Men's Low-Kick at W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 Skopje -75 kg
Men's Low-Kick Kickboxing at the W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 (Skopje) |
|||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-51 kg | |||||||||
-54 kg | |||||||||
-57 kg | |||||||||
-60 kg | |||||||||
-63.5 kg | |||||||||
-67 kg | |||||||||
-71 kg | |||||||||
-75 kg | |||||||||
-81 kg | |||||||||
-86 kg | |||||||||
-91 kg | |||||||||
+91 kg |
The men's middleweight (75 kg/165 lbs) Low-Kick division at the W.A.K.O. European Championships 2006 in Skopje was the fifth heaviest of the male Low-Kick tournaments involving fifteen fighters. Each of the matches was three rounds of two minutes each and were fought under Low-Kick kickboxing rules.
As there were too few fighters for a tournament designed for sixteen, one of the participants received a bye into the quarter finals. The tournament gold medal was won by Russian Ibragim Tamazaev who defeated Serbian Dragan Mićić in the final by unanimous decision. It was Tamazaev's second gold at W.A.K.O. in Low-Kick as he was the defending world champion from Agadir '05. Defeated semi finalists Leszek Koltun from Poland and Stelian Angelov from Bulgaria won bronze medals.[1][2]
Results
Key
Abbreviation | Meaning |
---|---|
D (2:1) | Decision (Winners Score:Losers Score) |
KO | Knockout |
TKO | Technical Knockout |
AB | Abandonment (Injury in match) |
WO | Walkover (No fight) |
DQ | Disqualification |
WIN | Method unknown - used when official source unclear |
See also
- List of WAKO Amateur European Championships
- List of WAKO Amateur World Championships
- List of male kickboxers
References
- ↑ "Low Kick (Results)" (PDF). www.european-championships-macedonia-2006.com. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
- ↑ "Low Kick (In Croatian - Low-Kick results)". kickboxing333.blog.hr. Retrieved 2011-06-25.