K-1

For other uses, see K1 (disambiguation).
K-1 Global Holdings Limited
Private
Industry Martial-arts entertainment planning and promotion
Founded 1993
Headquarters Unit A, 3/F, Queen’s Centre, 58-64 Queen’s Road East, Wan Chai, Hong Kong
Key people

Mike Kim, Chairman/CEO
Alin Hălmăgean, Director Operations

Ned Kuruc, Director Operations
Owner K-1 Global Holdings Limited
Slogan K-1 Rising
Website K-1 Global
K-1 World GP

K-1 began in 1993 and is a kickboxing platform and martial arts brand well-known worldwide mainly for its heavyweight division fights.[1] On January 2012, K-1 Global Holdings Limited, a company registered in Hong Kong, acquired the rights to K-1, and is the current organizer of K-1 events worldwide.

Name

The letter K in K-1 is officially designated as a representation of words karate, kickboxing and kung fu. Nevertheless, some reports suggest that it represents the initial K found in competing disciplines such as karate, kickboxing, kung fu, kempo, kakutougi (the generic Japanese term for "combat sports"), and [tae] kwon do.[2] Yet another theory claims that the K simply comes from kakutougi and the "1" component pertains to the single weight division (in earlier competition) and the champion's unique position.[3] Nevertheless, the promotion held several tournaments under K-2 and K-3 banners from 1993 to 1995.

History

Main article: History of K-1

K-1's founder Kazuyoshi Ishii, a former Kyokushin karate practitioner who had formed his own organization to help promote the best stand-up martial artists.[4] arranged several successful challenge events against other martial arts organizations, originally using rules based on the Kyokushin Knockdown karate rules, but gradually adapting and changing to stand-up martial arts rules. In 1993,with the cooperations of all the martial arts organizations in the world, Mr. Ishii founded the K-1 organization exclusively as a stand-up martial arts organization, And from that time on for almost 20 years' period,K-1 has been the no.1 stand-up martial art knock-out sport in the world. But due to the well known unhappy scandals of the management,K-1 was facing difficulties with several management barriers and finally has been acquired by a Hong Kong(China) based firm named K-1 Global Holdings,and presently under reformation through the last couple of years.

List of K-1 events

Main article: List of K-1 events

Every year there are dozens of other K-1 qualifying tournaments and preliminaries all over the world.

K-1 has held events in many countries around the world.

The following is a list of countries that K-1 has held events in chronological order:

Tournament format

K-1 Qualifying System 2009

K-1 Grand Prix

Main article: K-1 World Grand Prix

Original K-1 Grand Prix was a single event tournament held in Japan where competitors participated on invitation. By 1998, K-1 introduced the K-1 World Grand Prix format composed of K-1 Regional Elimination Tournaments (theoretically amounting to six), which qualify fighters for the K-1 World Grand Prix Final, along with licensed K-1 Fighting Network events designed to hold national preliminaries for regional qualification. However, given the fact that K-1's popularity differs greatly among six K-1 regions, which may limit the number of actual elimination tournaments or change locations. For example, K-1 attempted to gain popularity in the United States by holding two GPs, however only a few Americans have ever qualified for the Finals. In 2006 one of the American GPs was relocated to Auckland. Additionally the K-1 Paris GP lost its qualifying right in favor of Amsterdam. Eventually Amsterdam lost it in favor of Łódź, and then Łódź in favor of Bucharest.

K-1 World Grand Prix Final Eliminator ("Final 16") is an event where 16 participants compete for the final eight spots in the Final ("Final 8"). Eight participants from the Final Eliminator meet at the K-1 World Grand Prix Final that was traditionally held at Tokyo Dome. It should be noted that lesser elements in the tournament format have been significantly modified in years. The 2012 final took place for the first time in history outside Japan, in Zagreb, Croatia.

K-1 World MAX and other

By 2002, K-1 started the K-1 World MAX ("Middleweight Artistic Xtreme") tournament for 70 kg (154 lb) Middleweight division, following a similar scheme to K-1 World Grand Prix (with theoretically four regional eliminators). In 2007, K-1 introduced two new Title belts separate from K-1 World GP Champions, Super Heavyweight World Title for fighters over 100 kg/220 lbs and Heavyweight World Title for fighters under 100 kg/156–220 lbs.

Rules

In K-1 single elimination tournament matches:

Fouls

The following actions in K-1 are considered fouls:[5]

A fighter is penalized as follows:

Two cautions result in one warning. Two warnings result in a point deduction, and three point deductions in one round can result in a disqualification.

A red card is shown automatically if a fighter commits a foul with malicious intent.

Reception

The sport is very popular in Japan, South Korea, Brazil, and in Europe in countries such as the Netherlands, Croatia and Romania but recently enjoys only limited popularity in the United States.

The events are frequently shown on Tokyo Broadcasting System and Fuji TV[6] in Japan, XTM in South Korea, Combate and SporTV in Brazil, Spike (before HDNet Fights)[7] in the United States and on Eurosport in Europe.

List of K-1 champions

Main article: List of K-1 champions

Current champions

DivisionChampionSinceTitle defenses
-70 kg Armenia Marat Grigorian July 4, 2015 0
-65 kg Thailand Kaew Fairtex November 3, 2014 1
-60 kg Japan Hirotaka Urabe November 21, 2015 0
-55 kg Japan Takeru April 19, 2015 1

See also

References

  1. "Black Belt". Books.google.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-02-20.
  2. Tashiro, H., & Tyrangiel, J. (2001): Turning the martial arts into mondo mayhem TIME (September 3, 2001). Retrieved on March 4, 2010.
  3. Maylam, J. (2001): K-1 hits the spot: Ultimate fighters pack a punch The Japan Times (October 21, 2001). Retrieved on March 4, 2010.
  4. "K-1 |  FIGHT! Magazine Archives". fightmagazine.com. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  5. Archived August 9, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  6. "Bad Left Hook, Global Boxing News and Commentary". Headkicklegend.com. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  7. Archived October 29, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.


External links

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