
|
WKA (World Kickboxing Association)
Many laymen are under the impression that modern day
kickboxing
originated in Thailand, Japan or elsewhere in the Far East,
in fact, the
real origins of the sport are revealed by the real name by
which it was
known, full contact karate.
|
During the early seventies the American martial arts
world was shaken to its foundations by the demands made
on it by a fresh young new generation of practitioners.
Fighters started looking for a competitive format in
which they could use their skills to the full effect,
full power punches and kicks in bouts fought to the
knockout.
The development of specialised protective equipment
speeded up the evolution of this new sport, which became
known as kickboxing.
Between 1970 and 1973 a handful of kickboxing
promotions were staged across the USA. In the early days the
rules were never clear, one of the first tournaments had no
weight divisions and all the competitors fought off until
one was left. A very young Benny Urquidez reached the final.
Weighing in at 10 stones Urquidez faced the 14 stones Dana
Goodson. Urquidez
won the tournament by pinning Goodson to the floor for more
than 10 seconds,
which was part of the rules.
In the mid-seventies various American tournament karate
practitioners became frustrated with the limitations of
the then rather primitive competitive scoring system.
In the mid-seventies various American tournament karate
practitioners became frustrated with the limitations of the
then rather primitive competitive scoring system. They
wanted to find a system within which they could apply kicks
and punches to the knockout. Full contact karate was born.
Early bouts were fought on open matted areas just as
ordinary karate matches were. Later events were staged in
regular size boxing rings. These early tournaments produced
kickboxing's first stars, Joe Lewis, Bill Wallace, Benny Urquidez and Jeff Smith. Later the Americans really wanted
to test their mettle and sent teams of kickboxers to Japan
under the banner of the WKA (World Kickboxing Association).
From this point kickboxing developed in to a true
international sport. |

|
 |
 |
Today the WKA is world's oldest and largest sanctioning
body, and continues to grow.
More about the WKA (World Kickboxing Assosiation):
www.wka.co.uk
WAKO (World Amateur Kickboxing Organisation)
WAKO started its activity in Europe in 1976. The founder was
Mr. Georg Bruckner from Berlin, who promoted the first ever
World Championships in semi and full contact karate ( as it
was called in those days) back in 1978 with 110 competitors
representing 18 countries.
WAKO immediately created the rules and regulations for the
new fighting sports and acted , since the very beginning, as
the authentic Kickboxing Federation of the world. In our
Championships, only national teams are accepted. Each member
country can
present only 1 competitor in each weight class. The WAKO
World Championships are NOT open competitions therefore each
representative is the premier competitor in that category,
from their country.
Today WAKO kickboxer participants are estimated to be around
1,200,000 with
no less than 6,000 clubs around the globe. We promote,
nationally and
internationally, more than 1,000 amateur and professional
events a year. Now recognised as the principal European and
World Kickboxing Federation, today WAKO includes WAKO-PRO
which is growing steadily all over the world and organises
events that spread the word about our movement, attracting
thousands of spectators to sports-arenas ( and even football
grounds !) together with full press promotion.
WAKO-PRO started in 1991, and in a very short time has
become the leading professional body in Europe, Asia, South
America, the Caribbean and the Middle-East.
In the USA WAKO is supported by the KRANE organisation which
unites the best American fighters, particularly in the
"point system" and in Musical Forms. The WAKO representative
in the USA is Mr. Don Rodrigues, coach and manager of the
famous John Paul Mitchel team. Therefore WAKO and WAKO-PRO
are working in conjunction to guarantee the future of world
class kickboxing.
Our strength lies precisely both in our numbers and quality.
We are different, as you will find out for yourself.
More about WAKO (World Amateur Kickboxing Organisation): UK:
www.wakogb.co.uk or World:
www.wako-fikeda.it
|
CONTACT
STORM GYM
Telephone:
Chief
Instructor, Amir Subasic:
0044 (0) 7837 992 223
Paul Shields: 0044 (0)
7768 697537
Chris Woods: 0044 (0) 7763 618 562
E-mail: Amir@stormgym.com

|
|
|