Saiyok Pumpanmuang

Saiyok Pumpanmuang (Thai: ไทรโยค พุ่มพันธ์ม่วง; born October 22, 1983), formerly known as Saiyoknoi Sakchainarong, is a Thai welterweight kickboxer and Muay Thai fighter. He is the Former Lumpinee Stadium 154 lbs champion and the Champion of Thailand 147 lbs.[1]

Saiyok Pumpanmuang
BornSakdaa Niamhom
(1983-10-23) October 23, 1983
Phitsanulok, Thailand
Native nameไทรโยค พุ่มพันธ์ม่วง
Other namesSaiyoknoi Sakchainarong
NationalityThai
Height1.72 m (5 ft 7 12 in)
Weight75.0 kg (165.3 lb; 11.81 st)
DivisionLightweight
Welterweight
Middleweight
StyleMuay Thai
StanceSouthpaw
Fighting out ofBangkok, Thailand
TeamMuaythai Plaza 2004 (2007–present)
TrainerMaster Pit and Phomsak
Years active15 (1998–present)
Kickboxing record
Total306
Wins252
By knockout41
Losses53
Draws1
Other information
Notable relativesMongkutthong Sakchainarong, brother
last updated on: April 6, 2014

Biography and career

Saiyok Pumpanmuang was born as Sakdaa Niamhom on October 22, 1983, in lower northern Thailand in Phitsanulok, the capital of Phitsanulok Province. He began boxing at the age of 11 in the Sor Riendek camp.[2]

Career

Muay Thai

Known as Saiyoknoi Sakchainarong during early years of his career, he rose to fame by winning three stadium titles including one from the prestigious Rajadamnern Stadium. Saiyok was considered in Thailand one of the most promising fighters in the heavier weight classes, however he fell from grace after losing his belts to Singmanee Sor Srisompong, in a controversial match seen by the thai media as fraud.[3]

After the fight, promoters shied away from the disgraced fighter, forcing him to find another job and earn living as fruit merchant. He was taken in by a promoter at Lumpinee Stadium, Lieutenant General Sukkhatat Pumphanmuang, who decided to help Saiyok on his return to the sport.[3]

Saiyok, took Lumpinee promoter’s last name as part of his new ring alias, and on March 7, 2008, at Lumpinee he won the vacant welterweight title of Thailand by second-round KO over Singsiri Por Sirichai.[4]

On January 9, 2010 at the Society of Journalists annual awards show in Bangkok, Saiyok was awarded the Muaythai Ambassador of the Year award.[5]

He faced Fabio Pinca at Thai Fight: Lyon on September 19, 2012, in Lyon, France and won via decision after three rounds.[6][7]

He fought Dylan Salvador in Roschtigrabe, Switzerland on October 20, 2012, and lost by TKO after he could not continue due to a knee injury at the end of round one.[8][9]

He outpointed Thiago Texeira at Thai Fight 2013: King of Muay Thai in Ayutthaya, Thailand on February 23, 2013.[10]

Saiyok was set to fight Chike Lindsay at Muaythai Superfight on May 13, 2013,[11] but the bout was scrapped.

Saiyok will coach a team of farangs against a rival team trained by Sudsakorn Sor Klinmee on the reality television series Thai Fight Kaad Chuek, to be shown over between July and August 2013 on Thailand's Channel 5. The two coaches will face off in December 2013.[12]

He knocked out Mickaël Piscitello with a second round elbow at Thai Fight: Bangkok 2013 in Bangkok on June 29, 2013.[13]

He KO'd Muhammad Nsubuga in round two at Thai Fight: Pattani 2013 in Pattani, Thailand on September 22, 2013.[14]

He beat Seyedisa Alamdarnezam by an extension round decision in a non-tournament match at the Thai Fight Semi-Finals in Bangkok, Thailand on November 30, 2013.[15][16]

Lethwei

On July 22, 2018, Saiyok faced Lethwei star Tun Tun Min, former Openweight Lethwei World Champion,[17] under traditional Lethwei rules KO to win in Yangon, Myanmar. Both fighters showed immense heart,[18] but left fans slightly disappointed since it ended in a draw because there was no knockout.[19]

Titles and accomplishments

Kickboxing

Muay Thai

  • World Muaythai Organization (WMO)
    • 2015 WMO Muaythai 72 kg World Champion
  • Thai Fight
    • 2014 Thai Fight 72.5 kg Tournament Champion
    • 2013 Thai Fight Kard Chuek Tournament Runner-Up
  • Martial Arts Sports Association (MASA)
    • 2012 MASA Junior Middleweight World Muay Thai Champion
  • Lumpinee Stadium
    • 2010 Lumpinee Stadium Super-welterweight (154 lb) Champion
  • Professional Boxing Association of Thailand (PAT)
    • 2008 Thailand Welterweight (147 lb) Champion
  • Omnoi Stadium
    • 2007 Tamjai Superyak 8-Man Tournament Champion (143 lb)

Boxing

Awards

  • 2010 Muaythai Ambassador of the Year[5]
  • Member of Thai Fight from 2011 to 2018 (30–5 record)

Muay Thai record

Muay Thai record

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

Lethwei record

Professional Lethwei record

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

Boxing record

Boxing record

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

gollark: And you are interpreting it by dropping bits like the mixed fabric thing.
gollark: And? Other religions did. And nonreligion thought. They disagree on stuff.
gollark: How's that not subjective now you're going around *interpreting* it?
gollark: And I could procedurally generate a moral system in a bunch of different ways.
gollark: Ignoring the whole fundamental values differences issue, saying something is objective(ly) right because it's generated by evolutionary processes and not humans is… odd. I mean, the bible has tons of contradictory competitors.

See also

References

  1. Scalia, Rian. "Thai Fight On Wednesday Features Saiyok vs. Pinca, Sudsakorn, Aikpracha, More". Liverkick.com. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  2. Scalia, Rian. "Thai Fight Lyon: Saiyok, Aikpracha, Bennoui Win, Sudsakorn Loses". Liverkick.com. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  3. Scalia, Rian. "Alright, Here's 10 More Fights To Watch In October". Liverkick.com. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  4. Scalia, Rian. "Dylan Salvador Scores Huge Upset With KO Over Saiyok Pumphanmuang". Liverkick.com. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  5. Walsh, Dave. "Thai's Dominate at Thai Fight 2013- King of Muay Thai". Liverkick.com. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  6. Walsh, Dave. "American Chike Lindsay Set to Take on Saiyok Pumpanmuang in One of the Most Unusual Cards This Year". Liverkick.com. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  7. Walsh, Dave. "Weekend Results: Thai Fight and MAX Muay Thai". Liverkick.com. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  8. "ဆိုင်းယော့ နှင့်စိန်ခေါ် ပွဲတွင် ထွန်းထွန်းမင်း၏ထိုးကြေး ကျပ်သိန်း ၁၁၀ ရရှိမည်". The Standard Time Daily. June 16, 2018. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
  9. "ဆိုင်းယော့ နှင့်စိန်ခေါ် ပွဲတွင် ထွန်းထွန်းမင်း၏ထိုးကြေး ကျပ်သိန်း ၁၁၀ ရရှိမည်". The Standard Time Daily. June 16, 2018. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
  10. Hlaing, Kyaw Zin (July 24, 2018). "Tun Tun Min, Saiyok Pumpanmuang battle to a draw". Myanmar Times. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
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