World Association of Kickboxing Organizations
The World Association of Kickboxing Organizations is an international kickboxing organization counting over 120 affiliated countries representing all five continents. WAKO is a major governing body of amateur kickboxing and is responsible for the development of kickboxing worldwide. The organization was officially recognized as an official kickboxing governing body by Sport Accord. WAKO is recognized by the Global Association of International Sports Federations and the International Olympic Committee.
History
In 1977, WAKO was founded in Europe and formulated the rules and regulations acting as the Kickboxing Federation of the World. It was founded by American Kickboxing promoter Mike Anderson, and his friend, German Kickboxing promoter Georg Brueckner. WAKO was officially registered in Zurich, Switzerland and become the largest unified kickboxing organization in the world.In 2006, the International Amateur Kickboxing Sports Association and WAKO merged under the umbrella of WAKO, making its acceptance possible by the General Association of International Sports Federations as the governing body for the sport of Kickboxing.
WAKO became a member of Sport Accord and was officially recognized as the official Kickboxing governing body by Sport Accord, Olympic Council of Asia, WADA and the International World Games Association. Kickboxing is included in World Combat Games, Asian Indoor Games, and the Martial Arts Games in the 2017 International World Games. WAKO has five continental divisions functioning under the auspices of the WAKO International Federation which are WAKO Europe, WAKO Pan America, WAKO Asia, WAKO Oceania and WAKO Africa. WAKO hosts its ordinary General Assemblies in Antalya, Turkey.
In 1991, WAKO PRO was officially established during a WAKO Board meeting in Spain. After a their career as amateurs in the organization, fighters were now able to continue as professional fighters in WAKO Pro.
Olympic recognition
On the 20th of July 2021, the International Olympic Committee officially recognised kickboxing as an Olympic sport, and recognised WAKO as the world governing body for the sport.Styles
WAKO supports 7 different styles, four on the tatami and three in the ring.Tatami sports
Musical form
A musical form is a staged or imaginary fight against one or more opponents in which the performer uses techniques from Oriental Martial Arts to personally selected music.Point fighting
Also known as semi-contact, point fighting is a discipline where two contestants fight with the primary goal of scoring defined points. All strikes are controlled; full force is prohibited.- Opponents are allowed to hit each other with punches and kicks. Striking is allowed only above the waist.
- Foot sweeps are allowed.
- Elbows and knees are forbidden.
- Clinch fighting and throws are forbidden.
Light contact
- Opponents are allowed to hit each other with punches and kicks. Striking is permitted above the waist and below ankle/mid-calf.
- Foot sweeps are allowed.
- Elbows and knees are forbidden.
- Clinch fighting and throws are forbidden.
Kick-light
- Opponents are allowed to hit each other with punches and kicks. Kicks striking the thigh are permitted.
- Foot sweeps are allowed.
- Elbows and knees are forbidden.
- Clinch fighting and throws forbidden.
Ring sports
Full contact
Full contact is a discipline of kickboxing where the intention is to mimic the pressure felt during a real fight.- Opponents are allowed to hit each other with punches and kicks, striking above the waist and below the ankle/mid-calf.
- Foot sweeps are allowed.
- Elbows and knees are forbidden.
- Clinch fighting and throws are forbidden.
Low-kick
- Opponents are allowed to hit each other with punches and kicks, striking the thigh which can be attacked using the shin.
- Foot sweeps are allowed.
- Elbows and knees are forbidden.
- Clinch fighting and throws forbidden.
K1-style
- Opponents are allowed to hit each other with punches, knees and kicks. Legs and any other part of the body can be attacked using the shin.
- Foot sweeps are forbidden.
- Elbows are forbidden.
- Throws are forbidden.
- Clinching must be less than 5 seconds. Kickboxers are allowed to hold the opponent's neck with both hands in order to attack only with the knee and are only allowed one knee strike per clinch.
Competitions
WAKO Kickboxing was one of thirteen combat sports participating in the first Combat Games being held in Beijing, China under the patronage of the IOC and SportAccord. WAKO participated in the World Combat Games in St. Petersburg, Russia in September 2013, under the patronage of the IOC and SportAccord. There were three styles at the Combat Games: Low Kick, Points Fighting, and Full Contact.
K-1 Rules World Champions
The list includes Wako Pro K-1 Rules world title holders. .Super Heavyweight
- Mark Russell - 2003 Defeats Sinisa Andrejasvic; renamed K-1 Rules title in 07; still listed as champion as of 07-06-12.
- Djamal Kasymov - 2007
- Sebastien Van Thielen - 2009 Defeats Paolo Reverberi.
- Vladimir Mineev - 2009 Defeats Sergey Zelinskiy
- Freddy Kemayo - 2013 Defeats Dino Belošević
- Petr Vondráček - 2014 Defeats Nicolas Vermont
- Daniel Skvor - 2017 Defeats Stefan Andjelkovic.
- Roman Kryklia - 2018
- Tomáš Hron - 2019 Defeats Michal Blawdziewicz.
Cruiserweight
- Kirkwood Walker - 1997
- Musashi - 1999
- Duncan Airlie James - 2003 Defeats Angelo Grenata
Heavyweight
- Guy N'Guessan - 2006 Defeats Patrice Quarteron.
- Clei Silva - 2010 Defeats António Sousa;
Light Cruiserweight
- Ivica Tekic - 2005 Still champion as of 06-05-16; renamed K-1 Rules title in 07; vacant as of 07-06-12.
- Alex McKenzie - 2008
- Horace Martin - 2011 Defeats Andrei Manhole
- Gabriele Casella - 2016 Defeats Gregory Grossi
- Elijah Bokeli - 2021 Defeats Samuel Dbili
- Bilal Bakhouche-Chareuf - 2022 Defeats Mohamed Hamdi.
Light Heavyweight
- Andre Mannaart - 1997 Defeats Franz Haller.
- Franz Haller - 1997
- Sissoko Moussa - 2005 Renamed K-1 Rules title in 07; still listed as champion as of 07-06-12.
- Federico Spitaletto - 2011
- Nicola Gallo - 2013 Defeats Sidney Mokgolo
- Cédric Tousch -2016 Defeats Aleksandar Petrov
- Elijah Bokeli - 2017 Defeats Alexandar Petrov for the vacant title.
- Alexandar Mekovic - 2020
- Sergej Braun - 2021
Super Middleweight
- Cosmo Alexandre - 2010 Defeats Dmitry Shakuta
- Datsi Datsiev - 2014 Defeats Thiago Michel.
- Yohan Lidon - 2016
- Aleksandr Menkovic - 2017 Defeats Cristian Torres
- Nikola Todorovic - 2021 Defeats Zakaria Laaouatni.
Middleweight
- Habib Gadjiev - 2005 Renamed K-1 Rules title in 07; vacant in 08.
- Mohamed Rahhaoui - 2008 Defeats Ricardo Fernandes
- Arnaldo Silva - 2009 Defeats Dennis Schneidmiller
- Mohamed Rahhaoui - 2011
- Yuri Bessmertny - 2013 Defeats Aleksandr Zakharov
- Cédric Doumbé - 2016 Defeats Ljubo Jalovi; starts competing exclusively for Glory in 16-12; officially vacant sometime in 19.
- Alexandr Zakharov - 2019 Defeats Zakaria Laaouatni
- Davide Armanini - 2021 Defeats Maikel Astur.
Light Middleweight
- Dmitry Shakuta - 2001 Defeats Winston Walker; vacates in 01.
- Christian Daghio - 2001 Defeats Mario Prinks.
- Matteo Sciacca - 2005 Still champion as of 06-04-10; vacant as of 06-05-16.
- Fabrizio Bergamini - 2007 Defeats Frane Radnić.
- Frane Radnić - 2008 Defeats Foad Sadeghi.
- Bruno Franchi - 2009
- Frane Radnić - 2009 Vacant in 10.
- Arnaldo Silva - 2010 Defeats Bruno Franchi
- Chingiz Allazov - 2015 Defeats Djimé Coulibaly; moves down to the super welterweight division in 16.
- Youssef Boughanem - 2016 Defeats Armen Petrosyan for the vacant title; vacant in 16.
- Vladimir Vulev - 2016 Defeats Maksim Kolpak; vacates in 19-04.
- Atanas Bojilov - 2019 Defeats Maxim Spodarenko; vacant in 22-11 after Bojilov retires.
- Ziga Pecnik - 2022 Defeats Alessio Zeloni.
Super Welterweight
- Sofiane Allouache - 2003
- Peter Crooke - 2005 Renamed K-1 Rules title in 07
- Sofiane Allouache - 2008 Defeats Eric
- Abraham Roqueñi - 2011
- Chingiz Allazov - 2016 Defeats Enriko Kehl; vacant in 19.
- Georgian Cimpeanu -2019 Defeats Urlich Marvin for the vacant title; vacant in 22.
- Sergio Sanchez - 2022 Defeats Vinicius Bereta.
Welterweight
- Kieran Keddle - 2002 Defeats Lee Chesters.
- Neil Woods - 2005 Renamed K-1 Rules title in 07; still listed as champion as of 11-08-01; vacant in 11.
- Diogo Neves - 2011 Defeats Ionuţ Atodiresei for the vacant title.
- Alessandro Campagna - 2012-04-16 Defeats Luciano Boinha; still champion as of 12-07-10; vacant as of 13-07-01 and 14-03-03.
- Dylan Salvador 2016 Defeats Aleksei Fedoseev.
- Mohamed Galaoui - 2019 Defeats Andre Santos for the vacant title; vacant in 22.
- Andre Santos - 2022 Defeats Luca Mameli.