Orlando Wiet

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Orlando Wiet
Born (1965-10-24) October 24, 1965 (age 58)
Paramaribo, Suriname
NationalityDutch
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight170 lb (77 kg; 12 st)
DivisionWelterweight
StyleMuay Thai
Fighting out ofFrance
TeamTeam Wiet
Years active1994–1998
Mixed martial arts record
Total6
Wins1
By knockout1
Losses5
By knockout1
By submission4
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Orlando Wiet (born 24 October 1965) is a Surinamese-Dutch former world champion kickboxer, boxer and mixed martial artist.

Kickboxing[edit]

Orlando Otmar Wiet started his career in Purmerend with Cees van der Velden and then trained in Breda with Ramon Dekkers and Cor Hemmers. He also trained in Thailand in Buriram Nonkee Payuthe with Mr. Pramote and fought in the Old Lumpini Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand for the promoter Mr. Songchai Ratanasuban, the first non-Thai fighter to win a fight by decision. Wiet has fought at K-1 and It's Showtime tournaments. In 1985, Wiet defeated Stephane Nikiema and won a European Muay Thai championship. In 1989, he defeated Omar Benamar and won a world title.[1][2][3][4] Wiet defeated Ivan Hippolyte in April 1995. He then defeated Azem Maksutaj and after that he took part in the K-1 Grand Prix tournament in July 1995, beating Franz Haller in the first round and losing to Taiei Kin in the second round. Ivan Hippolyte, who lost to Wiet in a previous match, won the tournament.[5]

Mixed martial arts[edit]

In 1994, Wiet decided to take part in the tournament UFC 2, as the first fighter living in France. UFC 2 was a tournament with fighters of different styles. Wiet represented Muay Thai. He was the lightest fighter among the sixteen participants of the tournament, weighting 170 pounds. However, in the opening round, he could use his Muay Thai techniques and defeated 6.2 tall and 245 pounds Robert Lucarelli by TKO (Corner Stoppage) with elbow, knee strikes and punches. Then, in the quarterfinals, he faced the tallest and heaviest judo fighter of that tournament, 6.4 tall and 260 pounds Remco Pardoel. Pardoel could use his weight advantage and Wiet lost by TKO and got seriously injured. After he lost to Todd Bjornethun a year later, Wiet decided to focus on boxing and kickboxing.

Boxing[edit]

Wiet started his boxing career with Jean Robert Pujol in 1996. He participated in boxing matches in parallel with kickboxing. After a four win streak, he was defeated by Aziz Daari. His next fights were not so successful as in kickboxing. He had matches against opponents such as Byron Mitchell and Bruno Girard.[6]

After retiring[edit]

Wiet's career ended in 1999 when he sustained a critical groin injury throwing a high kick in training. Wiet retired from fighting in 1999 after 180 fights and number of injuries. However, he came back once in 2005, once in 2008 and once in 2011 to fight in MMA. He lost all three fights by submission. Wiet has subsequently worked as a coach, training fighters such as Karim Souda .[7]

Personal life[edit]

Orlando Wiet was married to Valérie Hénin, female boxer with 2-0-1 record in professional boxing and kickboxer with 0–2 record. Valerie helped her husband in training for part of his matches. The couple broke up a little later. From this marriage, Orlando has two daughters, Magda Wiet-Hénin and Lena Wiet. Magda Wiet is a taekwondo world champion.[8][6]

Titles and achievements[edit]

  • European Muay Thai Champion
  • 5 time world Muay Thai Champion
  • WTC Super Middleweight World Champion 1997

Mixed martial arts record[edit]

Professional record breakdown
6 matches 1 win 5 losses
By knockout 1 1
By submission 0 4
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 1–5 Zoran Milovic Submission (armbar) GCP - Greater Champion Podgorica May 19, 2011 1 0:43 Podgorica, Montenegro
Loss 1–4 Paul Jenkins Submission (americana) NGT 5 - Iustitia Divina December 14, 2008 2 1:50 Milan, Italy
Loss 1–3 Mario Stapel Submission S-1 - European Grand Prix 2005 November 12, 2005 1 0:00 Germany
Loss 1–2 Todd Bjornethun Submission (triangle choke) UFCF - United Full Contact Federation 1 September 8, 1995 1 5:43 United States
Loss 1–1 Remco Pardoel KO (elbows) UFC 2: No Way Out March 11, 1994 1 1:29 Denver, Colorado, United States UFC 2 tournament quarterfinals.
Won 1–0 Robert Lucarelli TKO (knees) 1 2:50 UFC 2 tournament first round.

Kickboxing and Muay Thai record (incomplete)[edit]

Kickboxing record (Incomplete)
134 Wins (47 (T)KO's), 21 Losses
Date Result Opponent Event Location Method Round Time
1999-10-24 Draw Netherlands Perry Ubeda It's Showtime - It's Showtime Haarlem, Netherlands Decision Draw 5 3:00
1997-06-07 Loss Japan Taiei Kin K-1: Fight Night '97 Zurich, Switzerland Decision 5 3:00
1996 Loss France Aurélien Duarte France Decision 5 3:00
1996-06-02 Win Japan Toshiyuki Atokawa K-1 Fight Night Zurich, Switzerland TKO 2 0:30
Loss France Aurélien Duarte Paris, France Decision 5 3:00
Draw France Aurélien Duarte Nancy, France Decision 5 3:00
1995-07-16 Loss Japan Taiei Kin K-1: Legend 95 Nagoya, Japan Decision · Majority 3 3:00
1995-07-16 Win Italy Franz Haller K-1: Legend 95 Nagoya, Japan Decision 3 3:00
1995-06-10 Win Albania Azem Maksutaj K-1 Fight Night Zurich, Switzerland KO (left punch) 2 2:45
1995-04-02 Win Netherlands Ivan Hippolyte Amsterdam, Netherlands Decision 5 3:00
1994-12-10 Loss Japan Taro Minato K-1: Legend 94 Nagoya, Japan Decision 5 3:00
1994-09-18 Loss Japan Taiei Kin K-1 Revenge Yokohama, Japan KO (Right high kick) 4 0:08
1992-06-21 Loss France Farid Kenniche Paris, France Decision 5 3:00
1992-04-09 Loss France Stephane Nikiema Paris Fight Night 1992 Paris, France Decision 5 3:00
1992 Loss Thailand Changpuek Kiatsongrit Olham, England, UK Decision(split) 5 3:00
1992 Loss Thailand Jomhod Kiatadisak Germany
1991-04-21 Loss Netherlands Ivan Hippolyte Kickboxing "Holland vs Canada" Amsterdam, Netherlands Decision 5 3:00
1989 Win France Omar Benamar Amsterdam, Netherlands Decision 5 3:00
1988-11-20 Loss Netherlands Ivan Hippolyte Amsterdam, Netherlands Decision 5 3:00
1987-11-17 Loss Netherlands Luc Verheye Amsterdam, Netherlands Ko 2 1:27
1986 Loss Thailand Krongsak Sakkasem France Decision 5 3:00
1985-12-28 Win Netherlands Stéphane Nikiéma European Muaythai Championship Amsterdam, Netherlands Decision 5 3:00
Win United Kingdom Keith Nathan KO 4 1:47
Win Netherlands Bayram Colak Decision 5 3:00

Professional boxing record[edit]

16 fights 8 wins 8 losses
By knockout 4 2
By decision 4 6
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round Date Location Notes
14 Win 8–6 Andreas Marks Decision 1999-Feb-2 FrancePont-Sainte-Maxence,France
13 Win 7–6 Andras Galfi Decision 1998-Jun-2 FranceSaverne,France
12 Loss 6–6 Olivier Beard TKO 1998-Feb-7 FranceLe Havre,France
11 Loss 6–5 Bruno Girard Decision 1997-Dec-6 France Dombasle-sur-Meurthe,France
10 Loss 6–4 Byron Mitchell Decision 1997-Jul-8 France Palais des Sports, Marseille,France
9 Loss 6–3 Didier Poujol Decision 1997-Jun-20 France Marignane,France
8 Win 6–2 Wilhem Thelineau KO 1997-May-24 France Nancy,France
7 Win 5–2 Allaoua Anki TKO 1997-Apr-19 France Lingolsheim,France
6 Loss 4–2 France Youssef Temsoury Decision 1997-Apr-4 France Cahors,France
5 Loss 4–1 France Aziz Daari KO 1997-Feb-7 France Chateauroux,France
4 Win 4–0 Switzerland Francesco Passanante Decision 1996-Nov-19 France Chenove,France
3 Win 3–0 France Youssef Temsoury Decision 1996-Jun-29 France Brive,France
2 Win 2–0 France Christophe Cochet TKO 11 May 1996 Germany Colmar, Germany
1 Win 1–0 France Halim Badani TKO 06 Jan 1996 France Palais des Sport Marcel Cerdan, Levallois-Perret, Paris, France

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Orlando Wiet ("The Gladiator") | MMA Fighter Page". Tapology.
  2. ^ Trefeu, Serge (February 3, 2020). "The epic of Dutch Muay Thai champions".
  3. ^ "orlando". le blog thai.
  4. ^ "fighter's profile - Orlando Otmar Wiet | K-1sport.de". k-1sport.de.
  5. ^ "Tournament Overview - | K-1sport.de". k-1sport.de.
  6. ^ a b "BoxRec: Login". boxrec.com.
  7. ^ "Boxe : le Nancéien Souda refait le monde" (in French), L'Est Républicain, November 27, 2015.
  8. ^ "Portrait. Valérie Hénin, championne du monde de kick-boxing, de full contact et de boxe anglaise, première femme au combat". www.estrepublicain.fr.