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W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 (Skopje)

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W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 (Skopje)
The poster for W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 (Skopje)
PromotionW.A.K.O.
Date21 November 2006 (start)
26 November 2006 (end)
CityNorth MacedoniaSkopje,Republic of Macedonia
Event chronology
W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 (Lisbon)W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 (Skopje)W.A.K.O. World Championships 2007 (Belgrade)

W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 inSkopje were the joint eighteenth Europeankickboxing championships held by theW.A.K.O. organization (the other event was held the previous month inLisbon). It was the first event to be held in the country ofRepublic of Macedonia and was organized by the nation's kickboxing president Ljupčo Nedelkovski,[1] involving (mainly)amateur men and women from 31 countries acrossEurope.

There were three styles on offer at Skopje; Low-Kick,Thai-Boxing and Light-Contact. The other usual W.A.K.O. styles (Full/Semi Contact, Aero-Kickboxing and Musical Forms) were held at the earlier event in Lisbon. By the end of the championshipsRussia were easily the strongest country overall with a massive medals tally withBelarus came a distant second andSerbia not far behind in third place. The event was held in Skopje, Macedonia over six days, beginning on Tuesday 21 November and ending 26 November 2006.[2]

Participating nations

[edit]

There were around 31 nations from acrossEurope participating at the 2006 W.A.K.O. European Championships in Skopje including:[3]

        

Low-Kick

[edit]

Similar to Full-Contact kickboxing, contestants in Low-Kick are allowed to kick and punch one another with full force, with the primary difference being that in Low-Kick they are also allowed to kick one another's legs, with matches typically won by decision or stoppage. As with other forms of amateur kickboxing, various head and body protection must be worn. More information on the style can be found at the W.A.K.O. website.[4] Both men and women took part in Low-Kick at Skopje, with the men having twelve weight divisions ranging from 51kg/112.2lbs to over 91kg/+200.2lbs, and then women having six ranging from 48kg/105.6lbs to 70kg/154lbs and unlike more recent W.A.K.O. championships (aside from Lisbon) some countries were allowed more than one athlete per weight division.[citation needed]

Notable winners in the category included Zurab Faroyan picking up his 4th gold medal in a row, which included winning in Full-Contact at the other European championships in Lisbon a month or so previously, while countryman Konstantin Sbytov picked up his 3rd gold medal. Other winners included multiple world championEduard Mammadov and Ibragim Tamazaev who had won at the last world championships in Agadir. Also in medal positions and more recognisable to western and international audiences wereMichał Głogowski,Ludovic Millet and Mickael Lallemand who all won bronze medals.Russia continued her tradition of being the strongest nation in Low-Kick, easily dominating the medal positions with twelve gold, four silver and eight bronze.[5]

Men's Low-Kick Kickboxing Medals Table

[edit]
EventGoldSilverBronze
Light Bantamweight -51 kg
details
Aleksandar AleksandrovRussiaNijat HuseynovAzerbaijanRasim AlitiNorth Macedonia
Afanasiev KlimeniRussia
Bantamweight -54 kg
details
Jordan VasilevBulgariaEmil KarimovAzerbaijanBoban MarinkovicSerbia
Mokhmad BetmirzaevRussia
Featherweight -57 kg
details
Zurab FaroyanRussiaMilos AnicSerbiaGabor KissHungary
Mariusz CieślińskiPoland
Lightweight -60 kg
details
Eduard MammadovAzerbaijanDzianis TselitsaBelarusAlikhan ChumaevRussia
Grigory GorokhovRussia
Light Welterweight -63.5 kg
details
Artur MagadovRussiaAyoub SaidiDenmarkGleb BozkoEstonia
Kurbanali AkaevRussia
Welterweight -67 kg
details
Nikolai ShtakhanovRussiaEvgeny GrechishkinRussiaVenelin IankovBulgaria
Mickael LallemandFrance
Light Middleweight -71 kg
details
Konstantin SbytovRussiaMilan DragojlovicSerbiaMichał GłogowskiPoland
Ludovic MilletFrance
Middleweight -75 kg
details
Ibragim TamazaevRussiaDragan MićićSerbiaLeszek KoltunPoland
Stelian AngelovBulgaria
Light Heavyweight -81 kg
details
Nenad PagonisSerbiaDrazenko NinicBosnia and HerzegovinaRail RajabovAzerbaijan
Teppo LaineFinland
Cruiserweight -86 kg
details
Kirill IvanovRussiaStipe StipeticCroatiaDilian SlavovBulgaria
Vladimir DjordjevicSerbia
Heavyweight -91 kg
details
Dimitri AntonenkoRussiaDejan MilosavljevicSerbiaSasa CirovicSerbia
Ivan StanićCroatia
Super Heavyweight +91 kg
details
Dragan JovanovićSerbiaHafiz BakhshaliyevAzerbaijanGoran RadonjicMontenegro
Jan AntoskaSlovakia

Women's Low-Kick Kickboxing Medals Table

[edit]
EventGoldSilverBronze
Bantamweight -48 kg
details
Anabyeva SvetlanaRussiaEkateruba VerzhbitskayaRussiaCorina CarlescuRomania
Zeljana PitesaCroatia
Featherweight -52 kg
details
Maria KrivoshapkinaRussiaEkaterina DumbravaRussiaVira MakresovaUkraine
Eva OttHungary
Lightweight -56 kg
details
Milena DincicSerbiaMaryna BatsmanUkraineArsalane AhlamFrance
Lidia AndreevaRussia
Middleweight -60 kg
details
Barbara PlazzoliItalyMilijanka CenicSerbiaOlga ZykRussia
Fatima BokovaRussia
Light Heavyweight -65 kg
details
Vera AvdeevaRussiaMimma MandoliniItalyJelena JuricSerbia
Maja DjukanovicSerbia
Heavyweight -70 kg
details
Svetlana KulakovaRussiaElena KondratyevaRussiaOlivera MilanovicSerbia
Nataša IvetićSerbia
Super Heavyweight +70 kg
details
Natalija SimacCroatiaDaniela LazarevskaNorth MacedoniaNo bronze medallists recorded

Thai-Boxing

[edit]

Thai-Boxing, more commonly known asMuay Thai, is a type of kickboxing that allows the participants to throw punches, kicks, elbows and knees at full force to legal targets on the opponents body. Due to the physical nature of the sport, stoppages are not uncommon, although in amateur Thai-Boxing head and body protection must be worn. At Skopje both men and women took part in the style with the men having twelve weight divisions ranging from 51kg/112.2lbs to over 91kg/+200.2lbs and the women six, ranging from 52kg/114.4lbs to over 70kg/154lbs and unlike more recent W.A.K.O. championships (aside from Lisbon) some countries were allowed more than one athlete per weight division.[citation needed]

There were not too many recognisable winners in Thai-Boxing at Skopje althoughVitaly Gurkov had won a number of amateur world championships with various organizations prior to this event and would go on to win aK-1 regional tournament as a pro. By the end of the championshipsRussia finally overhauled the dominance ofBelarus in the style, coming out top with six gold, seven silver and seven bronze medals.[6]

Men's Thai-Boxing Medals Table

[edit]
EventGoldSilverBronze
Light Bantamweight -51 kg
details
Giampiero MarcedduItalySiarhei SkibaBelarusAndrey MikhaylovRussia
Bantamweight -54 kg
details
Maksym GlubochenkoUkraineGoran MimicaCroatiaAndrea MolonItaly
Featherweight -57 kg
details
Aleksandar GogicSerbiaRuben AlmediaPortugalRamil NovruzovBelarus
Ilya MordvinovRussia
Lightweight -60 kg
details
Pashik TatoyanRussiaBahtiyar IskanderzadeAzerbaijanGor ShavelyanRussia
Aleksandar JankovicSerbia
Light Welterweight -63.5 kg
details
Yury ZhvokovskiBelarusSergey SolomennokovRussiaStanislav UshakovRussia
Michele IezziItaly
Welterweight -67 kg
details
Vitaly GurkovBelarusNikolay BubnovRussiaMikhail MishinRussia
Nebojsa DenicSerbia
Light Middleweight -71 kg
details
Denis DikusarRussiaRizvan IsaevRussiaIle RisteskiNorth Macedonia
Milos MihaljevicSerbia
Middleweight -75 kg
details
Yury HarbachovBelarusMikhail ChalykhRussiaKamel MezatniFrance
Aleksandre StajkovskiNorth Macedonia
Light Heavyweight -81 kg
details
Dzianis HancharonakBelarusIvan DamianovBulgariaDmytro KirpanUkraine
Arpad ForgonHungary
Cruiserweight -86 kg
details
Maxim VinogradovRussiaAly StaubmannAustriaSiarhei KrauchankaBelarus
Zaur AlekporovAzerbaijan
Heavyweight -91 kg
details
Kiril PendjurovBulgariaAtanas StojkovskiNorth MacedoniaAlexey ShevtsovRussia
Igor JurkovićCroatia
Super Heavyweight +91 kg
details
Alexey KudinBelarusValentino VenturiniCroatiaMirko VlahovićMontenegro
Mladen BozicSerbia

Women's Thai-Boxing Medals Table

[edit]
EventGoldSilverBronze
Bantamweight -48 kg
details
Anna KozelkovaRussiaViktoria AgeevaRussiaAnett UrbanHungary
Featherweight -52 kg
details
Petra BuchenbergerHungaryAlisa ChukhninaRussiaKristina KaramaticCroatia
Adi RotemIsrael
Lightweight -56 kg
details
Irma BalijagicBosnia and HerzegovinaBarbara VlahovCroatiaNo bronze medallists recorded
Middleweight -60 kg
details
Natalya KamenskikhRussiaAna MandicCroatiaPanu DonatellaItaly
Sanja SamardzicBosnia and Herzegovina
Light Heavyweight -65 kg
details
Elena SolarevaRussiaLejla OsmaniNorth MacedoniaNo bronze medallists recorded
Heavyweight -70 kg
details
Nives RadicCroatiaEkaterina RokunovaRussiaTatiana OvchinnikovaRussia

Light-Contact

[edit]

Light-Contact is a form ofkickboxing that is less physical than Full-Contact but more so than Semi-Contact and is often seen as a transition between the two. Contestants score points on the basis of speed and technique over brute force although stoppages can occur, although as with other amateur forms head and body protection must be worn – more detail on Light-Contact rules can be found on the official W.A.K.O. website.[7] The men had nine weight divisions ranging from 57kg/125.4lbs to over 94kg/+206.8lbs while the women had six ranging from 50kg/110lbs to over 70kg/154lbs and unlike more recent W.A.K.O. championships (aside from Lisbon) some countries were allowed more than one athlete per weight division.[citation needed]

As it is often in the shadow of the full contact styles there were not many familiar faces in Light-Contact although Dezső Debreczeni, who is a regular winner in Light and Semi-Contact, won another gold medal. By the end of the championshipsHungary preventedRussia from being top in all three styles at Skopje by winning three golds, two silvers and three bronze.[8]

Men's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table

[edit]
EventGoldSilverBronze
-57 kg
details
Dezső DebreczeniHungaryMaxim AysinRussiaFabien SabyFrance
Artur NovikovRussia
-63 kg
details
Konstyantyn DemoretskyyUkraineMikhail GerasimovRussiaKamel BachaFrance
Stanislav PetrovBulgaria
-69 kg
details
Przemysław ZiemnickiPolandDanir YusupovRussiaZsolt NagyHungary
Juraj HoppanSlovakia
-74 kg
details
Toby BemullerRepublic of IrelandSergey FaretovRussiaArtem NoskovUkraine
Attila OlaszHungary
-79 kg
details
Stefan BückerGermanyZoltan DancsoHungaryChristophe TouzeauFrance
Bernhard SussitzAustria
-84 kg
details
Duane ReidUnited KingdomMurat PukhaevRussiaRainer GerdenitschAustria
David NagodeSlovenia
-89 kg
details
Gavin WilliamsonUnited KingdomMattia BezzonItalyArtem VasylenkoUkraine
Berislav BudiscakCroatia
-94 kg
details
Giovanni NurchiGermanyMikael BäckströmSwedenTibor WappelHungary
Emin PanyanRussia
+94 kg
details
Michal WszelakPolandMerlin GehrtGermanyKonstantin KuleshovRussia
Cristian LubranoItaly

Women's Light-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table

[edit]
EventGoldSilverBronze
-50 kg
details
Fatima ZaaboulaFranceReka KrempfHungaryTherese GunnarssonSweden
Alexandra KibanovaRussia
-55 kg
details
Maria KushtanovaRussiaZaneta CieslaPolandAndriana TricoliItaly
Roxana LasakFrance
-60 kg
details
Julie McHaleRepublic of IrelandKatarina IlicicCroatiaTamara RadkovicSlovenia
Maria Antonietta LovicuItaly
-65 kg
details
Marta FenyvesiHungaryKatarzyna FurmaniakPolandSabina SehicSlovenia
Nicole TrimmelAustria
-70 kg
details
Ivett PruzsinszkyHungaryLariza BrezenkoUkraineAnnalisa GhilardiItaly
Kate KearneyUnited Kingdom
+70 kg
details
Oxana KinakhRussiaPaulina BiecPolandZeliha DoğrugüneşTurkey
Sabine SchnellGermany

Overall Medals Standing (Top 5)

[edit]
RankingCountryGoldGoldSilverSilverBronzeBronze
1RussiaRussia201619
2BelarusBelarus522
3SerbiaSerbia4511
4HungaryHungary427
5ItalyItaly227

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"EUROPEI DI SCOPJE (In Italian – event details)". ilguerriero.it. Retrieved23 June 2011.
  2. ^"WAKO European Championships – Skopje Macedonia – Welcome (Event details)". european-championships-macedonia-2006.com. Retrieved23 June 2011.
  3. ^"WAKO European Championships – Skopje Macedonia – Competitors". european-championships-macedonia-2006.com.{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|url= (help)
  4. ^"WAKO Low-Kick Rules"(PDF). wakoweb.com. Retrieved23 June 2011.
  5. ^"results.pdf (scroll down to Low Kick pg 5)". wakoweb.com. Retrieved23 June 2011.
  6. ^"results.pdf (scroll down to Thai Kickboxing pg 3)". wakoweb.com. Retrieved23 June 2011.
  7. ^"WAKO Light-Contact Rules"(PDF). wakoweb.com. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 9 March 2012. Retrieved23 June 2011.
  8. ^"results.pdf (Light Contact)". wakoweb.com. Retrieved23 June 2011.

External links

[edit]
W.A.K.O. Amateur Championships
WAKO World Championships
WAKO World Cadets & Juniors Championships
  • Zadar 2006 (6th Juniors / 2nd Cadets)
  • Naples 2008
  • Belgrade 2010
  • Bratislava 2012
  • Rimini 2014
  • Dublin 2016
  • Jesolo 2018
WAKO European Championships
World Combat Games
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