W.A.K.O. European Championships 1998 (Leverkusen)

W.A.K.O. European Championships 1998 in Leverkusen were the joint fourteenth European kickboxing championships (the other was held in Kyiv the same year) hosted by the W.A.K.O. organization and the fourth championships (world and European) to be held in Germany. The event was open to amateur men and women based in Europe only and there were just the two styles on offer; Full-Contact and Light-Contact kickboxing. By the end of the championships Russia was by far the dominant nation in terms of medals won, with Poland second and Hungary third. The event was held in Leverkusen, Germany over six days starting on Tuesday, 1 December and ending on Sunday, 6 December 1998.[1]

W.A.K.O. European Championships 1998
The poster for W.A.K.O. European Championships 1998
Information
PromotionW.A.K.O.
Date1 December (Start)
6 December 1998 (End)
CityGermany Leverkusen, Germany
Event chronology
W.A.K.O. World Championships 1997 W.A.K.O. European Championships 1998 W.A.K.O. World Championships 1999 (Bishkek)

Full-Contact edit

Full-Contact is a form of kickboxing where fights are won primarily by stoppage or points decision, with kicks and punches allowed above the waist, although unlike professional kickboxing fighters had to wear head and body protection - more detail on the rules are available on the W.A.K.O. website.[2] At Leverkusen the men had twelve weight classes ranging from 51 kg/112.2 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs, while the women had six, ranging from 48 kg/105.6 lbs to over 65 kg/+143 lbs. Notable medalists included Robert Nowak, Almaz Gismeev and future female boxing legend Natascha Ragosina who had all won gold medals back at the last European championships in Belgrade. By the championships end Russia was the strongest nation overall in Full-Contact, winning five golds, three silvers and three bronzes.[3]

Men's Full-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Light Bantamweight -51 kg Merguen Mongush   Gabor Aburko   Damian Ławniczak  
Kuvat Kurbanov  
Bantamweight -54 kg Francesco De Luca   Milisav Ilic   Kenneth Johansen  
Alexandre Fedozov  
Featherweight -57 kg Thomas Karlsson   Fouad Habbani   Armen Ohanyan  
Laszco Velsei  
Lightweight -60 kg Muzaffer Tosun   Artur Sergeev   Daniel Korner  
Zoubahir Mamoudi  
Light Welterweight -63.5 kg Dosaev Gani   Gyoergy Bugyik   Giuseppe Lorusso  
Marco Seifert  
Welterweight -67 kg Giga Kordzadze   Sven Kirsten   Terje Arildsen  
Roman Bashkaton  
Light Middleweight -71 kg Robert Nowak   Khalmurad Izmailov   Mikhail Plotnikov  
Lasylo Bavany  
Middleweight -75 kg Zoran Stanković   Andreas Tuft   Gerard Zdziarski  
Roman Chmil  
Light Heavyweight -81 kg Aleksei Solovjov   Viktor Savchenko   Mittally Tiszai  
Roman Dakolinsh  
Cruiserweight -86 kg Igor Pylypenko   Petri Reima   Dmitri Sobennicov  
Attila Sarkoezi  
Heavyweight -91 kg Elvir Behlulovic   Gergely Csölle   Ramazi Kikalishvili  
Lubos Koptak  
Super Heavyweight +91 kg Almaz Gismeev   Patrik Matejka   Vlatko Sorola  
Vladyslav Chornyi  

Women's Full-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Bantamweight -48 kg Veronique Legras   Alina Shaternikova   Erzsebet Borosi  
Giovanna Neglia  
Featherweight -52 kg Christine de Ruggiero   Helena Karpatchyova   Oksana Ivasiva  
Edyta Olewniczak  
Lightweight -56 kg Tatyana Chalaj   Viktoria Rudenko   Iwona Guzowska  
Heidi Hutari  
Middleweight -60 kg Julia Voskoboinik   Anna Kasprzak   Elza Midzic  
Tatyana Alalutdinova  
Light Heavyweight -65 kg Agnieszka Rylik   Zulfiya Kutdyusova   Suzana Stunja  
Tanja Vujic  
Heavyweight +65 kg Natascha Ragosina   Ivana Derdic   Bojava Trajkovic  
Marianne Antersberger  

Light-Contact edit

Light-Contact is a form of kickboxing that is less physical than Full-Contact but more so than Semi-Contact and is often seen as an intermediate step between the two. Fights are generally won by points scored on the basis of speed and technique over brute force and both fighters must wear head and body protection - more detail on Light-Contact rules can be found on the official W.A.K.O. website.[4] The men had eight weight divisions ranging from 57 kg/125.4 lbs to over 89 kg/+195.8 lbs while the women had five ranging from 50 kg/110 lbs to over 65 kg/143 lbs. The most notable winner was Tomaž Barada who added to the gold he won at the last European championships. By the end of the event Hungary was the top nation overall in Light-Contact with two golds, six silvers and two bronze medals.[5]

Men's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-57 kg Rafal Kaluzny   Dezső Debreczeni   Diego Bianco  
Denis Van Ngoc  
-63 kg Tomaž Barada   Antonio Coletta   Dawid Kowalski  
Che Deane  
-69 kg Alexander Starostin   Oliver Stricz   Aleksandr Sukhoviy  
Andreas Hahn  
-74 kg Boris Zalyotkin   Tamas Hudoba   Sergey Zaharchuk  
Darren Duncan  
-79 kg Zoltan Dancso   Alexei Zalyotkin   Roland Conar  
Miroslav Sobotka  
-84 kg Martin Albers   Laszlo Toth   Bartolomeo Bonvino  
Muhammad Ali Durmaz  
-89 kg Klaus Wilkinson   Zsolt Molnar   Radek Nekvinda  
Michal Wszolek  
+89 kg Michael Kruckenhauser   István Tóth   Gianmario Franchina  
Jacek Puchacz  

Women's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-50 kg Szilvia Csicsely   Sonia De Biase   Marie Laure Miviere  
Julita Tkaczyk  
-55 kg Bianca Tapilatu   Rita Pesuth   Stephanie Rzehak  
Adriana Popa  
-60 kg Emanuela Amisani   Lisa Palme   Judit Gal  
Monika Florek  
-65 kg Marianne Klemmstein   Lidiya Sharapova   Petra Hochstrasser  
Csilla Bodoe  
+65 kg Sallie McArdle   Anja Renfordt   Katarzyna Balcerzar  
Annalisa Ghilardi  

Overall Medals Standing (Top 5) edit

Ranking Country Gold   Silver   Bronze  
1   Russia 7 5 3
2   Poland 3 1 11
3   Hungary 2 7 6
4   Germany 2 2 6
4   Italy 2 2 6
5   France 2 1 1

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "WAKO EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  2. ^ "WAKO Full contact Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  3. ^ "WAKO EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (FULL CONTACT)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  4. ^ "WAKO Light-Contact Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  5. ^ "WAKO EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (LIGHT CONTACT)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 24 May 2011.

External links edit