Fields K-1 World GP 2007 In Las Vegas

New Blood Primed For War In Las Vegas K-1 Tourney

Cheek, Barry, and Brown Ton To Fight For America’s Future 

August 11, 2007

Bellagio Ballroom

Las Vegas, Nevada

 

 

- Special Thanks go out to Mike Afromowitz for the following:

 

Las Vegas, NV….Undefeated knockout artist, “Savage” Rick Cheek, (19-0 (17 KO’s) (1 No Contest), and

fellow United States representatives and Muay Thai stars Patrick Barry (14-3-1 (8 KO’s) and Esh’Chadar

“The Dispossessor” Brown Ton (6-1 (3 KO’s) will each battle to become the next K-1 North America

tournament champion during the “2007 K-1 World GP In Las Vegas” eight-man, single-elimination playoff at

Las Vegas, Nevada’s Bellagio on Saturday, August 11th.  

 

Barry is slated to face Sweden’s Rickard Nordstrand (16-6 (3 KO’s) in the tournament’s quarterfinal round

while, in the same bracket of the draw, Brown Ton is scheduled to square off with 23-year-old speed

demon, Zabit Samedov (50-5 (26 KO’s), of Belarus. 

 

Cheek’s opponent has yet to be named.  The other quarterfinal round matchup in Cheek’s bracket will see

Russia’s Alexandre Pitchkounov (6-1-1 (3 KO’s) take on Japanese Karate stylist, Tsuyoshi Nakasako

(18-24-1 (5 KO’s).

 

“I’m in this game to see where I belong in the world and this event is a great way to test myself,” said Cheek,

a 29-year-old former heavyweight boxing champion of both The United States Airforce and Armed Forces. 

Cheek resides in Rohnert Park, California and is a protégé of distinguished trainer, Billy Olson.  “I want to be

able to prove that Americans can fight in K-1 as well as The Dutch or anyone else.”   

 

While his service with The United States military makes him an attractive candidate to represent his country

in an alternative form of war that is martial arts prize fighting, it is Cheek’s sheer dominance of North

America’s heavyweight kickboxing ranks that make him a dangerous threat to his competition in next

month’s tournament.   To date, only two of his 19 professional opponents have been able to take Cheek the

distance of a bout.

 

Two years ago, Cheek, who stands 6 feet 4 inches tall and is chiseled at 270 pounds, made a lasting

impression on K-1 executives by obliterating Mike Sheppard in two rounds during a K-1 North America

tournament reserve matchup at Las Vegas’s Mirage. 

 

Cheek’s absence from both Las Vegas K-1 cards last year was due to a torn ACL and MCL he sustained in

the squared circle last February.  He has since fully recovered and returned to action, stopping all three

opponents that he has faced.  Only one of the three was able to survive a full round of battle with Cheek.  “I

spent a lot of time building (my knee) back up and it’s probably my better knee now,” he commented.

 

The most experienced in K-1 competition of the trio, the 28-year-old Barry, a two-time San Shou rules

kickboxing champion who took up Muay Thai five years ago, recently made a career-defining transition when

he was taken under the wing of none other than K-1’s all-time greatest competitor, “Mr. Perfect” Ernesto

Hoost.  Barry, a native of New Orleans, Louisiana, is holding his training camp for next month’s K-1 event in

Holland, Hoost’s homeland and the number one producer of K-1 super heavyweight champions.

 

The relationship Barry has forged with Hoost has already paid dividends.  During the quarterfinal round of a

K-1 World Grand Prix tournament in Honolulu, Hawaii on April 28th, Barry stopped two-time K-1 tournament

champion and fearsome brawler, “Big Daddy” Gary Goodridge with a left kick to the head in round one of

their matchup.

 

In the semifinal round of the Honolulu affair, however, Barry ran into trouble when he met Pitchkounov, whom

he had lost a decision to in a tournament reserve contest in Las Vegas last April.  Once again, Pitchkounov

flustered Barry for three rounds before walking away with a judges' decision victory. 

 

Brown Ton, a 30-year-old resident of Dallas, Texas with origins in Miami, Florida, is perhaps America’s best

kept secret.  The 6’2”, 225 pound protégé of Muay Thai legend Saekson Janjira made history in December

when he became the first American ever to compete in the annual “S-1 Super 8 World Championship” Muay

Thai tournament event staged in Bangkok, Thailand as part of the celebration of the Thai king’s birthday. 

Before a staggering, standing room only crowd of over 100,000, Brown Ton defeated two opponents before

placing as runner-up in the super heavyweight, single-elimination tournament.

 

The son of a Catholic Church minister, Brown Ton has been devoted to his religion since his early years,

traveling far and wide with his father on religious missions.  He sees his fighting career as a means of

spreading his religious messages and, thus, bestowed upon himself his nickname.  “I am “The

Dispossessor,” he said, “because I fight to dispossess for the glory of the Lord. 

 

Tickets for “K-1 World Grand Prix 2007 in Las Vegas,” priced at $300, $200, $100, and $50, are on sale at

Bellagio’s box office (888-488-7111).  In addition to the eight-man tournament, the event will feature a pair of

Superfights.  Two-time K-1 tournament champion and fearsome knockout artist, Mighty Mo” Siligia, will

square off with last April’s K-1 North America tournament victor, Chalid “Die Faust” Arrab in one of the

featured fights. 

 

Bellagio Ballroom doors will open for “K-1 World Grand Prix 2007 in Las Vegas” at 5 PM Pacific Standard

Time on Saturday, August 11th and the card’s first preliminary bout will begin at 5:30 PM.  The eight-man

tournament will commence at 7 PM.

 

K-1 is a martial arts fighting sport that derives its name from its inclusion of a wide array of combat

disciplines including Karate, Kung-Fu and Kickboxing ("K"), with an 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, K-1 has evolved into the country's most popular sport and has achieved popular culture

status as its athletes are larger-than-life celebrities.

 

 

Subject to change

 

(7/15/07)