Woooo. Remy Bonjasky has got to be thee best fighter in K-1. He won his first 2 fights in the 1st round by KO and then beat Musashi by decision. I was impressed by Musashi too, TBH. I didnt think he was gonna go that far. Im dissapointed in Botha though
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The Dutch were made for muay thai. Some people theorize that its because you guys are naturally tall, but that doesn't explain why Ramon Dekker was such a successfull fighter in Thailand since he is about 5'6" and maybe 140 lbs with his clothes wet. He has slugged it out with some of Thailands best, taking some pretty hard elbows and knees but never giving up. I saw a picture of a fight that he lost by decision; he could have easily given up because he was cut badly from elbows just over his eye.Originally posted by Toudiyama[NL]Remy Rules
He fought less than 4 minutes in the 2 early fights
For the dutch it was clear, either Remy or Peter would become the champ
Must say Musashi amazed everybody by ending up in the finals
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Originally posted by shadowkillerDont understand why everyone always forgets ernesto hoost. Hes from holland as well but he should be a candidate for best in the world.
Do you really think we could forget Ernesto Hoost, 4x K1 champ
Nor do we forget Peter Aerts 3x K1 champ
Even the Name Rob Kaman is still known or Andre Brilleman ( who ended up in a barrel of concrete)
That's what I meant, we ( the Netherlands) have had a big share of champions, compared to our size ( 16 mil people)
Maybe it is because we saw immidiately the power of the lowkick when the rest of the world except for thailand and japan didn't and years later still didn't
I remember the WKA fights where the US fighter would try lowkicks but would be kicking with the protected instep instead of the shin, even if they had lost a previous fight on these same lowkicks, they didn't learn, it took them several years
So we are years ahead
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