W.A.K.O. World Championships 1978

W.A.K.O. World Championships 1978 were the first ever W.A.K.O. World kickboxing championships introduced by the pioneer of German Karate Georg Brueckner[1] and the third major event hosted by the W.A.K.O. organization – formerly known as the W.M.A.A. (World of Mixed Martial Arts Association).[2] The W.A.K.O. championships were open to amateur men only from eighteen countries across the world and all bouts were fought under Full-Contact kickboxing rules - differing from modern rules in that there was a platform instead of a ring and fighters wore no protective clothing or head guards.[3] Semi-Contact, which had been introduced at the 1978 European championships, would have no place at this event. At the end of the championships, the USA was the top nation, with hosts West Germany a close second, and the Dominican Republic in third. The event was held in West Berlin, West Germany on November 5, 1978.

W.A.K.O. World Championships 1978
The poster for W.A.K.O. World Championships 1978.
Information
PromotionW.A.K.O.
DateNovember 5, 1978
City West Berlin
Attendance8000
Event chronology
W.A.K.O. European Championships 1978 W.A.K.O. World Championships 1978 W.A.K.O. European Championships 1979

Men's Full-Contact Kickboxing

Similar to the European championships, the worlds had seven weight divisions for amateur men only, with all bouts fought under Full-Contact kickboxing rules. More detail on Full-Contact's rules-set can be found at the W.A.K.O. website, although be aware that the rules have changed since 1978.[4] The weight divisions ranged from 57 kg/125.4 lbs to over 84 kg/+184.8 lbs. The medal winners are listed below with Peter Harbrecht of particular interest – the West German winning gold in the -74 kg category for the third time at a W.A.K.O. event (he had won gold at the 1977 and 1978 European championships as well). Other world and European champions included Ivan Mendes and Omar Sahli, who had both picked up gold medals five months previously in Wolfsburg.[5]

Men's Full-Contact Kickboxing Medals Table

Event Gold Silver Bronze
-57 kg José Ceballos Jonny Canabate Rachid Alitem
-63 kg Ivan Mendes Chalabi Bennacef No Medallist
-69 kg Omar Sahli Youssef Zenaf Heinz Klupp
-74 kg Peter Harbrecht Harold Roth Enric Gunning
-79 kg Daryl Tyler Nelson Colon Bernd Eggert
-84 kg Branko Zgaljardic Dirk Peter Nils Hovelsrud
+84 kg Tony Palmore Tom Rissman Harold Ehmann

Overall Medals Standing (Top 5)

The USA was the strongest nation at the 1978 W.A.K.O. World Championships, narrowly beating the host nation West Germany into second place by collecting a tally of two gold and one silver medal.[6]

Ranking Country Gold Silver Bronze
1 USA 2 1 0
2 West Germany 1 2 2
3 Dominican Republic 1 1 0
4 Netherlands 1 0 1
4 Norway 1 0 1
5 Yugoslavia 1 0 0
gollark: I wonder if someone will end up making a third-party case extension or something to make it more tractable.
gollark: It is somewhat hard to remember.
gollark: Probably wouldn't really work as ranks for people.
gollark: "crude, basic, grand, rare, arcane, heroic, unique, celestial, and divine"
gollark: Wait, there's a rarity scale for skills and items and such in ToH, right? Maybe it could be based on that.

See also

References

  1. "George Bruckner - . : WAKO World Association of Kickboxing ..." www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
  2. "PKA, WAKO, WKA and other associations". karate-in-english-lewis-wallace.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
  3. "First WAKO World Championships in 1978 and 1979". karate-in-english-lewis-wallace.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
  4. "WAKO Full contact Rules" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  5. "lst WAKO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS (List of medallists)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-04-01.
  6. "lst WAKO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS (Overall Medal Standing)" (PDF). www.wakoweb.com. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
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