W.A.K.O. European Championships 2000 (Jesolo)

W.A.K.O. European Championships 2000 in Jesolo were the joint fifteen European kickboxing championships (the other was held in Moscow the same year) hosted by the W.A.K.O. organization and the sixth championships (world and European) to be held in Italy. The event was open to amateur men and women from across Europe and there were three styles on offer; Low-Kick (men only), Light-Contact and Semi-Contact. By the end of the championships the most successful nation was the hosts Italy, followed by Hungary in second and Kyrgyzstan in third. The event was held over five days at the Palasport Cornaro in Jesolo, Italy starting on Wednesday, 18 October and ending on Sunday, 22 October 2000.[1]

W.A.K.O. European Championships 2000 (Jesolo)
The poster for W.A.K.O. European Championships 2000 (Jesolo)
Information
PromotionW.A.K.O.
Date18 October (Start)
22 October 2000 (End)
VenuePalasport Cornaro
CityItaly Jesolo, Italy
Event chronology
W.A.K.O. European Championships 2000 (Moscow) W.A.K.O. European Championships 2000 (Jesolo) W.A.K.O. World Championships 2001 (Maribor)

Low-Kick edit

Low-Kick is similar to Full-Contact kickboxing except that it allows kicks below the knee. Matches are usually resolved by a point's decision or referee stoppage and as is common in amateur kickboxing, both fighters have to wear head and body protection – more detail on Low-Kick rules can be found at the W.A.K.O. website.[2] At Jesolo the style was open to men only, with there being twelve weight classes ranging from 51 kg/112.2 lbs to over 91 kg/+200.2 lbs. The most notable winner was Ivan Strugar who won his fifth gold medal at an amateur W.A.K.O. championships. Kyrgyzstan was the top nation in Low-Kick winning four golds, one silver and two bronze medals.[3]

Men's Low-Kick Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Light Bantamweight -51 kg Sinisa Marinkovic   Gianpiero Marceddu   Utkir Hudoyarov  
Alberto Costa  
Bantamweight -54 kg Igor Pavlenko   Mariusz Cieśliński   Mirbek Suyumbaev  
Francesco De Luca  
Featherweight -57 kg Tafay Duyshekeev   Evgeny Khil   Pedro Marta  
Michele Iezzi  
Lightweight -60 kg Viatcheslav Tislenko   Nuno Neves   Oleksandr Kozachenko  
Milisav Ilic  
Light Welterweight -63.5 kg Janbulat Amantaev   Alexandre Pogorelov   Hebojsa Marinkovic  
Ruslan Melnyk  
Welterweight -67 kg Luca Lazzaro   Isa Mambetov   Enrique Martinez  
Oliver Elisabeth  
Light Middleweight -71 kg Konstantin Beloussov   Carlos Tavares   Ruslan Kovalenko  
Kanatbek Sydygaliev  
Middleweight -75 kg Ivan Strugar   Oleg Outenine   Davyd Dzhydzhelava  
David Dancrade  
Light Heavyweight -81 kg Drazenko Ninic   Aslanbek Dychekov   Istvan Denes  
Anatoliy Dudchenko  
Cruiserweight -86 kg Anuar Ibraev   Dmitri Vorobjov   Leonid Mironenko  
Vassili Komakov  
Heavyweight -91 kg Ruslan Avasov   Tugomir Gruica   Darko Milasinovic  
Tibor Nagy  
Super Heavyweight +91 kg Ivan Rudan   Mirko Vlahovic   Yevgeni Orlov  
Dejan Mitrovski  

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 a stepping stone between the two. Fighters score points on the basis of speed and technique over brute force although stoppages can occur, and as with other amateur kickboxing styles head and body protection must be worn – more detail on Light-Contact rules can be found on the official W.A.K.O. website.[4] The men had nine weight divisions in the style ranging from 57 kg/125.4 lbs to over 94 kg/+206.8 lbs while the women had six ranging from 50 kg/110 lbs to over 70 kg/154 lbs. Notable winners at Jesolo included Dawid Kowalski, Martin Albers and Michal Wszelak who had all won gold medals at the last world championships in Caorle. By the end of the championships Hungary was the most successful nation in Light-Contact, winning four gold medals, two silver and four bronze.[5]

Men's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-57 kg Fouad Habbani Dezso Debreczeni Danijel Mrkoci
-63 kg Dawid Kowalski Egidio Carsana Robert Arvai
-69 kg Youseff Lattaoui Marcel Fekonja   Gianluca Manca  
Vitaliy Piatetsky  
-74 kg Paul Lynch Rafal Petertil Sergey Androssiou
-79 kg Zoltan Dancso Vadym Pikiner Darren Duncan
-84 kg Martin Albers Bogumil Polonski Jozsef Jorcsak
-89 kg Dirk Kindl Yohann Lemaire Marek Marszal
-94 kg Salim Mohamed Dmitry Gerasimov Toni Turk
+94 kg Emmanuel Mendy Alex Melcher Wojciech Szczerbiński

Women's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-50 kg Szilvia Csicsely   Renate Sandland   Ioulia Trofimova  
Julita Tkaczyk  
-55 kg Agnes Tapai   Edyta Olewniczak   Rada Matsonen  
Andrea Rzehak  
-60 kg Marzia Davide   Monika Florek   Sanja Stunja  
Margaryta Dyadyk  
-65 kg Ivett Pruzsinszky   Suzana Stunja   Annamaria Sisonna  
Saida Gasanova  
-70 kg Larysa Berezenko   Marijana Birin   Annalisa Ghiladri  
Szilvia Linezmayer  
+70 kg Kelly Zanini   Viktoria Kovacs   Anja Renfordt  
Biserka Siranovic  

Semi-Contact edit

Semi-Contact is a form of kickboxing in which fights were won by points given due to technique, skill and speed, with physical force limited and as with other forms of amateur kickboxing, head and body protection is worn – more information on Semi-Contact can be found on the W.A.K.O. website.[6] As with Light-Contact the men had nine weight divisions ranging from 57 kg/125.4 lbs to over 94 kg/+206.8 lbs while the women had six ranging from 50 kg/110 lbs to over 70 kg/154 lbs. By the end of the championships Italy was by far the strongest nation in Semi-Contact picking up six golds, three silvers and two bronzes.[7]

Men's Semi-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-57 kg Dezső Debreczeni   Gianluca Scolari   Rafal Kaluzny  
Fouad Habbani  
-63 kg Vasilis Tatiadis   Andrea Misiani   Rudolf Vrba  
Donald Kealy  
-69 kg Eirik Gunderson   Richard Calixte   Faton Redzas  
Mihaly Koszogovits  
-74 kg Roy Baker   Roman Martin   Zvonimir Gribl  
Domenico De Marco  
-79 kg Michel Decian   Zoltan Dancso   Igor Sharov  
Stelios Polites  
-84 kg Peter Edwards   Ozcan Arslan   Valeriy Drevilo  
Christian Bazdaric  
-89 kg Peter Csikos   Clifton Finlay   David Tarpey  
Roberto Montuoro  
-94 kg Giuseppe Fracaroli   Halis Arslan   Laszlo Toth  
Andreas Mohr  
+94 kg Marco Culiersi   Karl-Heinz Kohl Brenner   Emmanuel Mendy  
Paul Coffey  

Women's Semi-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-50 kg Samantha Aquilano   Krisztina Poropszki   Veronique Legras  
Katarzyna Nowak  
-55 kg Gloria De Bei   Agnes Tapai   Gonca Thurm  
Maria Pia Litvinova  
-60 kg Luisa Lico   Melanie Moder   Lin Sissel Archer  
Jana Moravcova  
-65 kg Anita Madsen   Emanuela Amisani   Anastasiya Savinova  
Adriane Doppler  
-70 kg Anna Megliaccio   Marijana Birin   Lenka Klofacova  
Szilvia Linczmayer  
+70 kg Nadya Sibila   Nicola Corbett   Kateryna Chernetska  
Viktoria Kovacs  

Overall Medals Standing (Top 5) edit

Ranking Country Gold   Silver   Bronze  
1   Italy 9 5 9
2   Hungary 6 5 10
3   Kyrgyzstan 4 1 2
4   France 3 3 6
5   Serbia and Montenegro 3 1 3

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Wertungen EM 2000" (PDF). wakoweb.com. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  2. ^ "WAKO Low-Kick Rules" (PDF). wakoweb.com. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  3. ^ "Wertungen EM 2000 – Wertungen Low-Kick (German language)" (PDF). wakoweb.com. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  4. ^ "WAKO Light-Contact Rules" (PDF). wakoweb.com. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  5. ^ "Wertungen EM 2000 – Wertungen Leichtkontakt (German language)" (PDF). wakoweb.com. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  6. ^ "Semi-Contact Rules" (PDF). wakoweb.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
  7. ^ "Wertungen EM 2000 – Wertungen Semikontakt (German language)" (PDF). wakoweb.com. Retrieved 28 May 2011.

External links edit