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This is the list of all K-1 champions. Included are the K-1 World Grand Prix and K-1 World MAX champions as well as all the preliminary tournament winners from the events promoted by FEG (1993– 2011), K-1 Global (2012–2023), and K-1 (2014–present), following the former's dissolution.
K-1 Brazil 2004 Challenge: Goiânia, Brazil: CPMG Hugo de Carvalho Ramos: 2004-10-13: K-1 World MAX 2004 Champions' Challenge: Tokyo, Japan: Yoyogi National Gymnasium: 11,800 2004-09-25: K-1 World Grand Prix 2004 Final Elimination: Tokyo, Japan: Nippon Budokan: 14,860 2004-09-11: K-1 New Talents 2004 in Lübeck: Lübeck, Germany: Hanse Halle ...
On September 20, 2016, "K-1 World GP" executive producer Kensaku Maeda retired, [30] and was subsequently replaced by the Krush executive producer Mitsuru Miyata. [31] From June 2017 onward, "K-1 World GP" started once again started holding events at the Saitama Super Arena. It was further revealed that fighters were signed exclusively to K-1 ...
K-1 World Grand Prix, also known as the K-1 WORLD GP, is an elimination kickboxing tournament that was originally held annually from 1993 by the K-1 organization, under the ownership of the Fighting and Entertainment Group (FEG). Each year, K-1 would hold various 16-men, 8-match grand prix style qualifying tournaments throughout the world to ...
K-1 World GP 2024 in Osaka - Asian Round was a kickboxing event that was held by K-1 on October 5, 2024, at the Edion Arena in Osaka, Japan. Fight Card.
It was the eighth K-1 Grand Prix final, involving eight of the world's top fighters, with all bouts fought under K-1 Rules (100 kg/156-220 lbs). The eight finalists were a mixture of invitees, some of whom had been at the previous year's final , or had qualified via preliminary tournaments (for more detail on this see bulleted list below).
K-1 World GP 2023: inaugural Middleweight Championship Tournament; Weight Class Method Round Time Notes Middleweight 75 kg Hasan Toy: def. Shintaro Matsukura: KO (Left hook) 1 0:46 K-1 75 kg World Grand Prix Final. For the inaugural K-1 Middleweight Championship. Catchweight 56 kg Akihiro Kaneko: def. Emre Karaca KO (3 Knockdowns/punches) 1
K-1 Challenge 2004 Oceania vs World K-1 World Grand Prix 2004 Final was a kickboxing event promoted by the K-1 organization. It was the twelfth K-1 World Grand Prix final, involving twelve of the world's best K-1 fighters (four being reservists) from eight countries, with all bouts fought under K-1 Rules (100 kg/156-220 lbs).