5 mois depuis
🚨 Tony Yoka Retrouve le Chemin de la Victoire Après Trois Défaites Consécutives ✅ !
🏅 Jet d’éponge : Victoire de Yoka par Abandon de Amine Boucetta.
🔥 Nos félicitations à Tony Yoka il en avait bien besoin 👏
#tonyyoka #boxeanglaise #boxer
🏅 Jet d’éponge : Victoire de Yoka par Abandon de Amine Boucetta.
🔥 Nos félicitations à Tony Yoka il en avait bien besoin 👏
#tonyyoka #boxeanglaise #boxer
6 mois depuis
Cameroonian boxer Kevin Sadjo Lele beats Argentinian Durval Palacio after 12 rounds and wins the WBC silver championship belt. He did not fail to thank Cameroon for the support.
8 mois depuis
Another one!!! Muluh Supremo🇨🇲 defeated Nsua Shadrack 🇨🇩 in EFC112🇿🇦. 🏆🥊
The CATWEIGHT BOUGHT fight held in Johannesburg, South Africa last Thursday, April 11th, 2024 where the Cameroonian boxer who hails from Bamenda defeated his opponent Nsua from DR Congo🇨🇩 in a first round K.O🥊
Muluh Supremo also earned performance bonus after the impressive win🏆.
Follow Kimbiblog Sports for more.
#Isaacmuluh #kimbiblog #MuluhSupremo
The CATWEIGHT BOUGHT fight held in Johannesburg, South Africa last Thursday, April 11th, 2024 where the Cameroonian boxer who hails from Bamenda defeated his opponent Nsua from DR Congo🇨🇩 in a first round K.O🥊
Muluh Supremo also earned performance bonus after the impressive win🏆.
Follow Kimbiblog Sports for more.
#Isaacmuluh #kimbiblog #MuluhSupremo
9 mois depuis
Fredia "The Cheetah" Gibbs (born July 8, 1963), is an American former professional martial artist, kickboxer, and boxer who competed from 1975 to 2005. During her kickboxing career, she held ISKA, WKA, and WKF World ******* les. Before her kickboxing career, she was an All-American in basketball and track.
She is also a model and actress. Fredia has been featured on the Fresh Prince of Bel Aire with Will Smith. She was one of the women who was throwing Will Smith around in his nightmare. Her latest film is called Knockout."
Gibbs made history when she became the first African-American female Kickboxing ISKA World Champion. She earned the name "The Most Dangerous Woman in the World" after an upset in 1994 in her fight against World Champion Valérie Wiet-Henin of France in the "Battle of the Masters" Pay Per View Event in San Jose, California. She went on to become one of the most dominant champions of all time, and remains a significant historical figure in light and super lightweight kickboxing divisions. She competed from 1991 to 1997, amassing a record of 16 wins, 0 losses, and 15 KOs, and three world ******* les. She also competed as a top contender in women's professional boxing from 1997 to 2005 with a record of 9 wins, 2 losses, and 1 draw.
She wrote The Fredia Gibbs Story about her life in 2016
“Being bullied is such a terrifying experience, especially for a child,” Fredia said. “[We] are just trying to learn our identity and learn who we are; to be threatened and quartered by kids who are supposed to be your classmates, whom you help with homework, it was uncomfortable, ugly and very negative.”
As she ran home to escape her bullys, her uncle Dr. William Groce, met her at the door this last time. “Look, baby girl, you can’t continue to run all of your life. You’re going to have to learn how to stand firm and face your fear(s),” he advised.
Gibbs began her instruction in Jeet Kune Do/Aikido fight style at Quiet Storm Martial Arts School in Chester, Pennsylvania. She learned martial arts to rebuild her self confidence and self esteem, which suffered as a result of being bullied. She was trained with her Uncle Will and by a group of lethal martial artists, lawyers, judges, doctors, business leaders, and blue collar workers. Earning her black belt was the unorthodox result of throwing powerful jab combinations and mastering tactical takedowns to obtain the glittering key on the ground behind Groce, the only way out of The Storm.
“It was tough. It was difficult but, I got the key. I unlocked the door and walked out.”
KIDNAPPED
In 1993, Gibbs martial arts training saved her life. She had lost her paycheck and bus fare in a game of Dominoes at a gathering in Inglewood, Calif. Strapped for cash, stranded and wanting to sleep in her bed instead of the couch she was offered, Gibbs accepted a ride from Lonnie Franklin Jr. after spending hours playing against him. She had no way of knowing her Domino opponent was California’s infamous Grim Sleeper, the serial killer responsible for murdering at least 100 Black women in South Central, displacing their bodies throughout Los Angeles circa 1985.
Now with him in his RV, something sinister in his sudden need for coffee awakened her intuition as he pulled into a secluded area. She refused to let him "violate" her. She tried to exit the passenger’s side door. The handle had been removed. When she scrambled for the van’s rear doors, she came face-to-face with a monster intent on violating, then adding her to his list of lifeless victims.
“He came charging at me like a football player...” She explained the aikido technique that uses an assailant’s clothing against them. “I tied his shirt over his head, pulled his pants down and grabbed his... so he couldn’t move,” demanding that he tell her where his keys were.
With her second key to freedom in hand, she told Grim, “When a "b" says, ‘No,’ she means, ‘No.'”
Gibbs was terrified and called her mom. She moved away from the Los Angeles area immediately.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1994, Gibbs’ meteoric brawling record warranted an invitation to compete in a pay-per-view International Sport and Karate Association (ISKA) match-up against Valerie Wiet-Henin, dubbed “The Most Dangerous Woman in the World.”
Wiet-Henin was a formidable opponent renowned for breaking jaws and bruising ribs, a million-dollar baby who did not scare Gibbs.
In the third round, Gibbs said, “My legs began to get weak.” Looking to The Hill from whence her help was to come, she cried out, “Oh God! You gotta help.”
Stitched-up, torn and tattered, she delivered a lethal kick followed by an overhand right to the back of Wiet-Henin’s head, knocking her out.
In addition to becoming “The Most Dangerous Woman,” Gibbs also became the only martial artist except Bruce Lee to have a combat statue dedicated in her honor.
Gibbs has been featured in Black Achievers, Black Belt, Delco Times, Inside Karate, Jet, Los Angeles Sentinel, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Sports Illustrated for Women, and Upscale Magazine.
Her fight gear is displayed at the Sports Legend of Delaware County Museum, dedicated to preserving the history and memory of Delaware County Sports Legends. She is an author, celebrity trainer, philanthropist, motivational speaker, and radio host. In 2016–2017 she was honored and participated in the Orange County Heritage Black History Parade and was nominated to attend the United State of Women summit hosted by the White House.
In 2016 #Gibbs was named one of the Top Ten Greatest African American Female Athletes of All time for Kickboxing.
In 2022, Cabrini University honored alumna Fredia Gibbs (ʼ19) during a statue dedication ceremony.
She is also a model and actress. Fredia has been featured on the Fresh Prince of Bel Aire with Will Smith. She was one of the women who was throwing Will Smith around in his nightmare. Her latest film is called Knockout."
Gibbs made history when she became the first African-American female Kickboxing ISKA World Champion. She earned the name "The Most Dangerous Woman in the World" after an upset in 1994 in her fight against World Champion Valérie Wiet-Henin of France in the "Battle of the Masters" Pay Per View Event in San Jose, California. She went on to become one of the most dominant champions of all time, and remains a significant historical figure in light and super lightweight kickboxing divisions. She competed from 1991 to 1997, amassing a record of 16 wins, 0 losses, and 15 KOs, and three world ******* les. She also competed as a top contender in women's professional boxing from 1997 to 2005 with a record of 9 wins, 2 losses, and 1 draw.
She wrote The Fredia Gibbs Story about her life in 2016
“Being bullied is such a terrifying experience, especially for a child,” Fredia said. “[We] are just trying to learn our identity and learn who we are; to be threatened and quartered by kids who are supposed to be your classmates, whom you help with homework, it was uncomfortable, ugly and very negative.”
As she ran home to escape her bullys, her uncle Dr. William Groce, met her at the door this last time. “Look, baby girl, you can’t continue to run all of your life. You’re going to have to learn how to stand firm and face your fear(s),” he advised.
Gibbs began her instruction in Jeet Kune Do/Aikido fight style at Quiet Storm Martial Arts School in Chester, Pennsylvania. She learned martial arts to rebuild her self confidence and self esteem, which suffered as a result of being bullied. She was trained with her Uncle Will and by a group of lethal martial artists, lawyers, judges, doctors, business leaders, and blue collar workers. Earning her black belt was the unorthodox result of throwing powerful jab combinations and mastering tactical takedowns to obtain the glittering key on the ground behind Groce, the only way out of The Storm.
“It was tough. It was difficult but, I got the key. I unlocked the door and walked out.”
KIDNAPPED
In 1993, Gibbs martial arts training saved her life. She had lost her paycheck and bus fare in a game of Dominoes at a gathering in Inglewood, Calif. Strapped for cash, stranded and wanting to sleep in her bed instead of the couch she was offered, Gibbs accepted a ride from Lonnie Franklin Jr. after spending hours playing against him. She had no way of knowing her Domino opponent was California’s infamous Grim Sleeper, the serial killer responsible for murdering at least 100 Black women in South Central, displacing their bodies throughout Los Angeles circa 1985.
Now with him in his RV, something sinister in his sudden need for coffee awakened her intuition as he pulled into a secluded area. She refused to let him "violate" her. She tried to exit the passenger’s side door. The handle had been removed. When she scrambled for the van’s rear doors, she came face-to-face with a monster intent on violating, then adding her to his list of lifeless victims.
“He came charging at me like a football player...” She explained the aikido technique that uses an assailant’s clothing against them. “I tied his shirt over his head, pulled his pants down and grabbed his... so he couldn’t move,” demanding that he tell her where his keys were.
With her second key to freedom in hand, she told Grim, “When a "b" says, ‘No,’ she means, ‘No.'”
Gibbs was terrified and called her mom. She moved away from the Los Angeles area immediately.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1994, Gibbs’ meteoric brawling record warranted an invitation to compete in a pay-per-view International Sport and Karate Association (ISKA) match-up against Valerie Wiet-Henin, dubbed “The Most Dangerous Woman in the World.”
Wiet-Henin was a formidable opponent renowned for breaking jaws and bruising ribs, a million-dollar baby who did not scare Gibbs.
In the third round, Gibbs said, “My legs began to get weak.” Looking to The Hill from whence her help was to come, she cried out, “Oh God! You gotta help.”
Stitched-up, torn and tattered, she delivered a lethal kick followed by an overhand right to the back of Wiet-Henin’s head, knocking her out.
In addition to becoming “The Most Dangerous Woman,” Gibbs also became the only martial artist except Bruce Lee to have a combat statue dedicated in her honor.
Gibbs has been featured in Black Achievers, Black Belt, Delco Times, Inside Karate, Jet, Los Angeles Sentinel, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Sports Illustrated for Women, and Upscale Magazine.
Her fight gear is displayed at the Sports Legend of Delaware County Museum, dedicated to preserving the history and memory of Delaware County Sports Legends. She is an author, celebrity trainer, philanthropist, motivational speaker, and radio host. In 2016–2017 she was honored and participated in the Orange County Heritage Black History Parade and was nominated to attend the United State of Women summit hosted by the White House.
In 2016 #Gibbs was named one of the Top Ten Greatest African American Female Athletes of All time for Kickboxing.
In 2022, Cabrini University honored alumna Fredia Gibbs (ʼ19) during a statue dedication ceremony.
9 mois depuis
🔴 Kévin Lele Sadjo après sa victoire face à Giovanni De Carolis déclare:
« J'étais censé le boxer le 02 décembre à Marseille et ça n'a pas pu le faire. Et j'avais vraiment une flamme à l'intérieur de moi. Elle n'arrivait pas à s'éteindre par rapport à cet adversaire parce j'avais travaillé durement. J'ai laissé ma famille, ma femme et mon fils pour aller me préparer. J'avais vraiment envie d'en découdre avec lui. Donc c'est comme je vous ai dit en conférence de presse : je vais le boxer comme s'il me devait de l'argent. Chaque coup que je donnais, il remboursait sa dette envers moi. » 🥊🇨🇲🇫🇷
[RMC Sport via TyJu Info Sport]
#KevinLele #Boxe , #Cameroun , Twitbook24 , #Sport
« J'étais censé le boxer le 02 décembre à Marseille et ça n'a pas pu le faire. Et j'avais vraiment une flamme à l'intérieur de moi. Elle n'arrivait pas à s'éteindre par rapport à cet adversaire parce j'avais travaillé durement. J'ai laissé ma famille, ma femme et mon fils pour aller me préparer. J'avais vraiment envie d'en découdre avec lui. Donc c'est comme je vous ai dit en conférence de presse : je vais le boxer comme s'il me devait de l'argent. Chaque coup que je donnais, il remboursait sa dette envers moi. » 🥊🇨🇲🇫🇷
[RMC Sport via TyJu Info Sport]
#KevinLele #Boxe , #Cameroun , Twitbook24 , #Sport
1 année depuis
Le monde de la boxe admiratif de Francis Ngannou après son combat face à Tyson Fury - L'Équipe
Dans un combat que beaucoup l'ont vu gagner, Francis Ngannou sort grandi de sa défaite aux points contre Tyson Fury, samedi à Riyad (Arabie saoudite). De Mike Tyson à Lennox Lewis, tous sont admiratifs.
https://ow.ly/GQXN50Q1SvX
1 année depuis
𝐈 𝐰𝐢𝐬𝐡 𝐓𝐲𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝐅𝐮𝐫𝐲 𝐯𝐢𝐜𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐲
#TysonFury is a nice guy who has accepted this fight against #FrancisNgannou 🇨🇲 even though the latter is not a real boxer. However, Tyson Fury is an undefeated boxing champion and it's against the best boxers that he's always been called upon to fight. So I sincerely hope he wins!
Except that #Nganou is too strong! Can Fury really beat him? Even Nganou certainly wants Fury to win, without even meaning to, he's going to demolish #Fury . How sad! Nganou and I support Fury wholeheartedly.
Come on let's go! You are and will remain our champion. The predator
#FuryNgannou #raphaeldjine #battleofthebaddest
#TysonFury is a nice guy who has accepted this fight against #FrancisNgannou 🇨🇲 even though the latter is not a real boxer. However, Tyson Fury is an undefeated boxing champion and it's against the best boxers that he's always been called upon to fight. So I sincerely hope he wins!
Except that #Nganou is too strong! Can Fury really beat him? Even Nganou certainly wants Fury to win, without even meaning to, he's going to demolish #Fury . How sad! Nganou and I support Fury wholeheartedly.
Come on let's go! You are and will remain our champion. The predator
#FuryNgannou #raphaeldjine #battleofthebaddest
1 année depuis
ASTUCE : CHANCE
EFFICACITÉ : EXTRÊME..
DE QUOI S'AGIT IL :
vous allez quelque part mais votre coeur n'est pas tranquille , vous voyagez mais vous avez peur, vous allez à un rendez vous et vous voulez que tout se passe comme vous le souhaitez, ..... vous allez à un entretien d'embauche.....etc....
QUOI FAIRE : il suffit juste de porter votre premier sous vêtement (caleçon , slip , string boxer , .....) à l'envers...et c'est terminé !
À l'envers c'est à dire : le devant " partie ou repose votre jessica( vAgin*gin) pour femme , Le Dagobert ( ***** *)nis pour homme se retrouve derrière. Et le derrière du caleçon où repose le pays ( les fesses ) séparés en deux se retrouve devant.
Vous pouvez aller à vos occupations l'esprit tranquille.....vous reviendrez de la gueule du loup vainqueur..La chance va vous frapper ce jour là comme c'est pas permis ✊🙏
#Twitbook24 #Tweetnews
EFFICACITÉ : EXTRÊME..
DE QUOI S'AGIT IL :
vous allez quelque part mais votre coeur n'est pas tranquille , vous voyagez mais vous avez peur, vous allez à un rendez vous et vous voulez que tout se passe comme vous le souhaitez, ..... vous allez à un entretien d'embauche.....etc....
QUOI FAIRE : il suffit juste de porter votre premier sous vêtement (caleçon , slip , string boxer , .....) à l'envers...et c'est terminé !
À l'envers c'est à dire : le devant " partie ou repose votre jessica( vAgin*gin) pour femme , Le Dagobert ( ***** *)nis pour homme se retrouve derrière. Et le derrière du caleçon où repose le pays ( les fesses ) séparés en deux se retrouve devant.
Vous pouvez aller à vos occupations l'esprit tranquille.....vous reviendrez de la gueule du loup vainqueur..La chance va vous frapper ce jour là comme c'est pas permis ✊🙏
#Twitbook24 #Tweetnews
1 année depuis
Francis "The Predator" Ngannou x ROF.
The new heavyweight collection is here.
"Never underestimate a man with hope and faith"
Hope was all that Francis Ngannou had. For the heavyweight king and the most imposing force in combat sports? Hope is the only thing that mattered. Hope delivered him through unimaginable situations. Through the poverty he was born into in his native country of Cameroon, right through the endless hours in the sand mines in which he worked for under two bucks a day as a child. Across the length of the Sahara Desert, when he fled. Across Morocco, where he was jailed as a refugee. Across the Strait of Gibraltar, where he paddled for dear life, in pursuit of his dreams.
Before his otherworldly strength made him a champion, there was the hope. Pushing him forward. Fueling his belief. Building his greatness.
The size of the man can’t easily tell the size of somebody’s drive. In Francis’s case, it does. He is the exact size of his resolve. A specimen. A fighter from the first, he fought. He fought from nothing to something. From the streets of Paris, France, to a gym to live out his dream as a boxer. And as with any hero’s journey, a detour. His was into the MMA cage, where he set out on an unthinkable adventure. He fought on.
At first in local fights. Then other European ports. Finally, the biggest stage — the UFC, where nine years after crossing the Mediterranean Sea as a refugee, he became a champion. And not just a champion, but one of the most feared and decorated champions of all time.
Where does hope lead? To unimaginable heights. To the ring, where Francis was always headed. To a clash with the lineal heavyweight champion of the world, Tyson Fury. To the brink of super-stardom. Go back and read the quote at the top. Never underestimate somebody with hope.
The power was always in his hands. 💪
Introducing our new collaborative collection with the great Francis Ngannou, MMA’s undisputed heavyweight champion of the world.
#RootsofFight #Francis_Ngannou , #KnowYourRoots
https://rootsof.co/ngannou...
The new heavyweight collection is here.
"Never underestimate a man with hope and faith"
Hope was all that Francis Ngannou had. For the heavyweight king and the most imposing force in combat sports? Hope is the only thing that mattered. Hope delivered him through unimaginable situations. Through the poverty he was born into in his native country of Cameroon, right through the endless hours in the sand mines in which he worked for under two bucks a day as a child. Across the length of the Sahara Desert, when he fled. Across Morocco, where he was jailed as a refugee. Across the Strait of Gibraltar, where he paddled for dear life, in pursuit of his dreams.
Before his otherworldly strength made him a champion, there was the hope. Pushing him forward. Fueling his belief. Building his greatness.
The size of the man can’t easily tell the size of somebody’s drive. In Francis’s case, it does. He is the exact size of his resolve. A specimen. A fighter from the first, he fought. He fought from nothing to something. From the streets of Paris, France, to a gym to live out his dream as a boxer. And as with any hero’s journey, a detour. His was into the MMA cage, where he set out on an unthinkable adventure. He fought on.
At first in local fights. Then other European ports. Finally, the biggest stage — the UFC, where nine years after crossing the Mediterranean Sea as a refugee, he became a champion. And not just a champion, but one of the most feared and decorated champions of all time.
Where does hope lead? To unimaginable heights. To the ring, where Francis was always headed. To a clash with the lineal heavyweight champion of the world, Tyson Fury. To the brink of super-stardom. Go back and read the quote at the top. Never underestimate somebody with hope.
The power was always in his hands. 💪
Introducing our new collaborative collection with the great Francis Ngannou, MMA’s undisputed heavyweight champion of the world.
#RootsofFight #Francis_Ngannou , #KnowYourRoots
https://rootsof.co/ngannou...