Men's Low-Kick at WAKO World Championships 2007 Belgrade -71 kg

The men's light middleweight (71 kg/156.2 lbs) Low-Kick category at the W.A.K.O. World Championships 2007 in Belgrade was the sixth heaviest of the male Low-Kick tournaments, involving seventeen fighters from three continents (Europe, Asia and South America). Each of the matches was three rounds of two minutes each and were fought under Low-Kick rules.

As there were not enough fighters for a tournament designed for thirty-two, fifteen of the fighters received a bye through to the second round. The tournament winner was Russia's Konstantin Sbytov who claimed gold by defeating K-1 MAX fighter and 2004 W.A.K.O. European amateur champion Michal Glogowski from Poland. Paolo Iry from France and Milan Dragojlovic from Serbia won bronze medals.[1]

Results

1st Round 2nd Round Quarter Finals Semi Finals Final
 
  Michal Glogowski D(3:0)
  Nazarenko Vladimiros  
  Michal Glogowski D(3:0)
  Svetoslav Maleschkov  
  Svetoslav Maleschkov D(3:0)
  Robert Szoke  
  Michal Glogowski D(3:0)
  Paolo Iry  
  Frane Radnić  
  Paolo Iry WO
  Paolo Iry D(2:1)
  Vadzim Mazanik  
  Vadzim Mazanik D(3:0)
  Bobizhan Artykbayev  
  Michal Glogowski  
  Konstantin Sbytov D(2:1)
  Wellington Uega  
  Milan Dragojlovic D(3:0)
  Milan Dragojlovic D(3:0)
Kumar Jaliev   Andrea Andrenacci  
Kanan Sadiqov D(2:1) Andrea Andrenacci D(2:1)
  Kanan Sadiqov  
  Milan Dragojlovic  
  Konstantin Sbytov D(3:0)
  Dalibor Ognajnov D(3:0)
  Rostislav Khvorost  
  Dalibor Ognajnov  
  Konstantin Sbytov D(3:0)
  Kirill Grigoriev  
  Konstantin Sbytov D(3:0)
 

Key

Abbreviation Meaning
D (3:0) Decision (Unanimous)
D (2:1) Decision (Split)
KO Knockout
TKO Technical Knockout
AB Abandonment (Injury in match)
WO Walkover (No fight)
DQ Disqualification

See also

References

  1. "LK w -52 kg - Kickboxing Ireland Home Page (Low-Kick Results)" (PDF). www.kickboxingireland.ie. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-03-12.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.