Vasily Shish

Belarusian kickboxer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vasily Shish

Vasily "Torero" Shish (born 7 August 1982) is a Belarusian Muay Thai middleweight kickboxer fighting out of Minsk, Belarus for the Chinuk Gym. He is a five time world and five time European Muaythai and kickboxing champion who has won titles at both amateur and professional level.[1] Vasily has fought for several notable promotions such as K-1 MAX and (the now defunct) Thai & Kickbox SuperLeague.[2]

Quick Facts Born, Other names ...
Vasily Shish
Thumb
Vasily Shish with his belts
Born (1982-08-07) 7 August 1982 (age 42)
Other namesTorero
Nationality Belarus
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight70 kg (150 lb; 11 st)
DivisionMiddleweight
Welterweight
Super Lightweight
StyleMuay Thai
StanceOrthodox
Fighting out ofMinsk, Belarus
TeamChinuk Gym (2004-2008)
Gym "Kick Fighter" (1996-2003)
TrainerD.Pyastski
Kickboxing record
Total51
Wins37
By knockout17
Losses12
Draws2
Mixed martial arts record
Total1
Wins0
Losses1
Amateur record
Total71
Wins60
Losses11
Last updated on: 4 June 2011
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Career/Biography

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Perspective

Growing up in Minsk, Vasily joined the famous Gym "Kick Fighter" in 1996 where he studied Muay Thai alongside future world champions such as Andrei Kulebin, Aliaksei Pekarchyk and Dmitry Shakuta. In 1998 he won his first title as an amateur at the I.A.M.T.F. European Championships in Spain, winning a gold medal in the -51 kg category aged just 15 years old, also winning the honour of "best technique".[3] The next year he went to the world championships in Bangkok where he won a bronze medal competing against much more experienced fighters. In 1999 he was part of the Belarus team which won an incredible eight gold medals (out of twelve) in the Thai-boxing section at the W.A.K.O. world championships. What was even more impressive was that seven of the winners came from Vasily's Kick Fighter gym.[4]

In 2000 Vasily won his first pro title (I.K.F. world) by defeating American Richard Kostuck in less than 40 seconds in Minsk. He carried on in an excellent year by winning a gold medal at the amateur European Muaythai championships before finishing the year with a gold medal in Sydney at the World Cup in Martial Arts event. Between 2001 and 2003 Vasily won more amateur and pro world and European titles with the I.A.M.T.F., I.S.S/Brute Force, W.A.K.O. and World Kickboxing Network (W.K.N.) organizations, moving up in weight and relinquishing his I.K.F. world title as he did so. By 2003 Vasily sought more competitive matches joining the newly created Thai & Kickbox SuperLeague where he would be given the chance to fight world champions every event. Things did not go exactly as planned for Vasily and he only had two fights with the organization – losing both.[5]

By 2004 Vasily had parted from his longtime gym "Kick Fighter" after seven years and joined the rival Chinuk Gym in Minsk. With his new gym he had the opportunity to make up for his disappointing SuperLeague performances after being called up by the then world's biggest kickboxing organization K-1 to take part in an elimination match for the 2005 K-1 MAX final. Vasily faced a daunting task in Tokyo, with the reigning champion Buakaw Por.Pramuk standing in the way of a place of the final 8. After three rounds it was clear that Vasily had no chance of upsetting the odds on favorite, losing every round in a third round unanimous decision loss.[citation needed]

Since his K-1 MAX appearance Vasily has been on the fringes of the kickboxing scene, taking many fights across the border in Russia with the highlight being holding the W.B.K.F. European title between 2006 and 2007. He has also made a number of appearances on smaller European promotions such as Klash and Janus Fight with limited success, wins against Paolo Balicha and Michal Hansgut being nullified by defeats against Alviar Lima, Paulo Balicha and Fadi Merza.[citation needed]

Titles

Professional

  • 2006-07 W.B.K.F. European champion (0 title defences)
  • 2003 W.K.N. Muaythai super lightweight world champion -66.7 kg
  • 2002 I.S.S./Brute Force world champion
  • 2000 I.K.F. Pro Muaythai super lightweight world champion -62.2 kg (0 title defences - vacated)

Amateur

Professional Kickboxing Record

More information Date, Result ...
Professional Kickboxing Record
37 Wins (17 (T)KO's), 12 Losses, 2 Draws[12]
Date Result OpponentEventLocation MethodRoundTime
2008-04-20LossSyria Fadi MerzaFight Night Vienna[13]Vienna, AustriaDecision33:00
2007-12-15LossPortugal Paulo BalichaSwiss Las Vegas II[14]Basel, SwitzerlandDecision33:00
Fight was for W.F.C. junior middleweight world title -69.85 kg.
2007-10-26LossCape Verde Alviar LimaKlasH III "Show of No Mercy"[15]Sibiu, RomaniaDecision (Unanimous)33:00
2007-03-21LossRussia Konstantin SbitovFight Club Arbat[16]Moscow, RussiaTKO
Loses W.B.K.F. European title -71 kg.
2006-11-06WinRussia Nikolai KoreneevBARS - European Welterweight Championship '06[17]Moscow, RussiaDecision (Majority)83:00
Wins W.B.K.F. European title -71 kg.
2006-11-06WinRussia Artur ShamkhalovUfa Fight Night[18]Ufa, RussiaKO5
2006-07-21LossUkraine Petr NakonechnyiS-1 European Elimination - Round 1RussiaDecision33:00
2006-06-21DrawKyrgyzstan Kumar ZhalievFight Club Arbat[19]Moscow, RussiaDecision Draw33:00
2006-03-10LossUkraine Petr NakonechnyiK-1 East Europe MAX 2006, Super FightVilnius, LithuaniaExt.R Decision (Majority)43:00
2005-11-19LossFrance Yassine BenhadjJanus Fight 2005, Semi Final[20]Padova, ItalyDecision33:00
2005-11-19WinCzech Republic Michal HansgutJanus Fight 2005, Quarter FinalPadova, ItalyKO (High Kick)2
2005-10-26DrawKyrgyzstan Alen OfoyoFight Club Arbat[21]Moscow, RussiaDecision Draw33:00
2005-09-30LossFrance Farid KhiderKings of Muaythai: Belarus vs Europe[22]Minsk, BelarusDecision53:00
Fight was for W.K.N. Muay Thai super lightweight European title -66.7 kg.
2005-09-24WinPortugal Paulo BalichaFight Night Winterthur[23]Winterthur, SwitzerlandTKO4
2005-06-15LossRussia Alexei KraskoFight Club Arbat[24]Moscow, RussiaDecision33:00
2005-05-04LossThailand Buakaw Por. PramukK-1 World MAX 2005 World Tournament OpenTokyo, JapanDecision (Unanimous)33:00
Fails to qualify for K-1 World MAX 2005 Championship Final.
2004-10-27WinUkraine Alexandr DemchenkoFight Club Arbat[25]Moscow, RussiaKO
2004-10-26WinRussia Elbrus DzhumakovRussian Muaythai League[26]Moscow, RussiaKO3
2004-05-19WinRussia Sergey ZemnevichFight Club Arbat[27]Moscow, RussiaDecision (Unanimous)33:00
2003-09-27LossNetherlands Chris van VenrooijSuperLeague Germany 2003Wuppertal, GermanyDecision53:00
2003-05-10LossFrance Eddy SabanSuperLeague Austria 2003Vienna, AustriaDecision53:00
2002-12-19WinUkraine Petr NakonechnyiBelarus vs Ukraine[28]Bilohirsk, UkraineDecision53:00
2002-00-00WinThailandBrute Force Challenge[29]Pattaya, ThailandDecision53:00
Wins I.S.S/Brute Force Muaythai world title.
2002-09-14WinSyria Baker BarakatNight of KO[30]Sopot, PolandKO3
Wins W.K.N. Muaythai super lightweight world title -66.7 kg.
2002-00-00WinUnited States James CookBelarus vs USA[31]New York, NY, USADecision53:00
2000-00-00WinAustraliaBelarus vs Australia[32]Sydney, AustraliaKO
2000-06-29WinThailand Kongdej RatanachotRussia vs Thailand[33][34]Novosibirsk, RussiaDecision53:00
2000-00-00WinThailand Parynya DongtiamseeBelarus vs Thailand[35]Minsk, BelarusDecision53:00
2000-01-14WinUnited States Richard KostuckUSA vs Belarus[36]Minsk, BelarusTKO (Doc Stop/Cut by Elbow)10:38
Wins I.K.F. Pro Muaythai super lightweight world title -62.2 kg.
Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes
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Mixed Martial Arts Record

More information Date, Result ...
MMA Record
0 Wins, 1 Loss
Date Result OpponentEventLocation MethodRoundTime
2006-08-23LossUnited Arab Emirates Dzhabar AskerovBelorechensk Fight Night 2[37]Belorechensk, RussiaSubmission1
Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes
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See also

References

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