ZST

ZST (pronounced Zest) is a Japan-based mixed martial arts promotion and sanctioning organization holding amateur and semi-professional MMA events. ZST adopts unique rules in the MMA industry and also used to hold tag-team MMA matches.

ZST
Private
IndustryMixed martial arts promotion
Founded2002 (2002)
FounderKōki Hioki
Headquarters
Yoyogi, Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan
Key people
Jō Uehara
Websitehttp://www.zst.jp/

History

Before establishment

ZST was conceived in efforts to accommodate fighters of puroresu MMA promotion RINGS that went defunct in February 2002. On September 22, 2002, Takeshi Caesar, the president of Shoot Boxing Association (SBA), and Koki Hioki, representative of ZST, had a conversation after a Shoot Boxing event, and they announced that SBA would support ZST. For this reason, ZST promoted some matches under shoot boxing rule early on.[1]

First event

The first ZST event "The Battle Field ZST Opening Event" was arranged on November 23, 2002 in Tokyo, and it has since experienced a dramatic increase in popularity possibly in large part due to their highly different rule format. In this event, not only usual MMA matches but MMA tag match also was held among Takumi Yano, Masakazu Imanari and Remigijus Morkevicius, Mindaugas Stankos .[2]

ZST GP

On November 23, 2003, "ZST GP Opening" was held in Tokyo.

On May 17, 2008, ZST announced a major partnership with DEEP. The partnership will allow the two organizations to co-promote shows, share fighters and eventually unify the organizations.[3]

Rules

ZST Rule

Bouts consist of three rounds with a rest period of one and a half minutes. The first and second rounds are five minutes in duration and the third round is three minutes in duration, but the third round is an extra round. Punches, elbow strikes, knees and kicks are allowed to the head and body when both fighters are standing. On the ground punches, elbow strikes, knees and kicks are only allowed to the body. Bouts are not judged. In the event that the bout goes the full-time, the bout is ruled a draw.

Grappling rule (GT-F Rule)

Bouts consist of two rounds with a rest period of one and two minutes. The first and second rounds are five minutes in duration. The positioning is not regarded for scoring as important factor and any motions including clinching and holding which impedes bouts are prohibited. GT-F came from "Grappling Tournament - Featherweight".

Events

ZST holds various types of events depending on their theme.

  • ZST
    The main events held regularly under ZST rule for the top contenders.
  • ZST GP
    The tournament events under KOK rule. The events are divided to twice.
  • Battle Hazard
    The events focusing the matches which are not under ZST rule.
  • GT-F
    The tournament events of grappling.
  • Genesis
    The opening matches of ZST and Battle Hazard for the fresh professional contenders.
  • SWAT!
    The events focusing the fresh professional contenders who currently participate Genesis matches. It holds "Genesis tournament" every year, and it is an actual freshmen tournament.
  • Pre Stage
    The events of grappling for the amateur contenders.

Weight division

ZST sets 11 weight divisions.

Weight divisionWeight limitNo.Name of ChampionNationality
AbsoluteweightNo weight restrictions-Vacant-
Super heavyweightUnlimited-Vacant-
Heavyweight105 kg (231.5 lb)-Vacant-
Cruiserweight95 kg (209.4 lb)-Vacant-
Light heavyweight85 kg (187.4 lb)-Vacant-
Middleweight80 kg (176.4 lb)-Vacant-
Welterweight75 kg (165.3 lb)-Tetsuya YamadaJapan
Lightweight70 kg (154.3 lb)3rdSho KoganeJapan
Featherweight65 kg (143.3 lb)4thTetsuya SekiJapan
Bantamweight60 kg (132.3 lb)1stKeisuke FujiwaraJapan
Flyweight55 kg (121.3 lb)4thTatsuki SaomotoJapan
gollark: They read a fixed-sized subset of what recommender algorithms/their preferences/filter bubbles bring to their attention.
gollark: However, this probably isn't actually true because people don't read news randomly selected from all published news.
gollark: Not necessarily. If we assume that there are some amount people of devoting some fixed amount of time hours a day to reading news, and right now it's 90% real/10% fake, and writing 5x more content would push it to 80%/20%, that would be bad.
gollark: Which won't necessarily go faster just because you can write a few times more.
gollark: People actually spreading your content, quite possibly?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.