Xu Yan (kickboxer)
Xu Yan 徐琰 | |
---|---|
Born |
Binzhou, China | November 22, 1987
Native name | 徐琰 |
Other names |
The Chinese Tiger Phoenix |
Nationality | Chinese |
Height | 1.84 m (6 ft 1⁄2 in) |
Weight | 70.0 kg (154.3 lb; 11.02 st) |
Division |
Welterweight Middleweight |
Style | Sanshou |
Stance | Orthodox |
Fighting out of | Beijing, China |
Team | Beijing Shenghua International Fighting Club |
Years active | 2003-present |
Kickboxing record | |
Total | 57 |
Wins | 39 |
By knockout | 20 |
Losses | 17 |
By knockout | 8 |
Draws | 1 |
|
Xu Yan (Chinese: 徐琰; pinyin: Xǔ Yán; born November 22, 1987) is a Chinese Sanshou, Muay Thai, kickboxer who competes in the middleweight division. A multiple time provincial and national Sanshou titlist in his home country, Xu later made the switch to Oriental rules kickboxing and gained recognition fighting internationally in promotions such as Fight Code, K-1 and Shootboxing.
Career
Xu Yan began sanshou training at an early age and rose to prominence by winning provincial titles in his native Shandong three years consecutively; he won the Shandong Province Sanshou Championships at -65 kg/143 lb in 2003 and 2004 and at -70 kg/154 lb in 2005. Staying at -70 kg/154 lb, he then won the Chinese National Sanshou club Championships in 2005 and 2006, and affirmed himself as the country's top middleweight by winning a tournament held by Heroes of Legends in January 2007.[1] Fighting for the first time internationally, Xu was part of a team of sanshou fighters that challenged shoot boxing at Shoot Boxing 2007 Mu-So 2nd in Tokyo, Japan on May 25, 2007. He lost to Kenichi Ogata via a knee to the body knockout in the third round, the first loss of his professional career.[2] In September 2007, he won the IFB International Sanda Tournament in Guangzhou, China, defeating Muay Thai stylist Akarn Sannaha by decision in the final. A month later on October 13, 2007, Xu beat Joey Pagliuso by unanimous decision in Shenzhen, China, using his height and reach advantage to outpoint the American.[3]
Xu won a second Legend of Heroes tournament in December 2008 before losing a unanimous decision to Vuyisile Colossa in the same promotion in Beijing, China on January 18, 2009. Making the foray into Oriental rules kickboxing, he debuted in K-1 on March 20, 2009 at K-1 Award & MAX Korea 2009 in Seoul, South Korea where he lost to Kim Se-Ki by technical knockout after being dropped twice in the second round.[4][5] On May 31, 2009, he competed in the four man middleweight tournament at The Challenger event held at The Venetian Macao in Macau. After beating Keiji Ozaki by unanimous decision in the semi-finals, he lost to Heung Pak-Wing by first round knockout in the final.[6]
Xu Yan then rebounded with a split decision win over Baxter Humby in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States on August 30, 2009 before returning to K-1 to fight Yuichiro Nagashima in a non-tournament bout at the K-1 World MAX 2009 World Championship Tournament Final in Tokyo on October 26, 2009. Although a heavy underdog, he scored an upset win by knocking Nagashima down with a left hook inside the opening thirty seconds of the fight before finishing him with the same technique soon after.[7][8] He was then set to face Lim Chi-Bin at The Khan 2 in Seoul on November 27, 2009 but Lim was replaced by Lee Su-Hwan.[9][10] He lost to Lee by TKO in round two.
After beginning the year with wins over Ben Barwise and Lewis Corris, Xu was given the toughest test of his career in the form of Buakaw Por. Pramuk in a Wu Lin Feng promoted event at Henan Provincial Stadium in Zhengzhou, China on June 19, 2010. Xu was outfought and lost on points. He also received a controversial count by the referee in round two after going down from a low blow.[11][12][13] He fought and beat another Thai in his next outing, outpointing Malaipet Sasiprapa at Legends of Heroes: Muaythai vs. Kung Fu at the Arena of Stars in Pahang, Malaysia on October 9, 2010.[14][15] In his second appearance on US soil, Xu was scheduled to fight Raul Rodriguez at Wu Lin Feng: Battle of Las Vegas II on November 13, 2010 in Las Vegas but a change occurred as Rodriguez was replaced by Shane Oblonsky.[16] He lost via unanimous decision.[17] Three weeks later, Xu Yan was drafted into the 2010 edition of the King's Cup Muay Thai tournament as one of three replacement fighters.[18] Going down in Bangkok, Thailand on December 5, 2010, Xu was eliminated at the quarter-finals when he lost to Alexander Vogel on points.[19]
On March 12, 2011, Xu faced Sudsakorn Sor Klinmee on the Oktagon 2011 card in Milan, Italy. Round one was close but Sudsakorn asserted his dominance early on with a throw and only got better in the second. Xu faded in round three and received a somewhat controversial standing eight count before losing the decision.[20][21] He put a halt to his three-fight losing streak five months later when he knocked out Adil Abbas at a Legends of Heroes event in Nanchang, China before returning to Europe to compete for the Fight Code promotion and entered into the organization's 2011 Dragons Series -70 kg/154 lb tournament at the quarter-finals stage when he took the place of Dzhabar Askerov who withdrew due to scheduling conflicts.[22][23] He lost to Abdallah Mabel via split decision on October 15, 2011 in Marseille, France[24][25] but it later emerged that the French sporting commission had not allowed Fight Code's complete rule set just hours before the event and so a rematch was set for Geneva, Switzerland on November 26, 2011.[26][27] Three weeks before the rematch, Xu suffered a first round KO loss to Lamsongkram Chuwattana in Changsha, China. Against Mabel, Xu Yan rallied back in round three but the Frenchman dominated the first two and took the unanimous judges' decision.[28][29]
He stopped another three-fight skid with a win over Yuya Yamamoto at Krush.16 in Tokyo on February 17, 2012. Xu got off to a good start, landing against the defensively flawed Yamamoto and took over in the second by scoring three knockdowns and earning him the TKO victory.[30] Xu Yan outpointed Quinton Arendse on a Legends of Heroes show in his native country on April 21, 2012[31] before making a return to K-1 after an almost three-year absence to compete in the K-1 World MAX 2012 World Championship Tournament. At the K-1 World MAX 2012 World Championship Tournament Final 16 in Madrid, Spain on May 27, 2012, he fought Yasuhiro Kido in the tournament's opening stage. The fight got off to a rather lackluster start and had the crowd booing at one point in the first round before Xu fell victim to Kido's patented spinning backfist late in the third.[32][33][34]
After rebounding with a high kick knockout of a Japanese opponent in Legends of Heroes in Kunshan, China two months later, Xu Yan was soundly beaten to a unanimous decision in the tournament reserve match at the K-1 World MAX 2012 World Championship Tournament Final in Athens, Greece on December 15, 2012.[35][36]
Xu Yan scored a first round knockout over Ton Kunchat at Combat Renaissance in Hong Kong on September 17, 2013.
He defeated Mike Zambidis by unanimous decision, dropping him in rounds one and two, at Hero Legends in Jinan, China on December 3, 2014.[37][38]
Championships and awards
Kickboxing
- The Challenger
- The Challenger -70 kg/154 lb Tournament Runner-up
- Hero Legends
- Hero Legends World -70 kg/154 lb Championship (1 Title Def.)
- 2012 Hero Legends -70 kg/154 lb Tournament Championship
- 2011 Hero Legends -70 kg/154 lb Tournament Championship
- 2010 Hero Legends -70 kg/154 lb Tournament Championship
- 2007 Hero Legends -70 kg/154 lb Tournament Championship
- IFB International Sanda Tournament
- IFB International Sanda Tournament Championship
- Shandong Province Sanshou Championships
- 2003 Shandong Province Sanshou Championships -65 kg/143 lb Championship
- 2004 Shandong Province Sanshou Championships -65 kg/143 lb Championship
- 2005 Shandong Province Sanshou Championships -70 kg/154 lb Championship
- World Muaythai Council
- WMC World Super Welterweight (-70 kg/154 lb) Championship
Kickboxing record
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39 wins (20 KOs), 17 losses, 1 draws
Legend: Win Loss Draw/No contest Notes |
References
- ↑ "Xu Yan biography". 86wiki.com.
- ↑ "(レポ&写真) [SB] 5.25 後楽園:散打との対抗戦は4勝1敗。緒形KO勝ち". boutreview.com.
- ↑ "China Combat: MMA, BJJ, Sanda, Shuai Jiao...: November 2007". chinacombat.blogspot.co.uk.
- ↑ "K-1 AWARD & MAX KOREA 2009! Start Of A New Division". Nightmare Of Battle.
- ↑ Chris Nelson. "K-1 Award & MAX Korea 2009 Results". Bloody Elbow.
- ↑ "Martial Arts Academy, Dubai". fightacademy.ae.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Head Kick Legend's K-1 World MAX 2009 Finals Preview". Bloody Elbow.
- ↑ Chris Nelson. "K-1 MAX 2009 Tournament Final Results (with Videos)". Bloody Elbow.
- ↑ "Korean News! Dong Hyun Kim's MMA Organization? - Nightmare Of Battle". Nightmare Of Battle.
- ↑ "The Khan 2! Weigh-Ins Complete". Nightmare Of Battle.
- ↑ "Buakaw Vs. Xu Yan at Wu Lin Feng Rumored". The Science of 8 Limbs.
- ↑ "Buakaw Versus Xu Yan Video". The Science of 8 Limbs.
- ↑ "Buakaw gets ready for Beijing". IFMA - International Federation of Muaythai Amateur.
- ↑ "Malaipet Versus Xu Yan". The Science of 8 Limbs.
- ↑ "Hero Legends Results - Hollenbeck and Yodsanklai win, Malaipet loses - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on December 18, 2012.
- ↑ "Shane Oblonsky replaces Raul Rodriguez at WCK Muay Thai at Harrah's in Las Vegas - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on December 19, 2012.
- ↑ "WCK Muay Thai WuLinFeng Spectacular Results - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on December 18, 2012.
- ↑ "Kings Cup 8 man tournament draw, Pique, Oberg, and Askerov out - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on December 19, 2012.
- ↑ "Yodsanklai wins Kings Cup - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on December 18, 2012.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Oktagon results: Sudsakorn outclasses Xu Yan". liverkick.com.
- ↑ nopadon wongpakdee. "Sudsakorn vs. Xu Yan". My Muay Thai.
- ↑ "Xu Yan replaces Dzhabar Askerov at Fight Code Dragon Series Final 8 - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on December 19, 2012.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Askerov Out -- Xu Yan in for Fight Code Dragon's Tournament". liverkick.com.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Fight Code Teams With TK2 to Bring Stacked Card". liverkick.com.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Fight Code Dragons Final 8 Live Results". liverkick.com.
- ↑ "Armen Petrosyan e Xu Yan rientrano a Fight Code". muaythaicombat.it.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Armen Petrosyan and Xu Yan Allowed Fight Code Redemption in November". liverkick.com.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Fight Code Rhinos Final Live Results". liverkick.com.
- ↑ Parviz Iskenderov. "Belarus Jury Bessmertny KO's Armen Petrosyan (Video)". fightmag.net.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "Krush.16 Results: Kubo and Sato Claim ISKA Titles, Xu Yan KOs Yuya Yamamoto". liverkick.com.
- ↑ "徐琰英雄传说荷泽战赛后采访". gedoumi.com.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "K-1 Rising World MAX Final 16 in Madrid Live Results". liverkick.com.
- ↑ "Results and Recap: K-1 Rising - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on December 18, 2012.
- ↑ Fraser Coffeen. "K-1 Rising 2012 Live Video Stream, Results And Discussion". Bloody Elbow.
- ↑ Dave Walsh. "K-1 World MAX 2012 Final Live Results". liverkick.com.
- ↑ "K-1 World MAX 2012 Results: Murthel Groenhart wins MAX tournament - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on January 4, 2013.
- ↑ "Iron Mike Zambidis at Hero Legends". ironmikezambidis.com.
- ↑ "Hero Legends 2014 Results and Recap - Muay Thai Authority". muaythaiauthority.com. Archived from the original on January 6, 2014.
- ↑ 日本拳王被判不敌中国格斗第一人 瞬间瘫倒在地(Chinese)