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Freddy Kemayo

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Freddy Kemayo
BornFrédéric Kemayo
(1982-05-06) May 6, 1982 (age 42)
Other namesCrazy Horse
NationalityFrance French
Height1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)[1]
Weight100 kg (220 lb; 16 st)
DivisionHeavyweight
StyleKickboxing
Fighting out ofParis, France
TeamFaucon Gym
TrainerRichard Roudy
Years active2002–present
Kickboxing record
Total81
Wins60
By knockout43
Losses20
By knockout10
Draws1
Last updated on: November 10, 2012

Freddy "Crazy Horse" Kemayo (born May 6, 1982) is a French heavyweight kickboxer, fighting out of Faucon Gym in Villepinte, France. He is three time French Kickboxing champion currently competing in K-1, Superkombat and many other promotions.

Biography and career

Freddy Kemayo joined Faucon Gym in 1999 and has been training there under Richard Roudy ever since. In 2002 he became the French Kickboxing champion and in 2003 made his K-1 debut in Milan, Italy at the K-1 Preliminary tournament.[2]

His first success in K-1 came on April 16, 2005 at K-1 2005 Italy, when he defeated Lorenzo Borgomeo and Ionut Iftimoaie and reached the tournament finals, where he was stopped by Alexander Ustinov by unanimous decision.

On February 4, 2008 at K-1 European Qualification Kemayo knocked out Sergei Gur and qualified for K-1 World GP 2008 in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

On May 21, 2010 Kemayo fought at the K-1 World Grand Prix 2010 in Bucharest. In the first round he surprisingly beat the third tournament favourite, Sergei Lascenko in an overwhelming decision. He lost in the semi finals to Alexey Ignashov in a slim decision but the latter damaged his shin during his fight with kemayo so Freddy replaced him in the finals. In the finals he knocked out Sebastian Ciobanu with a head kick.

However in the K-1 World Grand Prix 2010 in Seoul Final 16 he unexpectedly lost by first round TKO to Gokhan Saki after been overwhelmed by punches to the head.[3]

He lost a unanimous decision to Pavel Zhuravlev on November 10, 2012 in Craiova, Romania at the SuperKombat World Grand Prix 2012 Final Elimination, which is the quarter-finals of the SuperKombat World Grand Prix 2012.[4][5]

He is scheduled to face Sergei Lascenko in a reserve bout at the SuperKombat World Grand Prix 2012 Final in Bucharest, Romania on December 22, 2012.[6]

Titles

Kickboxing record

Kickboxing record

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

See also

References

  1. ^ K-1 Scandinavia Profile
  2. ^ a b Titles
  3. ^ DiPietro, Monty. "Bregy and Karacs Best in Budapest". K-1 Grand Prix Website. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
  4. ^ SuperKombat Final Elimination, November 10: Fight Card
  5. ^ Superkombat Final Elimination: Live Results
  6. ^ SuperKombat WGP Final 2012: Fight Card, Ustream PPV available

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