Andy Ristie

Andy Ristie
Born (1982-03-17) March 17, 1982
Paramaribo, Suriname
Other names The Machine
Nationality Dutch, Surinamese
Height 1.82 m (5 ft 11 12 in)
Weight 70.0 kg (154.3 lb; 11.02 st)
Division Lightweight
Reach 77.0 in (196 cm)
Style Kickboxing, Muay Thai
Stance Orthodox
Fighting out of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Team Team Ristie (2013-present)
Years active 2002-present
Kickboxing record
Total 53
Wins 47
By knockout 28
Losses 5
Draws 1
last updated on: June 21, 2014

Andy Ristie (born March 17, 1982) is a Dutch-Surinamese kickboxer who competes in the lightweight division. After an unremarkable beginning to his career, he came to prominence with a lengthy and entertaining winning streak in the It's Showtime promotion in 2011 and 2012. This earned him an invite to fight amongst the 70 kg/154 lb division's elite, competing in the K-1 World MAX 2012 Tournament and debuting in Glory shortly after.

Standing at 1.82 m (5 ft 11 12 in), Ristie is tall for his weight class and is known to look for knockouts from the first bell. He utilizes devastating knee strikes to the body and possesses considerable punching power, especially in his left hook.[1] As of 2 November 2015, he is ranked the #2 lightweight in the world by GLORY.[2]

Career

Early career (2002–2011)

Ristie was born in Paramaribo, Suriname in 1982 and relocated to Amsterdam, Netherlands where he is trained by Lucien Carbin at Fight Club Carbin. He began training Muay Thai around age of 20 and while he won the World Kickboxing Network (WKN) Intercontinental Super Welterweight (-72.6/160.1 lb) Championship as an amateur, the beginnings of his professional career were fought in relative obscurity. Having built up an extensive record with an impressive knockout ratio fighting in smaller events in Suriname and the Netherlands, he was recruited by the It's Showtime promotion at twenty-nine years of age. He debuted with a first-round KO of Nick Beljaards at BFN Group presents: It's Showtime Brussels in Brussels, Belgium on March 26, 2011.[3][4]

On September 25, 2011, Ristie defeated William Diender via unanimous decision in the tournament reserve bout of the BFN Group & Music Hall presents: It's Showtime "Fast & Furious 70MAX" in Brussels.[5] He followed this up with a technical knockout defeat of Jonay Risco at Street Culture, Fight Club Group & Canary Kickboxing Federation presents: It's Showtime 53 on November 12, 2011 in Tenerife, Spain. Having dominated Risco throughout the fight, Ristie floored the Spaniard with a left hook in round three and, while he was able to make it back to his feet, referee Joop Ubeda called a halt to the contest.[6][7]

2012–present

He stopped Hinata Watanabe in the first round of their contest at It's Showtime 2012 in Leeuwarden in Leeuwarden, Netherlands, on January 28, 2012. After dropping his opponent in ten seconds, he sent Hinata to the canvas twice more, forcing a referee stoppage.[8][9][10] This win helped establish Ristie as a force on the world stage and earned him a contract with K-1. He was invited to compete alongside fifteen of the world's other top 70 kg/154 lb kickfighters in the K-1 World MAX 2012 World Championship Tournament, and faced Gago Drago in the opening stage at the K-1 World MAX 2012 World Championship Tournament Final 16 in Madrid, Spain on May 27, 2012. He began the fight by battering Drago with knees to the head and body and continued to put a one-sided beating on the Armenian throughout, winning a wide unanimous decision.[11][12][13][14]

On June 30, 2012, he KO'd Samir Djabba with a left hook in the first round, after 32 seconds, Music Hall & BFN Group present: It's Showtime 57 & 58 in Brussels.[15][16][17] Then, in his third fight in as many months, he stopped David Calvo with a knee to the body in under a minute at Street Culture, Federación Canaria de Kickboxing & Fightclub Group present: It's Showtime 59 in Tenerife on July 21, 2012.[18][19] He had originally been set to face Abraham Roqueñi at the event but he withdrew due to injury a week before.[20][21] After these victories, he broke the top ten in the world rankings for the first time in June 2012, coming in at #8.[22][23]

He was expected to fight on an It's Showtime card in Yokohama, Japan, on November 17, 2012,[24] but the event was cancelled following the promotion's acquisition by Glory[25] and so he was transferred to Glory 2: Brussels in Belgium and put up against Nordin Benmoh. Once again, he stopped his opponent with a left hook.[26][27][28][29] A rematch between Ristie and Hinata Watanabe was booked as the reserve fight for the Shoot Boxing World Tournament 2012 in Tokyo, Japan on November 17, 2012, and ended like the pair's first match ten months earlier: Hinata was cut early on and dropped with punches twice shortly after, resulting in a referee stoppage and a first-round technical knockout win for Ristie.[30][31]

Ristie was drawn against Andy Souwer in the quarter-finals of the K-1 World MAX 2012 World Championship Tournament Final in Athens, Greece on December 15, 2013, but lost after a unanimous decision.[32][33] Despite ending the year with a loss, he went 6–1 over the course of the twelve months, breaking into the top ten.[34][35]

For his first match in 2013, Ristie was set to face four-time world champion and original K-1 World MAX winner Albert Kraus at Glory 5: London in London, England on March 23[36][37][38] but was unable to fight due to visa issues and was replaced by Warren Stevelmans.[39] He was then transferred onto the Glory 6: Istanbul card in Istanbul on April 6 to face Alessandro Campagna.[40][41]

The Kraus-Ristie fight was rescheduled for Glory 8: Tokyo - 2013 65kg Slam on May 3, 2013,[42] and he won with a knee KO in round two.[43][44][45]

He was to fight Sanny Dahlbeck at Glory 10: Los Angeles - Middleweight World Championship Tournament in Ontario, California on September 28, 2013.[46] However, the Swede withdrew for undisclosed reasons and was replaced by Niclas Larsen.[47] He defeated Larsen via unanimous decision.[48]

Ristie caused one of the biggest upsets in kickboxing history when he knocked out both Giorgio Petrosyan and Robin van Roosmalen to win the Glory 12: New York - Lightweight World Championship Tournament in New York City, New York, US on November 23, 2013.[49][50] Against Giorgio Petrosyan in the semi-finals, Ristie applied a lot of pressure and caused the Italian problems in finding his rhythm, but Petrosyan controlled the first two rounds nonetheless. Going into the third in need of a knockout, Ristie managed just that when he landed a huge right hand that had Petrosyan stunned only for him to follow it up with a combination of a right, left and another left that finished it, becoming the first man to stop Petrosyan and ending his forty-two fight, six year undefeated streak.[51] Riding the wave of momentum that saw him dethrone kickboxing's all-time greatest, Ristie continued his rich vein of form in the final against Robin van Roosmalen, dropping the Dutchman towards the tail end of round one before putting him away in two.[52][53][54][55] Ristie had some problems with his camp in the weeks prior to the tournament, leaving his longtime trainer Lucien Carbin to form his own Team Ristie.[56]

He was to fight for the inaugural Glory Lightweight Championship against Ky Hollenbeck at Glory 14: Zagreb in Zagreb, Croatia on March 8, 2014[57] but Hollenbeck withdrew and was replaced by Davit Kiria.[58] He dominated the Georgian for the first three rounds and scored a knockdown with a step knee in the second, but faded in the championship rounds and was stopped in the fifth.[59][60][61]

The Hollenbeck-Ristie fight was then scheduled for Glory 17: Los Angeles in Inglewood, California, US on June 21, 2014.[62] Andy Ristie knocked out Ky Hollenbeck thirty-five seconds into round one, stunning his American opponent with a jab before putting him away with a left hook.[63][64][65]

On the February 6, 2015, Ristie fought Steve Moxon in a Superfight on Glory 19: USA in Hampton, Virginia, USA. He won the fight via TKO in the first round.

Championships and awards

Kickboxing

Kickboxing record

Kickboxing record

Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

External links

References

  1. Official Glory profile
  2. "Fighters Rankings". gloryworldseries.com.
  3. It's Showtime Brussels Today
  4. It's Showtime Brussels Full Results
  5. It's Showtime Fast & Furious 70MAX Preview: Reserve Fights
  6. It's Showtime 53 in Tenerife Tomorrow: Fight Card
  7. It's Showtime 53 in Tenerife Live Results
  8. It's Showtime: Saki vs. Hari, Full Fight Card For Saturday
  9. This Saturday's It's Showtime Saki vs. Hari Event - Preview: Part 1
  10. It's Showtime: Badr Hari vs. Gokhan Saki Live Results
  11. K-1 Announces Fights For MAX Final 16 May 27
  12. K-1 Rising World MAX Final 16 in Madrid Live Results
  13. K-1 Rising 2012 Live Video Stream, Results And Discussion
  14. So K-1 Came Back This Week End (And If You Missed It You Can Still Watch it for Free)
  15. It's Showtime June 30 Fight Card: Star Studded With 2 Title Fights
  16. Full Fight Card For It's Showtime 57/58 Tomorrow, Headlined By Peter Aerts vs. Tyrone Spong
  17. It's Showtime 57/58: Aerts vs. Spong Live Results
  18. It's Showtime Returns To Tenerife This Saturday
  19. It's Showtime 59 in Tenerife Live Results
  20. It's Showtime Fight Card For July 21: 61kg Title, Andy Souwer Atop Card
  21. Abraham Roqueñi Out, David Calvo In Against Andy Ristie At It's Showtime July 21
  22. LiverKick.com Rankings - June 2012
  23. LiverKick.com Rankings - June 2012
  24. It’s Showtime Headed to Japan in September
  25. It's Showtime 60 in Japan is Off, For Now
  26. GLORY Announces "GLORY 2 Brussels" For October 6, Remy Bonjasky vs. Anderson Silva Headlines
  27. GLORY 2 Brussels Final Fight Card For This Saturday
  28. GLORY 2 Brussels Live Results
  29. Weekly Kicks: Glory 2 Brussels results and analysis plus more
  30. Hinata vs. Ristie Rematch, Imada vs. Abdollahi Complete S-Cup Fight Card
  31. S-Cup 2012: Andy Souwer Wins 4th S-Cup
  32. K-1 World MAX Final 8: Tournament Line-up
  33. K-1 World MAX 2012 Final Live Results
  34. LiverKick.com Middleweight Rankings - December 2012
  35. 2012's Breakout Fighters in Kickboxing
  36. GLORY 5 London Tickets Presale, More Names Announced
  37. GLORY 5 London Fight Card
  38. GLORY 5 London Finalized Fight Card, This Saturday March 23
  39. Andy Ristie out, Albert Kraus now faces Warren Stevelmans tomorrow at GLORY 5 London
  40. Andy Ristie vs. Alessandro Campagna added to GLORY 6 Istanbul, April 6
  41. Updated GLORY 6 Istanbul Fight Card For Saturday, April 6
  42. GLORY 8 Tokyo: 65kg Tournament Field Complete, More Fights Added
  43. GLORY 8 Tokyo Live Results
  44. GLORY 8 Tokyo Results and Review: Yuta Kubo Proves Why He is the Number One Japanese Fighter in the World
  45. Glory 8 Results: Yuta Kubo wins featherweight tournament
  46. More Super Fights Announced for GLORY 10 Los Angeles
  47. GLORY 10 Los Angeles Fight Card: Shimizu Replaces Wakeling
  48. Glory 10 Results and Recap: Schilling stuns Levin to win 4-man tournament
  49. GLORY Announces GLORY 12 Lightweight Tournament Match Ups
  50. Match ups for Glory 12 lightweight tournament announced Archived October 5, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.
  51. Andy Ristie Dethrones Giorgio Petrosyan in R3
  52. Andy Ristie Takes Place as GLORY 12 Lightweight Champion
  53. Glory 12 Results and Recap: Andy Ristie shocks the world with two huge knockouts
  54. GLORY 12 Live Results and Updates
  55. GLORY 12 results: Upsets galore as Giorgio Petrosyan falls short to tourney winner Andy Ristie
  56. Post-GLORY 12 Rumor Roundup
  57. GLORY 14 Zagreb
  58. Kiria In - Ky Out vs. Ristie at GLORY 14
  59. Davit Kiria is the NEW GLORY Lightweight Champion
  60. Remy Bonjasky Walks Away With Controversial Decision Over ‘Cro Cop’ at Glory 14
  61. Glory 14 Results and Recap
  62. GLORY 17 Keeps Getting Bigger
  63. Glory 17 and Last Man Standing Live Results
  64. Glory's Last Man Standing Results
  65. Glory results: Artem Levin, Rico Verhoeven and Joseph Valtellini take home Glory gold
  66. Kickboxing 2013 Year End Awards: Fighter, Fight, and KO of the Year
  67. LiverKick Best of 2013: Knockout of the Year
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.