J
JDenz
Guest
In the wake of the Mike Tyson signing, K-1s most widely publicized acquisition to date, another top 10 boxing contender in Francois The White Buffalo Botha, will join the ranks of The New Fighting Sport and will make his K-1 rules fighting debut in Osaka, Japans K-1 Final Elimination event on October 11th. Botha will face world Muay Thai kickboxing champion, Jerome LeBanner during the Osaka seven fight card that will be televised live on United States Pay-Per-View television.
The Botha signing came shortly after the 35-year-old boxer initiated a verbal confrontation with K-1 megastar Bob The Beast Sapp following Sapps first-round victory over fellow former NFL player Stephan Gamlin during the Sunday, September 21st K-1 Survival 2003 card in Yokohama, Japan where Botha was on-hand as a spectator and guest of the K-1 organization. The exchange between Sapp and Botha, which turned into a shoving match, bore likeness to the showdown that unfolded between Tyson and Sapp on August 15th immediately after Sapps victory at K-1 Battle At The Bellagio in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Rated number 10 by The World Boxing Organization (WBO), Botha of Witbank, South Africa is also a former International Boxing Federation (IBF) World Heavyweight champion who boasts a professional boxing record of 44-4-2 (28 KOs). The four losses on Bothas record came at the hands of Lennox Lewis, Wladimir Klitschko, Michael Moorer, and Mike Tyson, all of whom have been heavyweight champions.
Bothas October 11th opponent, Jerome LeBanner, is recognized as one of the most accomplished and brightest fighters in the history of K-1. Twice, in 1995 and last year, he reached the championship round of the K-1 World Grand Prix Finals, the eight-man single-elimination tournament staged on the first Sunday of every December in Tokyo, Japans 70,000-capacity Tokyo Dome. LeBanner is also the reigning International Sport Karate Association (ISKA) World Superheavyweight Muay Thai kickboxing champion.
K-1 is a martial arts combat sport that derives its name from its inclusion of a wide array of martial arts disciplines, including Karate, Kung-Fu, and Kickboxing (K), and its intent to determine one champion in one ring (1). After being staged for the first time in Japan in 1993 under the direction of founder Master Kazuyoshi Ishii, it later evolved into the countrys most popular sport and achieved popular culture status there as its athletes turned into larger-than-life celebrities.
The Botha signing came shortly after the 35-year-old boxer initiated a verbal confrontation with K-1 megastar Bob The Beast Sapp following Sapps first-round victory over fellow former NFL player Stephan Gamlin during the Sunday, September 21st K-1 Survival 2003 card in Yokohama, Japan where Botha was on-hand as a spectator and guest of the K-1 organization. The exchange between Sapp and Botha, which turned into a shoving match, bore likeness to the showdown that unfolded between Tyson and Sapp on August 15th immediately after Sapps victory at K-1 Battle At The Bellagio in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Rated number 10 by The World Boxing Organization (WBO), Botha of Witbank, South Africa is also a former International Boxing Federation (IBF) World Heavyweight champion who boasts a professional boxing record of 44-4-2 (28 KOs). The four losses on Bothas record came at the hands of Lennox Lewis, Wladimir Klitschko, Michael Moorer, and Mike Tyson, all of whom have been heavyweight champions.
Bothas October 11th opponent, Jerome LeBanner, is recognized as one of the most accomplished and brightest fighters in the history of K-1. Twice, in 1995 and last year, he reached the championship round of the K-1 World Grand Prix Finals, the eight-man single-elimination tournament staged on the first Sunday of every December in Tokyo, Japans 70,000-capacity Tokyo Dome. LeBanner is also the reigning International Sport Karate Association (ISKA) World Superheavyweight Muay Thai kickboxing champion.
K-1 is a martial arts combat sport that derives its name from its inclusion of a wide array of martial arts disciplines, including Karate, Kung-Fu, and Kickboxing (K), and its intent to determine one champion in one ring (1). After being staged for the first time in Japan in 1993 under the direction of founder Master Kazuyoshi Ishii, it later evolved into the countrys most popular sport and achieved popular culture status there as its athletes turned into larger-than-life celebrities.