Ratchadamnern Versus Lumpini.

•August 4, 2009 • 2 Comments

I haven’t got a lot to say about this except wow:  This is an insane card. I nearly missed this one.  But August 6th Songchai is going to remind us all why he is the number one promoter in Thailand.  Champions versus champions at the Ratchadamnern Stadium.  Words like ‘epic, incredible and amazing’ come to mind.

The lineup is as follows:

(OneSongchai) Lumpini VS Ratchadamnern 6 August (Update 6 August 2009)

OneSongChai Grand Muaythai Promotion
(The 2 Greatest Stadiums Super Fight Ratchadamnern – Lumpini)
6 August 2009
At Ratchadamnern Boxing Stadium

1. Deshsuriya SithTiPraSert 118 LBS
RungRat NaRaTreeKul 118 LBS
2. PaKorn SakYoThin 122 LBS (Ratchadamnern Champion 115 LBS.)
RungReungLek LukePraBaht 122 LBS
3. MaNaSak SithNiWat 122 LBS
PornSaNe SithMonChai 122 LBS (Ratchadamnern Champion 118 LBS.)
4. SingThongNoi PorTeLaKul 126 LBS (S-1 Champion 122 LBS.)
SitTiSakSeng SiamEyuGym 126 LBS
5. PetTaVee SorKitTiChai 122 LBS (S-1 Champion 122 LBS.)
AAA TorRatKiat 122LBS (Lumpini Champion 122 LBS.)
6. NongOh SithOr 127 LBS (Thailand Champion 126 LBS.)
ChomThong ShuWatTaNa 127 LBS
7. PaLungPol PiRiYaNopChai 111 LBS (Thailand Champion 118 LBS.)
PetchMorRaKot TeeDet 99 111 LBS (Lumpini Champion 108 LBS.)
8. ThongChai TorSiLaChai 118 LBS (WMC Champion 118 LBS.)
LukeNiMit SingKlongSi 118 LBS
9. Dung SorPloenChit 43.5 KG
SuperBank SakChaiYaChote 43.5KG
10. PraChanShine PorPetNamThong 45 KG
Petchrachan F.A.Group 45 KG

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Quick results thanks to Rob Cox:

Khaimukdam Sit Or vs Rungrat Naratrikun
Pakon Sakyothin vs Rungruanglek LukprabarManasak Sitniwat vs Pornsaneh Sitmonchai
Singthongnoi Por Telakun vs Sitisak Chengsimiew gym
Petchthawee Sor Kittichai vs Sam-A Thor Ratonakiat
Jomthong Chuwattana vs Nong-O SitO
Palangpon Piriyanoppachai vs Petchmorakot Theedet 99
Thongchai Tor Silachai vs Loognimit Singklongsi

Not sure how or with what means but the bold names are the winners.

Remembering Alex Gong

•August 2, 2009 • 6 Comments

I’d like to thank Lynda Chunhawat for contributing this article about Alex Gong.  This is in memory of Alex and his many contributions to Muay Thai as the 6th anniversary of Alex’s tragic death draws near. There’s often a lot of hyperbole and nonsense about Alex Gong that made it to print.  I think its most appropriate someone who knew Alex write this tribute to his memory. Alex Gong’s titles:

National Siam Award “Best fighter of the year (2001)
K1 Super-Fight winner (2001)
K1 Super-Fight winner (2000)
ISKA Lt. Middle weight world champion (1999)
ISKA Lt. Middle Weight N. American Champion (1998)
ISKA Super Welter weight Inter-Continental Champion (1997)
WMTC Super Welter Weight N. American Champion (1996)
IFCA Lt. Middle Weight US national Champion – Amateur (1995)

Alex Gong remembered

By Lynda L. Chunhawat

Today is August 3, 2009, and it has been exactly 6 years since Alex Gong was killed.   I knew Alex for 6 years and saw him on a nearly daily basis.  He was an incredibly intense, busy, perpetually moving Type A personality who managed to give anyone who would listen a love and appreciation for the sport of Muay Thai.  A lot of people have forgotten but not me.  Time has not healed my sadness.  I still miss him.

I could fill your mind with page after page of stories about Alex but I won’t.  As someone who truly misses him I feel selfish and want to keep my memories to myself.  After someone is suddenly taken it is very common to canonize them, but in Alex’s case there were some who were incredibly insensitive and chose to speculate publicly on what happened.  I was there; it was a defining moment for me to see that and in that instant my life changed too.  He was by no means perfect and I don’t pretend to have been a best friend in fact we fought all the time. Frankly few people have the ability to make me as mad as he could and I think it was mutual.  The best part of saying that is it really reminds me that our core group of people who worked, trained and fought together really were a family.  Families fight and we had doozies.

Meeting Alex and joining the local Muay Thai community was wonderful and helped establish friendships that typically would never have occurred let alone lasted.  In our gym you could literally find exotic dancers, police officers, journalists, investment bankers, punk rockers and college students in the same class.  My very best friendships developed from that experience.

What you already know about Alex but may have forgotten is that he was a driving force behind Muay Thai in the U.S. in the late 90’s and early part of the millennium.  He truly devoted his life to the sport.  He had one amateur fight and then promptly turned professional and amassed an in impressive record.  Alex used to always mimic our trainers mantra of “train hard, fight easy”.  He would fight anytime, anywhere, anyone.  He once fought on live television against a lesser opponent with an active staph infection.  3 days prior to the fight he was in the hospital.  Yes the end result was he lost the fight but still managed to go to decision. A lesser fighter would have bowed out or made excuses. Not Alex. This particular story has never been made public but it is definitely one that exemplifies what Muay Thai meant to Alex.

He spent tireless hours thinking about fighting, analyzing fighting and looking for ways to improve the image of Muay Thai.  His camp was the catalyst to the once very active smoker community in the Bay Area.  He conceptualized a smoker community that would include tournaments and events that occurred with regularity.  They were monthly and had weight classes and participation of more than a dozen schools in fact there were times when we would tell people we had too many competitors and we couldn’t accommodate any additional people.  This model set the tone for smokers all over and existed in the Bay until less than a year ago.

He suffered a back injury about 2 years before he passed away and that kept him from training and fighting but in his last few months he started to train again and on his last day it was one of the most fun days the “old crew” had in years.  Loads of silly things, gross things all wrapped up in intense hardcore training.  All the strain of the previous few years had been lifted for a bit until…

What I’ll remember most about Alex is he fostered the now lifelong passion for Muay Thai I thank him for that.  What I would like for each reader to remember is to just…remember.  I could go on and it’s been difficult to condense this incredible story, there is no way to do it any justice so Alex just know that we still think of you and I hope you have peace where you are.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Thanks to Jorge Alvarez Rios for the nice video tribute to Alex Gong

[tweetmeme source=”remembering-alex-gong/]

Sanitchai Versus Abbas

•August 2, 2009 • 1 Comment

Santichai Swish (Thailand) vs Abbas Ahmadi (Iran) at the I-1 2007 Grand Prix Quarter Final in Hong Kong.


Danny Bill Vs. Coban Lookchaomaesaithong

•August 1, 2009 • 3 Comments

The best Farang Thaiboxer versus the infamous ‘Cruncher’ Coban, reknown for his many fights against Ramon Dekkers

Giorgio Petrosyan versus Petch

•July 26, 2009 • Leave a Comment

Giorgio Petrosyan versus Petch in Koh Samui, Thailand February 2006. This was before Giorgio’s entry into K-1 MAX.

The Z1 Malaysia Muay Thai tournament

•July 25, 2009 • 8 Comments

By Fatsoking

Hey everyone I was strolling over to the excellent Boxx Tomoi blog and I noticed a new tournament is coming to Malaysia for Muay Thai.

The Z-1 Banner

The Z-1 Banner

However this is not the typical 8-man 70.5 KG 8-man tournament you think of when you see the word tournament and a show ending in the number ‘1’ (i.e. K-1, S-1, I-1, M-1, etc.). This is what I was able to find via Z1’s open invitation for fighters:

Z1 will offer 4 weight categories with 8 boxers for each category. All together, there will be 32 boxers competing. Selected weight category will be 51.5kg, 59.5 kg, 63.5 kg and 67.5 kg respectively. Champion for each categories will hold the Z1 World Title Champion and handsome Cash Reward.

BOXX EVENT was established in 2005. Between 2007 – 2008, Boxx organised 17 Muay Thai Championships in Malaysia. Both local and international.

In 2009, Boxx has organised 2 international championships with another one coming up on 8 & 9 May 2009. Infact, 3 more Muay Thai events by Boxx Event will take place in Malaysia before Z1 in October.

Championship by Boxx has attracted many big names in Muay Thai including the legendary Namsaknoi, Berneung Sakhomsin, Jose “Pitu” Sans, Rudolf Durica, Corey Gwaliasi, Benny Ritter, Abbas Ahmadi, Champert Chosipaset, Fasochun Sit O (just to name a few) and many more.

Please refer to http://boxxtomoi.blogspot.com for more information.

I kind of like the idea of a tournament series offering up 4 different weight categories.

Here’s also the trailer for Z-1:

Lastly here is the announced schedule for Z-1:

15 August – Contract Signing Ceremony between the organizer and the boxers
2, 3 & 4 October – Preliminary Fights
6 & 7 November – Semifinal Fights
5 December – Final

I have to say the concept is pretty cool and it’s nice to see the lower weight Thaiboxers getting their chance.

Giorgio Petrosyan versus Cedric Muller

•July 24, 2009 • Leave a Comment

Giorgio Petrosyan Versus Cedric Muller at the Janus Fight Night event in Padova, Italy.

I think this was the first quarter final of the night.

Update to the Contender Asia 2 roster

•July 23, 2009 • 22 Comments

The official roster is updated for the cast of Contender Asia 2. I speculated that no Canadian representative would be going. I was incorrect. Jesse Miles is indeed proceeding to Malaysia to film his part. Please note this is the official confirmed roster as of 7/22/2009.

Quick update this is the new officially acknowledged roster via Contender Asia’s site.

Confirmed Contenders

Confirmed Contenders, with 2 yet to be decided

Confirmed Contenders, with 2 undecided

Confirmed Contenders

As many have speculated Jesse Miles is indeed going on despite being knocked out by Alex Ricci. Apologies for the error.

Watch this space as cast changes seem to be ever changing.

Buakaw to leave K-1 Max?

•July 23, 2009 • 5 Comments

By Fatso King

Hi everyone found this interesting bit about Buakaw from the excellent Muaymag.

Muaythai superstar Buakaw Por Pramuk has gone far beyond any other Thai fighter. At the moment, he can demand a pay of 1.3 million Baht for a fight, which is undeniably the highest ever in Thailand.

In the recent K-1 World Max 2009 round of eight, Buakaw was able to beat Nieky “The Natural” Holtzken quite decisively to earn a spot on the final K-1 bouts on October 26, when he will fight old rival Andy Souwer.

Buakaw Por Pramuk 2X champion of K-1 MAX

Buakaw Por Pramuk 2X champion of K-1 MAX

Should he defeat the Dutch, Buakaw will pass to the final and fight either Italy’s Giorgio Petrosyan or Japan’s Yuya Yamamota on the same day. The winner of the bout will become the 2009 K-1 champion and claim the prize money of about seven million Baht.

His manager Pramuk Rojjanatan said the other finalist is likely Petrosyan.

“Buakaw has already fought Souwer twice. If he could beat him to pass to the final, I think he wil meet Petrosyan rather than the Japanese. Buakaw had a draw with him two years ago in Sweden,” said the manager about the October 26 event.

Meanwhile, Pramuk said Buakaw will fight prepare for a fight on August 15 at the “It’s Showtime” event in Istanbul, Turkey, where he will be pitted against home town boy Murad Direcki.

Buakaw himself is not much worried with his future fights.

“The bout with Andy [Souwer]? I think I am not worried about that as we already know each other style well. If I had a good preparation, I am confident I can fight him and face Petrosyan in the final. I am confident I could win K-1 for the third time,” said the Thai legend.

Asked about his future plan, Buakaw said he wanted to quit fighting in K-1 if he becomes the champion again this time. He is also dreaming of traveling around the world and propagating muaythai.

“So that other Thai fighters will be given the opportunities to fight there. I have always fought in K-1 and was at disadvantage to my opponents. The weight limit was 70 kilograms, so all the westerners who were heavier than that would lose weight, while I was usually at 68-69 kilo.”

“My dream is to travel around the world, and I could fight in muaythai bouts anywhere that wants me. I believe muaythai is the greatest and best martial art in the world, so I want to make it known to the people so that they can see with their own eyes.”

“If all the weapons, including punches, knees, kicks, and elbows, are allowed, no other martial arts can match muaythai,” said Buakaw.

Written by Sroi Mungmee

Source: Khao Sod

What are your thoughts? Personally, I would prefer to watch Buakaw fight Muay Thai internationally too. It seems to me K-1 has limited interest in bringing Thai talent over to K-1 as well. I am speculating Buakaw wants another championship with K-1, a big pay day and then part ways. Some interesting comments too about the weight.

How do you all feel about this?

Giorgio Petrosyan Versus Roelrink

•July 23, 2009 • 6 Comments

Giorgo Petrosyan fights Roelrink in the Italian Extreme IV tournament. This fight took place in April 1, 2006 at Modena, Italy.