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Sot Chitalada (Thai: สด จิตรลดา, RTGS: Sot Chitlada), born as Chaovalit Wongcharoean (Thai: เชาวลิต วงศ์เจริญ; RTGS: Chaowalit Wongcharoen; 5 May 1962, in Chonburi, Thailand) is a Thai former boxer who was twice WBC and Lineal Flyweight Champion, having defended the title against nine boxers in total.
Chitalada loses TKO 6th round: Chitalada lost Lineal & WBC Flyweight titles. [2] 4: Muangchai Kittikasem vs. Sot Chitalada: February 28, 1992: Samutprakarn Crocodile Farm and Zoo, Samut Prakan province: Kittikasem TKO 9th round: Kittikasem defended WBC Flyweight title for the second time. [2] 5: Daorung Chuvatana vs. Lakhin CP Gym: May 27, 1995
He went up in weight and won the WBC and lineal flyweight title by KO in a 6-round fight against his countryman Sot Chitalada the very next year. Kittikasem KOd Jung Koo Chang and stopped Chitalada once again in the rematch. He lost another title to another amateur world champion, Russian Yuri Arbachakov, in 1992. The fight took place in Japan ...
Srisomvingse also had his own boxing gym, named "Sor Chitalada" in Soi Saensuk, Rama IV Road, Khlong Toei District, on the plot of his own home. In early the 1980s, he was the agent of the World Boxing Council (WBC) in Thailand. [3] He was also the founder Asian Boxing Council (ABCO) and was voted the first president in 1985.
Richard "Shrimpy" Clarke (born 20 April 1963 in Kingston) is a Jamaican professional fly/super flyweight boxer of the 1980s and '90s who won the World Boxing Council (WBC) Continental Americas flyweight title, WBC International light flyweight title, and British Commonwealth flyweight title, and was a challenger for the WBC flyweight title against Sot Chitalada, and North American Boxing ...
Bernal is remembered for his series of fights with Thailand's Sot Chitalada. For Bernal's second defense, he went to Bangkok to face Chitalada. He lost a twelve-round decision on 8 October 1984. Eight months later, Bernal travelled back to Bangkok in an attempt to wrest the title from Chitalada.
In Thailand, both professional boxers and Muay Thai kickboxers tend to use their stable or gym name as the last part of their ring name, for example Khaosai Galaxy, Khaokor Galaxy, Sot Chitalada, Samart Payakaroon, Kongtoranee Payakaroon, Namphon Nongkee Pahuyuth, Namkabuan Nongkee Pahuyuth, Ratanapol Sor Vorapin, Ratanachai Sor Vorapin, Saen ...
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