W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 (Belgrade)

W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 were the joint thirteenth world kickboxing championships (the other was held earlier that year in Maribor, Slovenia) hosted by the W.A.K.O. organization. It was the second championships to be held in Serbia and Montenegro (the Europeans had been held here back in 1996) and was open to amateur men and women across the world.

W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 (Belgrade)
The poster for W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 (Belgrade)
Information
PromotionW.A.K.O.
Date21 November 2001(start)
25 November 2001 (end)
CitySerbia and Montenegro Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro
Event chronology
W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 (Maribor) W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 (Belgrade) W.A.K.O. European Championships 2002

There were three styles on offer at Belgrade; Full-Contact, Low-Kick (men only) and Thai-Boxing (men only). The other typical styles, Semi Contact, Musical Forms etc., had taken place at the sister event in Maribor. By the end of the championships Russia was the strongest nation overall, followed by Belarus in second and hosts Serbia and Montenegro in third. The event was held over five days in Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro, starting on Wednesday, 21 November and finishing on Sunday, 25 November 2001.[1][2]

Full-Contact

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Full-Contact is a form of kickboxing where both punches and kicks are thrown with full force with strikes below the waist prohibited. Most matches are settled by either a point's decision or referee stoppage and like most other amateur contact sports, head and body protection is compulsory. More detail on Full-Contact rules can be found on the W.A.K.O. website. At Belgrade both men and women took part in the style with the men having twelve divisions ranging from 51 kg/112.2 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs, and the women had seven ranging from 48 kg/105.6 lbs to over 70 kg/+143 lbs.[3] Notable winners included was Roman Romanchuk who would also have some success in amateur boxing and Fouad Habbani who made the successful transition to Full-Contact having won gold in Light-Contact at Maribor. By the end of the championship Russia was by far the most successful country in the category winning seven golds and six bronzes in both male and female competition.[4]

Men's Full-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
-51 kg Olleksandr Sasyn   Francisco Fernandes   Ramin Allahverdiyev  
-54 kg Aleksandr Fedorov   Damian Lawniczak   Maxim Glubochenko  
Lazaros Hatzisavvas  
-57 kg Fouad Habbani   Youness Bouignane   Eduard Mammadov  
Pedro Marta  
-60 kg Michal Tomczykowski   Bouchaib El Bilali   Vladimir Pykhtin  
Dejan Kekic  
-63.5 kg Malik Mangouchi   Arild Mikalsen   Badre Belhaja  
Danylo Stepanenko  
-67 kg Ruslan Batrutdinov   Mariusz Ziętek   Krasimiz Gambazor  
Roman Pichuk  
-71 kg Robert Nowak   Rafael Gazayev   Thomas Kristiansen  
Konstanine Belooussov  
-75 kg Ramadani Besnik   Oleyandr Kirsh   Tomasz Walenski  
Andreas Papadakis  
-81 kg Roman Romanchuk   Solobodan Marinkovic   Alessio Rondelli  
Abdelhai Hanine  
-86 kg Yohann Lemaire   Mostapha Lakhsen   Ljubiša Ilić  
David Bybee  
-91 kg Stanislav Zemlyakov   Sean Collier   Andriy Ivanov  
Waine Turner  
+91 kg Ivan Rudan   Vyacheslav Bednyy   Florentin Pintescu  
Dmitri Guerassimov  

Women's Full-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
-48 kg Olesya Gladkova   Veronique Legras   Cinzia Vargiu  
Rita Takacs  
-52 kg Oksana Vasilieva   Fatma Akyüz   Tatiana Rinaldi  
Aliya Boranbayeva  
-56 kg Barbara Plazzoli   Edyta Olewniczak   Evguenia Grebenchtchikova  
Goranka Blagojevic  
-60 kg Milijanka Cenic   Monika Florek   Julia Nemtsova  
K Amatava  
-65 kg Marjut Lappalainen   Bouchara Errahmani   Karolina Lukasik  
Marija Divjak  
-70 kg Olga Slevinskaia   Bojaha Trajkovic   No bronze medalists recorded
+70 kg Kabira Rochai   Izabel Cavka   Daniela Lazarevska  

Low-Kick

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Low-kick is a style of kickboxing which is similar to Full-Contact, allowed strikes (punches and kicks) to be thrown at full force, with the only difference being that strikes are also allowed to the legs of the opponent. Fights are mainly won by a point's decision or by a referee stoppage, with head and body protection mandatory for all contestants. More details on the rules can be found at the W.A.K.O. website.[5] At Belgrade the category was open to men only with twelve weight divisions ranging from 51 kg/112.2 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs. The most notable gold medallist was Ivan Strugar who won yet another gold medal (sixth overall) at a W.A.K.O. championships, while future K-1 MAX and Superleague fighters (and brothers) José Reis and Luis Reis won bronze. By the end of the championships the host nation Yugoslavia was the strongest country in Low-Kick winning five gold, one silver and one bronze.[6]

Men's Low-Kick Kickboxing Medals Table

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
-51 kg Utkir Hudoyarov   Mergien Monguch   Jozdan Vasslilev  
Shyam Seebaluck  
-54 kg Milos Anic   Nurlan Valiev   Vusal Babayev  
Mariusz Cieśliński  
-57 kg Evgeniy Khil   Nicolai Muhailov   Mirbel Suiunbajev  
Gabor Kiss  
-60 kg Nikola Mladenovic   Viatcheslav Tislenko   Tahir Duishekeyev  
Saidi El Houssain  
-63.5 kg Milisan Icic   Boughnim El Mostafa   Alexandru Pogorelov  
Alessio Pastifieri  
-67 kg Isa Mambetov   Ruslan Kovalenko   Luis Reis  
Valeri Akinchine  
-71 kg Issaev Ioussoup   Dmitri Lihodumov   Sanjar Saparbekov  
José Reis  
-75 kg Ivan Sočo   Kanatbek Sydygaliev   Oleg Outenine  
Anatoliy Dyakov  
-81 kg Ivan Strugar   Drazenko Ninic   Ali Porsukov  
Abudakar Abakarov  
-86 kg Ismailov Magomed   Stanko Pavlović   Anuar Ibrayev  
Ilko Makshutov  
-91 kg Ante Varnica   Ruslan Azizov   Georgi Siderov  
Sergey Sokolov  
+91 kg Jovan Nikolic   Jasmin Sejdinović   Mirko Vlahovic  
Tugomir Gruica  

Thai-Boxing

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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 Belgrade the category was open to men only with twelve weight divisions ranging from 51 kg/112.2 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs. Notable winners included Andrei Kulebin winning the first of what would later be many world titles and future It's Showtime 77 MAX world champion Dmitry Shakuta. As with the last world championships Belarus proved to be absolutely dominant once more in Thai-boxing, going one better this time by picking up an incredible nine gold medals.[7]

Men's Thai-Boxing Medals Table

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
-51 kg Andrei Kulebin   Maxim Slipchenko   No bronze medalists recorded
-54 kg Dmitry Koren   Oleg Movchan   Issam Laafissi  
-57 kg Mohamed Ajuan   Edgar Arutyunyan   Moghad Eshan Rastegar  
Ahmed Chaikho  
-60 kg Rachid Boumalek   Dmitry Ouchkanov   Oleksiy Neskyy  
Kic Brahislav  
-63.5 kg Evgeni Gvozdev   Mourad Tijarti   Celap Hehad  
Oleksiy Kandalintsev  
-67 kg Alexei Pekarchik   Shamil Gaydarbekov   Pavlo Batsynu  
Jakob Szilard 
-71 kg Yuri Bulat   Yevgen Chronobrovtsev   Namiq Hashimov  
Dmitry Kurbatov  
-75 kg Dmitry Shakuta   Khabib Gadjiev   Milan Maljkovic  
Khalid Hanine  
-81 kg Yauhen Anhalevich   Lorenzo Borgomeo   Maksym Kyyk  
Raup Izrailov  
-86 kg Ivan Tolkachev   Vadym Vlayev   Domenico Giuliano  
-91 kg Andrei Molchanov   Timur Porsukov   Jevgeny Evtoshenko  
Milan Rabrehovic  
+91 kg Sergei Arkhipov   Dragan Jovanović   Ivica Perkovic  
Shammal Gaddgiev  

Overall Medals Standing (Top 5)

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Ranking Country Gold   Silver   Bronze  
1   Russia 10 7 13
2   Belarus 9 0 0
3   Serbia and Montenegro 6 4 9
4   Morocco 3 5 5
5   France 3 1 0

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Results of the 13th WAKO World Championships Belgrade (Yugoslavia)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  2. ^ "Kickbox-Ergebnisse - Kickboxer (German language - Dates & Results)". www.kickboxer.de. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  3. ^ "WAKO Full contact Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-05-24.
  4. ^ "Results of the 13th WAKO World Championships Belgrade (Yugoslavia) (fullcontact men/women)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  5. ^ "WAKO Low-Kick Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-05-28.
  6. ^ "Results of the 13th WAKO World Championships Belgrade (Yugoslavia) (low-kick)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  7. ^ "Results of the 13th WAKO World Championships Belgrade (Yugoslavia) (thai-boxing)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
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