- Source: Arnold Oborotov
Arnold Oborotov (born December 4, 1989) is a Lithuanian kickboxer.
Career
He faced Jarrell Miller at the K-1 World Grand Prix 2012 in Tokyo final 16 on October 14, 2012. Although he was able to land some powerful low kicks on Miller, the American's boxing ability was too much for Oborotov and he lost by unanimous decision after being floored in round one.
He replaced Zabit Samedov to face Andrei Stoica in an elimination fight for a shot at the inaugural SuperKombat Heavyweight (−95 kg/209 lb) Championship at the SuperKombat World Grand Prix 2012 Final in Bucharest, Romania on December 22, 2012. He lost by knock out in the first round, the first KO loss of his career.
He faced Emmanuel Payet for the WKN World Oriental Rules Light Heavyweight Title at Fight Night Saint Tropez in Saint-Tropez, France on August 4, 2013, losing by decision.
He lost to Peter Graham via an extension round majority decision in the semi-finals of a heavyweight tournament at Global FC 3 in Dubai, UAE on May 29, 2014.
He lost to Nicolas Wamba at Fight Night Saint-Tropez II in Saint-Tropez, France on August 4, 2014. Wamba earned a cut above right eye in first round, but defeated Oborotov via a spectacular right head-kick.
In his next fight, during GFC Fight Series 2, Oborotov fought Badr Hari. Hari won the fight by a first-round KO.
Titles
2019 KGP World Heavyweight Champion
2016 A1 WGP Final Heavyweight Tournament Runner Up
2016 A1 WGP Part 2 Heavyweight Tournament Champion
2014 ISKA European Heavyweight (−100 kg/-220 lb) K-1 Rules Champion
2014 International Heavyweight Tournament +96 kg Champion
2011 World Kickboxing Network (W.K.N.) European Oriental Rules Grand Prix Champion
2010 UKMF Cruiserweight British Champion
2009 UKMF English Champion
Kickboxing record
References
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Arnold Oborotov
- Andrey Gerasimchuk
- Jarrell Miller
- Peter Graham (fighter)
- List of male kickboxers
- ISKA (sports governing body)
- Badr Hari
- Jérôme Le Banner
- Roman Kryklia
- Global Fighting Championship