommen   Tomasz Kwasny   Roberto Belotti  
Albert Frommel  
-69 kg Jacey Cashman   Christian Boujibar   Premyslaw Ziemnicki  
Steven de Block  
-74 kg Roy Baker   Dimitri Gaulis   Bjorn Baert  
Nick Memmos  
-79 kg Kurt Baert   Billy Bryce   Michel Decian  
Neri Stella  
-84 kg Sam Timmis   Günther Schönrock   Igor Kaslek  
Emre Cetin  
-89 kg Peter Csikos   Daniel Weil   Matej Sibila  
Roberto Montuoro  
-94 kg Mark Brown   Laszlo Toth   Pero Gazilj  
Martin Kaiser  
+94 kg Terry Hillman   Darragh Geoghegan   Karl Heinz Kohlbrenner  
Luca Letizia  

Women's Semi-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-50 kg Samantha Aquilano   Renate Sandland   Katarzyna Nokaw  
Natalia Boulik  
-55 kg Monica Compagno   Gonca Thurm   Julia Trofimova  
Manuela Grobotek  
-60 kg Luisa Lico   Brigita Plemenitas   Damiris Favre-Rochex  
Caradh O'Donovan  
-65 kg Cecilia Brækhus   Urska Dolinsek   Gloria de Bei  
Patrizia Berlingieri  
-70 kg Adriane Doppler   Elaine Small   Anna Migliaccio  
Kelly Gillis  
+70 kg Nadja Sibila   Nicola Corbett   Mieke Hink  
Oxana Kinakh  

Musical Forms edit

Musical Forms is a non-physical competition which sees the contestants fighting against imaginary foes using Martial Arts techniques - more information on the style can be found on the W.A.K.O. website.[15] The men and women competed in four different styles explained below:

Notable winners included Christian Brell, Andrei Roukavistnikov, Sandra Hess and Veronica Dombrovskaya who added to the winners medals they had collected at the last world championships in Maribor, with Dombrovskaya also being a double winner in Musical Forms at Jesolo. By the end of the championships Belarus were the strongest nation in the style, winning three gold medals, one silver and one bronze overall.[16]

Men's Musical Forms Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Hard Styles Ashley Beck   Christian Brell   Steffen Bernhardt  
Soft Styles Andrei Roukavistnikov   Andrey Bosak   Castellacci Massimiliano  
Hard Styles with Weapons Christian Brell   Steffen Bernhardt   Ashley Beck  
Soft Styles with Weapons Andrey Bosak   Andrei Roukavistnikov   Michael Moeller  

Women's Musical Forms Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Hard Styles Sandra Hess   Samantha Smythe   Olga Koudinova  
Soft Styles Veronica Dombrovskaya   Mariya Pekarchik   Ewa Sliwa  
Hard Styles with Weapons Veronica Dombrovskaya   Olga Koudinova   Mariya Pekarchik  
Soft Styles with Weapons Mariya Pekarchik   Ekaterina Tchijikova   Veronica Dombrovskaya  

Aero-Kickboxing edit

Aero-Kickboxing made its debut at a W.A.K.O. championships in Jesolo. Like Musical Forms it is a non physical competition involving aerobic and kickboxing techniques in time to specifically selected music – more information on Aero-Kickboxing and the rule set can be found on the W.A.K.O. website.[17] There were three categories in Jesolo; male, female and a mixed sex team event. By the end of the championships France was the top nation making a clean sweep of all three gold medal positions.[18]

Men's Aero-Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Aero Men Jean Luc Kitoko   Harald Rainer   No bronze medallist recorded

Women's Aero-Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Aero Women Suzan Aycin   Marina Nikolic   Beata Krassoi  

Aero-Kickboxing (Team) Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Aero Team Team France I   Team Italy II   Team Italy I  

Overall Medals Standing (Top 5) edit

Ranking Country Gold   Silver   Bronze  
1   Russia 15 10 11
2   Italy 8 6 18
3   Belarus 8 2 2
4   Germany 7 11 6
5   Poland 5 6 9

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Europeans in Jesolo (Italian language - report on event)". www.ilguerriero.it. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  2. ^ "Wako Events In Hungary (mentions orig scheduled WAKO events in 2002)". axkickboxing.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  3. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  4. ^ "Kickbox-Ergebnisse (In German - results info etc from Jesolo)". www.kickboxer.de. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  5. ^ "WAKO Full contact Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  6. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002 (FULLKONTAKT)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  7. ^ "WAKO Low-Kick Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  8. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002 (Low-Kick)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  9. ^ "Europeans in Jesolo (Italian language - mentions Thai-Boxing and other championships)". www.ilguerriero.it. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  10. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002 (Thai-Boxing)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  11. ^ "WAKO Light-Contact Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  12. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002 (Leight contact)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  13. ^ "Semi-Contact Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  14. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002 (Semicontact)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  15. ^ "WAKO Musical Forms Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-05-30.
  16. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002 (Musical Forms)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-05-30.
  17. ^ "WAKO Aero Kickboxing Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
  18. ^ "Results Kickboxing European Championship 2002 (Aero-Kickboxing)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-06-04.

External links edit