- Source: K-1
- Source: K1
K-1 is a professional kickboxing promotion established in 1993 by karateka Kazuyoshi Ishii.
Originally under the ownership of the Fighting and Entertainment Group (FEG), K-1 was considered to be the largest Kickboxing organization in the world. The organization was known for its heavyweight division fights and Grand Prix tournaments. K-1 also promoted mixed martial arts events, with some events having both kickboxing and MMA matches on their cards (such as their Dynamite!! series). The promotion has also held several tournaments under K-2 and K-3 banners from 1993 to 1995.
FEG would later face financial issues in the 2010s, and eventually went bankrupt in 2012. That same year, K-1 Global Holdings Limited, a company registered in Hong Kong, acquired the rights to K-1. In 2023, global rights to the K-1 brand were acquired by M-1 Sports Media.
The letter K in K-1 is officially designated as a representation of words karate, kickboxing and kung fu. Nevertheless, some reports suggest that it represents the initial K found in competing disciplines such as karate, kickboxing, kung fu, kempo, kakutougi (the generic Japanese term for "combat sports"), and taekwondo. Another theory claims that the K simply comes from kakutougi and the "1" component pertains to the single weight division (in earlier competition) and the champion's unique position.
K-1 has its own unique ruleset different from other styles of Kickboxing. Because it has become so popular, K-1 is also seen as its own style of kickboxing and sometimes is erroneously considered as a standalone martial art/combat sport. Kickboxing governing bodies such as the ISKA and WKN have also crowned their own "K-1 rules" champions.
History
= Early years
=K-1's predecessor, Seidokaikan Karate, was formed in 1980 by Kazuyoshi Ishii, a former Kyokushin karate practitioner who had formed his own organization to help promote the best stand-up martial artists. Seidokaikan arranged several successful challenge events against other martial arts organizations, originally using rules based on the Kyokushin Knockdown karate rules, but gradually adapting and changing closer to kickboxing rules. In 1993, Mr. Ishii founded the K-1 exclusively as a kickboxing organization, closely cooperating with, but independent from Seidokaikan.
In 2010, rumours began to surface regarding financial issues with K-1, and parent company FEG. Simon Rutz, the owner of the Dutch-based kickboxing promotion It's Showtime, claimed in January 2011 that some fighters from It's Showtime had not been paid for fights in K-1.
In early 2011, FEG publicly announced that they were facing financial problems and that the organization would take some months off to restructure. Many fighters and managers spoke out against FEG, due to unpaid fight purses, as well as objections to the direction that its owner was taking K-1.
The entire K-1 brand, along with most of its trademarks, with the exception of, 'K-1 Koshien', 'K-1 MAX' and 'Dream', were sold to Japanese real estate firm, Barbizon Corporation Limited, on July 28, 2011.
= Acquisition and restructuring (2012–2023)
=On February 1, 2012, EMCOM Entertainment Inc. purchased K-1 from Barbizon. In March 2012, It's Showtime announced that EMCOM Entertainment established a new company K-1 Global Holdings Ltd. in Hong Kong. K-1 Global Holdings, Ltd., became the new official owner of the K-1 brand. K-1 Global's agreement with promotion required that certain fighters signed under It's Showtime appear in upcoming K-1 Global events.
The K-1 World MAX Final 16 took place on May 27, 2012, at the Palacio Vistalegre in Madrid, Spain. After the event, controversy and rumors circulated over fighters not being paid for their performances, unpaid financial obligations of FEG, and the incomplete transfer of ownership of the K-1 name. As a result, the K-1 World Grand Prix scheduled for 2012 would be cancelled if these issues were not resolved. The chairman of the new K-1 resolved these issues by paying fighters what was owed and including a 50% bonus.
It was announced in June 2012 that It's Showtime was purchased by Glory Sports International, eventually to be merged in their new promotion GLORY.
On August 10, 2012, K-1's co-promotion agreement with Romanian-based kickboxing promotion SUPERKOMBAT was announced. Though the agreement would eventually end, SK president Eduard Irimia stated that while its company will be independent in 2013 it will still continue to have cooperation with any interested promotion, including K-1, by offering fighters.
K-1 World GP Japan
On May 29, 2014, the launch of a "K-1 World League" in Japan was announced. It is considered to be a separate entity from the K-1 of 2012, with the World League acquiring naming rights and exclusive license for the Japanese region from K-1 Global Holding Ltd. "K-1 World League" would focus on fighters in the 55 kg, -60 kg, -65 kg, -70 kg and heavyweight weight classes; and would be structured around professional events, amateur competitions and K-1 gyms. M-1 Sports Media is in charge of planning and production. "K-1 World League" was subsequently renamed K-1 World GP on September 24, 2014.
After its formation, "K-1 World League" formally incorporated the Krush brand. Launched prior to the folding of FEG, in 2009, Krush was a collaboration between K-1 and AJKF. It was seen at the time as the second tier of K-1 competition, and produced a number of future K-1 fighters such as Takeru Segawa, Tatsuya Tsubakihara and Leona Pettas, among others. K-1 would later add the KHAOS brand, which is seen as the third tier of competition, as a stepping stone between amateur and professional competition. K-1 maintains a number of gyms throughout Japan, from which potential kickboxers can transition from training to amateur competition to professional competition. A fighter can viably spend their entire career under the K-1 umbrella.
On September 20, 2016, "K-1 World GP" executive producer Kensaku Maeda retired, and was subsequently replaced by the Krush executive producer Mitsuru Miyata.
From June 2017 onward, "K-1 World GP" started once again started holding events at the Saitama Super Arena. It was further revealed that fighters were signed exclusively to K-1, which wasn't the case previously.
On December 17, 2018, it was announced that the former Krush and K-1 commentator and martial arts writer Takumi Nakamura would replace Mitsuru Miyata as the executive producer.
On January 26, 2019, Krush was renamed "K-1 KRUSH FIGHT" to further announce the connection between the two brands. However, on December 7, 2019, it was renamed back to Krush. The aim of renaming the competition back to Krush was to dispel the image of the brand as the second tier of K-1.
= 2023–present
=On February 10, 2023, K-1 agreed on a mutual exchange of fighters with fellow Japanese promotion RISE, after they successfully co-promoted the Tenshin Nasukawa vs. Takeru crossover pay-per-view event, known as "THE MATCH 2022".
On February 28, 2023, M-1 Sports Media acquired the global licensing rights for the K-1 brand, which was from that point forward managed by K-1 International Federation (KIF).
On July 17, 2023, Takumi Nakamura stepped down stepped down from the position of producer.
Former Glory Japan General Manager Carlos Kikuta was announced as the new K-1 producer on July 18, 2023. That same day, K-1 announced a collaborative event with Quintet called ReBOOT, which will be held on September 10, 2023. The promotion subsequently announced their intention to re-brand their weight classes (under the "K-1 WORLD GP" and "K-1 WORLD MAX" banners, for heavyweights and fighters weighting -75 kg and under, respectively), that they would hold a heavyweight World Grand Prix, as well as a new partnership with Kyokushinkaikan.
On August 8, 2023, former executive producer Mitsuru Miyata was appointed as the Krush producer. On January 19, 2024, Kazuyoshi Ishii was appointed as an advisor.
Rules
K-1 rules are as follows:
The fights are contested in a ring which is six or more meters square and surrounded by four ropes.
Only striking techniques such as punches, sweeps, kicks and knees are allowed. Clinching is allowed (Only for 5 seconds)
Throws, headbutts, any grabbing of the opponent and strikes with the elbow are prohibited. Furthermore, spitting, biting, groin strikes, strikes to the back of the head, striking after the round has ended or the referee has called for a break, striking while the opponent is knocked down and excessive holding are all considered fouls.
Matches, both regular and title matches, are contested in three three-minute rounds. In case of a draw, an extension round is fought.
If a fighter is knocked down during the fight, the referee will begin counting to eight until the fighter rises from the canvas. The referee can interrupt the count, or forgo it completely, if he deems the fighter unable to continue competing. Should the fighter remain downed by the time the referee has counted to eight, he is ruled as knocked out and the other fighter will be ruled the winner by knockout.
Matches are scored based on four criteria:
(1) Number of knockdowns a fighter has scored, with three knockdowns inside of a single round resulting in a technical knockout (two in tournament bouts)
(2) Presence or absence of damage to the opponent
(3) The number clean strikes, with strikes which are thrown with fight ending intention scoring more highly than those thrown with the intent of racking up points
(4) Aggressiveness
List of K-1 events
While under FEG ownership, K-1 events were centred around the K-1 World Grand Prix, including qualifying tournaments and preliminaries held around the world.
Under the "K-1 World GP" brand from 2014 to present, K-1 events almost exclusively took place in Japan. Its event schedule would feature a mix between traditional, single-fight events, and events featuring one-night tournaments to determine the champion in one of its weight classes.
The following is a list of countries that K-1 has held events in chronological order:
Japan (1993–2012, 2014–2020)
Netherlands (1994, 2001–2003, 2006–2010)
France (1995, 2002–2008, 2010)
Switzerland (1995–2000, 2003, 2017)
United States (1998, 2000–2008, 2012)
Australia (2000–2005, 2010)
England (2000, 2002–2004, 2006–2007, 2013)
Italy (2000–2008)
Germany (2000–2008)
Belarus (2000, 2010)
Croatia (2000, 2002, 2007, 2009–2010, 2013)
South Africa (2000–2002, 2006)
New Zealand (2000–2006)
Czech Republic (2000–2001, 2006–2009)
Denmark (2001)
Ukraine (2001–2002, 2006, 2010)
Spain (2002–2004, 2005–2006, 2012–2014)
Brazil (2002–2006, 2013)
Sweden (2003–2010)
Russia (2003, 2006, 2010)
Bosnia and Herzegovina (2003–2004, 2009, 2016)
Scotland (2004)
Portugal (2004, 2006, 2013)
Poland (2004, 2007–2010)
South Korea (2004–2010, 2013)
Slovenia (2005–2006, 2008)
Hungary (2005–2010)
Lithuania (2006–2007, 2010, 2013)
Latvia (2006–2008)
Turkey (2007, 2010)
Belgium (2007)
Estonia (2007, 2009)
Romania (2007, 2009–2010, 2024)
Hong Kong (2007)
Austria (2008)
Taiwan (2008)
Moldova (2009–2010, 2013)
China (2013–2015)
Greece (2012)
Canada (2013)
Ireland (2013)
Azerbaijan (2014)
Thailand (2014)
Serbia (2016)
Tournament format
= K-1 Grand Prix
=The original K-1 Grand Prix was a single-event tournament held in Japan where competitors participated on invitation. By 1998, K-1 introduced the K-1 World Grand Prix format composed of K-1 Regional Elimination Tournaments (theoretically amounting to six), which qualify fighters for the K-1 World Grand Prix Final, along with licensed K-1 Fighting Network events designed to hold national preliminaries for regional qualification.
K-1's popularity differs greatly among six K-1 regions, which may limit the number of actual elimination tournaments or change locations. K-1 attempted to gain popularity in the United States by holding two GPs, however only a few Americans have ever qualified for the Finals. In 2006, one of the American GPs was relocated to Auckland. Additionally the K-1 Paris GP lost its qualifying right in favor of Amsterdam. Eventually, Amsterdam would lose it in favor of Łódź, and then Łódź in favor of Bucharest.
K-1 World Grand Prix Final Eliminator ("Final 16") is an event where 16 participants compete for the final eight spots in the Final ("Final 8"). Eight participants from the Final Eliminator meet at the K-1 World Grand Prix Final. Other elements of the tournament format would be modified over the years. The final was held at Tokyo Dome from 1997 to 2006, while the 2012 final took place for the first time in history outside Japan, in Zagreb, Croatia.
= K-1 World MAX and others
=By 2002, K-1 started the K-1 World MAX ("Middleweight Artistic Xtreme") tournament for 70 kg (154 lb) Middleweight division, following a similar scheme to K-1 World Grand Prix (with theoretically four regional eliminators). In 2007, K-1 introduced two new title belts separate from K-1 World GP Champions, Super Heavyweight World Title for fighters over 100 kg/220 lbs and Heavyweight World Title for fighters under 100 kg/156–220 lbs.
Broadcast
K-1 events have been shown on the Tokyo Broadcasting System and Fuji TV during FEG ownership. Following the reformation of K-1 under the "K-1 World League" & "K-1 World GP" banners, events would air through other broadcasters such as GAORA SPORTS, BS Sky PerfecTV! and TV Tokyo.
K-1 events are currently broadcast through streaming service Abema TV domestically in Japan. The promotion regularly uploads full fights, press conferences, and general media to its global YouTube channel.
On August 30, 2023, it was announced that DAZN would begin distributing future K-1 events in 200 countries, beginning with the ReBOOT~K-1 ReBIRTH~ event on September 10.
List of K-1 champions
= Current K-1 champions
=See also
List of K-1 events
List of K-1 champions
Krush
List of male kickboxers
List of Krush champions
References
K1, K.I, K01, K 1 or K-1 can refer to:
Geography
K1, another name for Masherbrum, a mountain in the Karakoram range in Pakistan
K1, a small town to north of Kirkuk city, Iraq
K1 (building), a high-rise building in Kraków, Poland
Mathematics
K
1
(
R
)
{\displaystyle K_{1}(R)}
denotes the first algebraic K-theory group of a ring
R
{\displaystyle R}
.
Military
Denel K1, a South African mortar
Daewoo Precision Industries K1, a carbine of the South Korean army
EMER K-1, a Burmese assault rifle designated EMERK
Fokker K.I, a World War I German experimental aircraft
Kucher Model K1, a Hungarian submachine gun
HMS K1, a World War I British submarine
HMS Acanthus (K01) / HNoMS Andenes (K01), a 1939 British, then Norwegian Flower-class corvette
K1 tank, or Type 88 tank, a modern main battle tank of the South Korean military
K-1 cart a United States Signal Corps cart for carrying signal equipment
K 1, a designation for a Swedish cavalry regiment
K1-class gunboat, planned World War II German gunboat
K1, a World War II Dutch sloop operated by the German Navy
Skoda K-1, of the Skoda K series, a World War II Czechoslovak howitzer
USS K-1 (SS-32), a 1913 United States Navy K class of submarine
K-1 Airfield, former name of the Gimhae Air Base
Soviet submarine K-1
IVL K.1 Kurki, a Finnish trainer aircraft
Names
An abbreviation of Keiichi Morisato, a character in the manga/anime Oh My Goddess!
First name of Keiichi Maebara, a character in Higurashi When They Cry franchise
K1, a nickname given to Kyler Murray (born 1997), American football quarterback
Transportation
= Road transport
=BMW K1, a sport bike
K-1 Attack, a Slovak sports car
K-1 (Kansas highway), a state highway in Kansas
London Buses route K1, a Transport for London contracted bus route
Tatra K1, a 1967 Czechoslovakian experimental tramcar
= Steam locomotives
=Furness Railway K1, a steam locomotive class related to the Furness Railway K2
GSR Class K1, a Great Southern Railway Irish steam locomotive
LNER Thompson/Peppercorn Class K1, a 1949 British 2-6-0 (mogul) steam locomotive class
LNER Class K1, a class of British steam locomotives
NCC Class K1, a Northern Counties Committee Irish steam locomotive
PRR K1, a Pennsylvania Railroad locomotive classification
SR K1 class, a British 2-6-0 steam locomotive
the first 1909 Tasmanian Government Railways K class Garratt, a type of articulated steam locomotive
= Water transport and sport
=K1 Britannia, the replica of His Majesty's Yacht Britannia built in 1893 for Commodore Albert Edward, Prince of Wales
The class/racing number on HMY Britannia's main sail
K1, (single kayak) a canoe racing event under the International Canoe Federation
= Other vehicles
=K-1 (rocket), an aerospace vehicle under development by Rocketplane Kistler
Electronics
Kawai K1, a digital synthesizer
Magnetophon K1, the first tape recorder, produced in Germany in 1935
Motorola KRZR K1, a mobile phone
Sendo K1, a model of Sendo mobile phone
Pentax K-1, a digital single-lens reflex camera
Pentax K-01, a digital mirrorless interchangeable lens camera
Tegra K1, an Nvidia system on a chip for mobile devices
United States government forms
K-1 visa, a United States immigration visa (also called the fiancé(e) visa)
Schedule K-1, a tax form of the United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) corresponding with Form 1065 to report one's share of income in a flow-through entity
Music
K. 1 can designate:
six works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart:
K. 1a, an Andante in C for Keyboard
K. 1b, an Allegro in C for Keyboard
K. 1c, an Allegro in F for Keyboard
K. 1d, a Minuet in F for Keyboard
K. 1e, a Minuet in G for Keyboard
K. 1f, a Minuet in C for Keyboard
Kk. 1 or K. 1, a sonata for keyboard by Scarlatti; see List of solo keyboard sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti
Kay One (born 1984), German rapper
Kingz One, a music group created in 2003
Miscellaneous
Family K1, a set of New Testament manuscripts
K1 or K-1, an abbreviation for kerosene heating fuel
K1, a Larcum Kendall marine chronometer (1769)
K-1, a kickboxing promotion
Haplogroup LT or K1, a Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup
K1, an alternative title for Kommune 1
k1, a coefficient that encapsulates process-related factors, limiting the minimum feature size in photolithography
K1 fund, a suspected German Ponzi-scheme
an abbreviation for KotOR 1
K1, a common name for the vitamin phylloquinone
See also
Kerrang! ("K!"), UK music webzine
Kahoot! ("K!"), Norwegian online quiz game learning platform
All pages with titles containing k-1
All pages with titles containing k1
KL (disambiguation)
KI (disambiguation)
1K (disambiguation)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- K League 1
- Energi kinetik
- Sigma
- Konduksi panas
- Volume molar
- Kelvin
- Serangan Pangkalan Udara K-1 2019
- Metode Jacobi
- Kalium
- E (konstanta matematika)
- K-1
- K1
- K-1 visa
- List of K-1 events
- Orders of magnitude (temperature)
- 2024 in K-1
- List of K-1 champions
- USS K-1
- K League 1
- 2024 K League 1
Smurfs: The Lost Village (2017)
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