K-1 Grand Prix '96 was a kickboxing event promoted by the K-1 organization. It was the fourth K-1 World Grand Prix final involving eight of the world's best heavyweight fighters (+95 kg/209 lbs), with all bouts fought under K-1 Rules. The eight finalists had all almost qualified via elimination fights at the K-1 Grand Prix '96 Opening Battle event. The only absentee was Stan Longinidis who was unable to participate in the tournament due to injury - he was replaced by reservist Duane Van Der Merwe. As well as tournament bouts there were also two 'Super Fights' fought under K-1 Rules. In total there were twelve fighters at the event, representing seven countries.

K-1 Grand Prix '96
Information
PromotionK-1
DateMay 6, 1996
VenueYokohama Arena
CityJapan Yokohama, Japan
Attendance17,850
Event chronology
K-1 Grand Prix '96 Opening Battle K-1 Grand Prix '96 K-1 Fight Night II

The tournament winner was Andy Hug who defeated Mike Bernardo in the final by way of second round knockout. This would be the popular Hug's first and sole K-1 World Grand Prix title, although he would be the runner up in two more finals. Mike Bernardo would be taking place in his first and only K-1 final, causing a considerable upset by defeating defending champion Peter Aerts by knockout in the quarter-finals. The event was held at the Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan on Monday, May 6, 1996 in front of 17,850 spectators.

K-1 Grand Prix '96 Tournament edit

K-1 Grand Prix '96 Opening Battle Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
        
  Peter Aerts KO
  Jean-Claude Leuyer  
  Peter Aerts  
  Mike Bernardo KO
  Mike Bernardo TKO
  Jeff Roufus  
  Mike Bernardo DEC
  Musashi  
  Sam Greco DEC
  Perry Telgt  
  Sam Greco  
  Musashi TKO
  Kit Lykins  
  Musashi KO
  Mike Bernardo  
  Andy Hug KO
  Mirko Cro Cop DEC
  Jérôme Le Banner  
  Mirko Cro Cop  
  Ernesto Hoost KO
  Stuart Green  
  Ernesto Hoost KO
  Ernesto Hoost  
  Andy Hug DEC
  Andy Hug TKO
  Bart Vale  
  Andy Hug KO
  Duane Van Der Merwe *  
  Sadau Kiatsongrit  
  Stan Longinidis DEC

* Reserve Fight winner Duane Van Der Merwe replaced Stan Longinidis in the quarter-finals as Stan Longinidis was injured

Results edit

K-1 Grand Prix '96 Results[1][2]
K-1 Grand Prix Quarter-finals: K-1 Rules / 3Min. 3R Ext.1R
  Mike Bernardo def. Peter Aerts  
Bernardo defeated Aerts by KO (Left Hook) at 0:13 of the 3rd round.
  Musashi def. Sam Greco  
Musashi defeated Greco by TKO (Doctor Stoppage, Broken Toe) at 3:00 of the 1st round.
  Ernesto Hoost def. Mirko Cro Cop  
Hoost defeated Cro Cop by KO (Right Low Kick) at 1:27 of the 3rd round.
  Andy Hug def. Duane Van Der Merwe  
Hug defeated Van Der Merwe by KO (Left Hook) at 0:40 of the 1st round.
Super Fight 1: K-1 Rules / 3Min. 3R
  Masaaki Miyamoto def. Ron Smoorenburg  
Miyamoto defeated Smoorenburg by KO (Right Punch) at 0:13 of the 1st round.
K-1 Grand Prix Semi-finals: K-1 Rules / 3Min. 3R Ext.2R
  Mike Bernardo def. Musashi  
Bernardo defeated Musashi by 3rd round Unanimous Decision 3-0 (30-28, 29-28, 30-28).
  Andy Hug def. Ernesto Hoost  
Hug defeated Hoost by 2nd Extra Round Split Decision 2-1 (10-9, 9-10, 10-9). After the 1st Extra Round the judges scored it a Majority Draw 1-0 (10-10, 10-9, 10-10) in favour of Hoost, while after the first 3 rounds the judges had scored it a Decision Draw 1-1 (30-29 Hug, 30-30, 29-30 Hoost).
Super Fight 2: K-1 Rules / 3Min. 3R
  Rene Rooze def. Jean-Claude Leuyer  
Rooze defeated Leuyer by KO (Punches) at 1:50 of the 1st round.
K-1 Grand Prix Final: K-1 Rules / 3Min. 3R Ext.2R
  Andy Hug def. Mike Bernardo  
Hug defeated Bernardo by KO (Left Spinning Low Kick) at 1:18 of the 2nd round.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "K-1 Grand Prix '96 Final Results". K-1 Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-12-08.
  2. ^ "Results: K-1 WORLD GRAND PRIX 1996 FINAL". K-1sport.de - Your Source for Everything K-1.

External links edit