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Marek Piotrowski

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Marek Piotrowski
Born (1964-08-14) 14 August 1964 (age 60)
Dębe Wielkie, Poland
Other namesThe Punisher
NationalityPolish
Height1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Weight85 kg (187 lb; 13.4 st)
DivisionMiddleweight
Light Heavyweight
Cruiserweight
Heavyweight
StyleBoxing, Kickboxing, Kyokushin Karate
Fighting out ofChicago, Illinois, U.S.
Rankblack belt in Kyokushin
Green belt in Jujutsu
Years active1984–1996
Professional boxing record
Total21
Wins21
By knockout11
Losses0
Kickboxing record
Total44
Wins42
By knockout27
Losses2
Other information
Boxing record from BoxRec

Marek "The Punisher" Piotrowski (born 14 August 1964 in Dębe Wielkie near Mińsk Mazowiecki) is a Polish retired heavyweight kickboxer and boxer. He is a former ten time kickboxing world champion.

Amateur career

At around age of 13 or 14, Piotrowski studied jujutsu achieving green belt before becoming interested in Kyokushin karate when he was at age of 18. In 1984 (in under 25 years old class) he won the Polish Juniors karate championship, following this up the next year by winning the Polish Senior championship. He became a karate black belt 1st dan in July 1993. His official karate record is 13 fights, with 13 victories.

At the beginning of 1987 Piotrowski began to focus on kickboxing, in particular full-contact, which was prohibited in Poland at the time. On 11 October 1987 he entered the 81 kg category of the 6th W.A.K.O. World Championships, a tournament for amateur kickboxers, held in Munich, Germany. Piotrowski won the competition defeating Hungarian Károly Halász in the final. Later that year he entered and won the Full Contact Kickboxing World Cup '87 in Budapest, Hungary and also won the Polish national kickboxing title. He had several more fights in 1988 in Poland and Europe, amassing a 17-0 amateur kickboxing record.

Professional career

In 1988 Piotrowski decided to leave Poland for the USA where he was determined to become a professional world champion, something he was unable to do in his own country due to the Communist-era rules on professionalism. He had his first professional fight in Rockford, Illinois in October 1988 against Bob Handegan whom he defeated via knockout in the 4th round. On 19 August 1989, in his fifth fight on American soil, Piotrowski sent shockwaves through the kickboxing community by outworking the reigning national champion Rick "The Jet" Roufus in a 10th round unanimous decision win. Piotrowski took Roufus's P.K.C. middleweight U.S belt.

As a result of his upset victory over Roufus, Piotrowski had his world title shot against the legendary Don "The Dragon" Wilson. On 4 November 1989, in Chicago, Illinois he defeated Wilson and took his belts, becoming the world champion of the P.K.C. and F.F.K.A kickboxing organizations, while Wilson had to vacate his I.S.K.A. world title due the loss (which Marek did not gain due to it not being an I.S.K.A. sanctioned event). As a result of his victories over two world class fighters, Piotrowski earned the nickname "The Punisher".

Throughout 1990 and 1991 he fought six more bouts, adding more championships to his collection by defeating Bob 'The Thunder' Thurman to win the K.I.C.K. Intercontinental title in Las Vegas, Nevada and Mark Longo to win the K.I.C.K. in Los Angeles, California. His kickboxing record now stood at 29 wins to 0 defeats (19 coming via knockout) and he held four professional world titles.

On 22 June 1991 in Chicago Piotrowski put his P.K.C. title on the line in a re-match against Rick Roufus while the vacant I.S.K.A. world title was also up for grabs. Piotrowski was not in the best condition for the fight, as ongoing personal problems hampered his preparation and he was defeated, suffering a heavy 2nd-round knockout from a high kick that left him unconscious on the canvas. After suffering his first ever defeat, Piotrowski needed time to recuperate and did not fight for the rest of the year.

In 1992 Piotrowski decided to enter professional boxing, winning his debut against Keith Williams on 8 February by technical knockout in the 4th round. Despite starting his boxing career, Piotrowski still wanted to recover his lost titles and fought several kickboxing bouts, winning all of them. In July 1992 he fought the Canadian Conrad Pla for the I.S.K.A. North American title, defeating him by 10th-round decision. After dismantling another opponent via 3rd round K.O. in Las Vegas, Piotrowski was ready for the opportunity to regain one of his world titles.

In Paris, France 1992 the North American I.S.K.A. champion met the W.K.A. Junior Light Heavyweight champion and legendary Dutchman Rob Kaman (also known as 'Mr Low-Kick', 98 wins, 78 K.O.s) for a shot at the I.S.K.A. World title, fought under Oriental Rules (this formula allowing low kicks). Unfortunately for Piotrowski he lost by technical knockout in a very dramatic fight - Kaman's renowned low kicks getting the better of him in the 7th round. He would look for another chance to avenge his defeats to Kaman and Roufus, but would never get it.

On 22 June 1993 he travelled to Montreal, Canada where he took on future K-1 fighter Michael "The Black Sniper" McDonald. Piotrowski won the fight by technical knockout in the 11th round, winning the W.A.K.O. Pro Full Contact World title, adding the professional W.A.K.O. title to the amateur one he had won back in 1987. Later that year he defeated Mike Winkeljohn by 8th-round decision, finally getting his hands back on the I.S.K.A. (Oriental Rules version) World title belt.

In 1994 Piotrowski won two more titles. In February he defeated Roy McCown to win the little-known T.B.C world title, while on 15 March he defeated Javier Mendez in San Jose, California to win the I.S.K.A. (Full Contact) World title. By the end of the year he was progressively becoming less focused on kickboxing and more on boxing, going 4 and 0.

In December 1995 he returned to Poland for his last kickboxing fight. In Kraków he defeated Italian Stefano Tomiazzo, winning the W.K.A. World title. He finished his kickboxing career with a record of 44 fights, with 42 victories to just 2 defeats and had been an eight-time professional world champion with seven different organizations; W.K.A., I.S.K.A., P.K.C, T.B.C., F.F.K.A, K.I.C.K. and W.A.K.O. pro, as well as holding two amateur world titles.

After retiring from kickboxing Piotrowski continued his boxing career. Between 1992 and 1996, he fought in 21 fights and won all of them. He finished his career on 13 December 1996 in Hannover, Germany, defeating Greg Lavely on points. In 1997 he was offered to fight for a professional championship for the I.B.F. belt, but he had to refuse due to his health problems. Piotrowski returned to live in Poland in 2002.

Titles

Professional

  • 1995 W.K.A. Full Contact Heavyweight World champion
  • 1994 I.S.K.A. Full Contact Light Heavyweight World champion
  • 1994 T.B.C. Full Contact World champion
  • 1993 I.S.K.A. Oriental Rules Light Heavyweight World champion
  • 1993 W.A.K.O. Pro Full-Contact Light Heavyweight World champion
  • 1991 I.S.K.A. Full Contact Light Heavyweight North American champion
  • 1990 K.I.C.K. Light Heavyweight World champion
  • 1990 K.I.C.K. Light Heavyweight Intercontinental champion
  • 1989 P.K.C. Full Contact Light Heavyweight World champion
  • 1989 F.F.K.A. Full Contact Light Heavyweight World champion
  • 1989 P.K.C. Full-Contact Middleweight United States champion

Amateur

  • 1987 Poland Full-Contact Kickboxing champion
  • 1987 Full contact Kickboxing World Cup '87 Gold
  • 1987 W.A.K.O. World Championships in Munich Gold -81 kg (Full-Contact)
  • 1985 Poland Senior Karate Championship Gold
  • 1984 Poland Junior Karate Championship Gold

Other recognitions

  • In 1987 Piotrowski gained 'The Siren' award from the Sportowiec magazine from being the best Polish sport discovery of the year.
  • On three separate occasions he was placed in the top ten of the best Polish sportsmen of the year in the Przeglad Sportowy ranking (1988, 1989, 1990), twice coming runner up.
  • The 'Fighter' magazine voted Piotrowski second in their 'Best Kickboxers of the 1980s', -172 pound (78 kg) category.
  • On two occasions he was recognised by American experts as 'Kickboxer of the Year' (1989 and 1994).
  • He was also chosen by the American press as one of the best fighters of the 1990s.
  • In 1991 Aleksander Bilik published the book 'Kickboxer', which described Piotrowski's career up until 1990.
  • In 2005 a documentary about Piotrowski called 'The Warrior' was filmed.
  • Also in 2005 there was the comic strip 'the Kickboxer' based on Marek Piotrowski published in the Polish publication Gazeta Wyborcza.
  • In 2006 Piotrowski received the Stanley Honour - Kickboxing award.

Kickboxing record

Kickboxing Record

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes