Alexey Ignashov

Alexey Victoravich Ignashov[1] (Belarusian: Аляксей Ігнашоў; born January 18, 1978) is a Belarusian Super Heavyweight kickboxer. He is a four-time Muay Thai World champion, K-1 World GP 2003 in Paris and K-1 World GP 2001 in Nagoya tournament champion.[2] He is currently living in Auckland, New Zealand and training at Balmoral Lee Gar Gym under Lollo Heimuli.[3]

Alexey Ignashov
Alexey Ignashov by earlphoto.eu
BornAlaksiej Victoravich Ihnašou
(1978-01-18) 18 January 1978
Minsk, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union
Other namesThe Red Scorpion
NationalityBelarusian
Height1.96 m (6 ft 5 in)
Weight117 kg (258 lb; 18.4 st)
DivisionSuper Heavyweight
StyleMuay Thai, Kickboxing
Fighting out ofAuckland, New Zealand
TeamChinuk Gym (1995–2006)
Balmoral Lee Gar (2006–present)
TrainerLollo Heimuli
Andrej Hrydzin
Horia Rădulescu (part-time)
Years active1997–present
Kickboxing record
Total108
Wins86
By knockout41
Losses22

Biography

He is best known for his knee strikes, notably used to score knockout wins over Badr Hari, Semmy Schilt, Nicholas Pettas, and Carter Williams. Ignashov is considered by his fans to be one of the most talented and technically sound heavyweight kickboxers in the world. However, he is also considered by many as frustratingly inconsistent, occasionally appearing lackluster or inactive in the ring, such as in his K-1 Final quarterfinal match against Peter Aerts in 2003. He suffered a knee injury in a fight against Bjorn Bregy in 2005. Since then, his performance has diminished.

Ignashov trained in the Chinuk gym for 11 years, before immigrating to New Zealand in 2006.

He has beaten the best kickboxers in the world, including decision wins over three times K-1 champions Remy Bonjasky and Peter Aerts and knockout highlight reel wins over two currently best kickboxers in the world Semmy Schilt and Badr Hari. He has also fought legendary Rob Kaman, losing by decision, but after that fight Rob gave the trophy to Ignashov. Despite all those huge wins, he has lost some bouts where he was a huge favorite. He was TKO'd only two times, each time because of injury, against Bjorn Bregy in 2005 and in his 2009 bout against 2003 French Kickboxing champion Freddy Kemayo.

After 5 years of being out of the major ring events Iggy was granted his wish to return to K-1 in April 2010 against Badr Hari, having one of the best chins in the sport. However he was very inactive in the ring and lost by unanimous decision. He was heavily criticized by the fans after the fight. Ignashov announced that he wants to have a rubber match with Badr Hari after he has a few more K-1 fights to get used to the big ring again. Just recently he competed in his 99 official fight while winning with Freddy Kemayo. He made his comeback after one year at 12 May 2012 in Budapest Hungary losing a decision against Ali Cenik.

He defeated Zinedine Hameur-Lain via decision in Kazan, Russian on 20 October 2012.[4] Just a week later, he was defeated by Tomáš Hron by unanimous decision at Nitrianska Noc Bojovnikov in Nitra, Slovakia.[5]

He was scheduled to fight Benjamin Adegbuyi on 10 November 2012 in Craiova, Romania, in the quarter-finals of the SuperKombat World Grand Prix 2012 Final Elimination.[6][7] Unfortunately, due a broken finger he had to pull out of the event.[8]

On 23 February 2013, he defeated the overmatched Martynas Knyzlis on points in Moscow, Russia.[9]

Ignashov had his rubber match with Badr Hari at Legend 2: Invasion in Moscow on 9 November 2013, losing by unanimous decision in yet another lackluster fight.[10][11][12]

Ignashov is slated to fight Andonis "Wrangler" Tzoros in Greece for the WKN K-1 Super Heavyweight Championship on April 26, 2015.[13]

Titles

Professional:

  • 2015 WKN International K-1 Rules Super-heavyweight Championship
  • 2003 K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 in Paris Champion
  • 2001 K-1 World Grand Prix 2001 in Nagoya Champion
  • 2000 K-1 Belarus Grand Prix 2000 Champion
  • 2000 I.S.K.A. World Heavyweight Champion
  • 2000 W.M.C. Muay Thai World Heavyweight Champion
  • 2000 W.P.K.L. Muay Thai European Champion
  • 1999 W.M.C. Muay Thai World Heavyweight Champion
  • 1999 I.S.K.A. World Heavyweight Champion

Amateur

  • 1999 I.A.M.T.F. Amateur Muay Thai World Championships -91 kg
  • 1997 European Amateur Muay Thai Heavyweight Champion -91 kg

Kickboxing record (Incomplete)

Kickboxing record (Incomplete)

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
3 matches 1 win 1 loss
By knockout 1 0
By submission 0 1
No contests 1
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 1–1 (1) Shinsuke Nakamura Submission (forearm choke) K-1 MMA ROMANEX 22 May 2004 2 1:51 Saitama, Japan
Win 1–0 (1) Steve Williams KO (knees) K-1 Beast 2004 in Niigata 14 March 2004 1 0:22 Niigata, Japan
NC 0–0 (1) Shinsuke Nakamura NC (overturned) K-1 PREMIUM 2003 Dynamite!! 31 December 2003 3 1:19 Nagoya, Japan

See also

References

  1. "NSAC report of K-1 World Grand Prix 2006 in Las Vegas II" (PDF). Boxing.nv.gov.
  2. "Fighter profile". Archived from the original on 8 June 2010.
  3. "Alexey Ignashov Interview". Fansofk1.com. Archived from the original on 1 October 2011. Retrieved 22 March 2011.
  4. Dave Walsh. "LiverKick - LiverKick". Liverkick.com.
  5. Unknown. "FOTO a VIDEO: Nitrianska noc bojovníkov 2 - Šport a relax - moja Nitra". MojaNitra.sk.
  6. Dave Walsh. "LiverKick - LiverKick". Liverkick.com.
  7. Dave Walsh. "LiverKick - LiverKick". Liverkick.com.
  8. Dave Walsh. "LiverKick - LiverKick". Liverkick.com.
  9. Dave Walsh. "LiverKick - LiverKick". Liverkick.com.
  10. Dave Walsh. "LiverKick - LiverKick". Liverkick.com.
  11. Dave Walsh. "LiverKick - LiverKick". Liverkick.com.
  12. "Legend Invasion 2 gifs and results from Moscow". Bloody Elbow.
  13. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 28 April 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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