43-6-1
Semmy  Schilt
Current Rank
Inactive
Height
212 CM / 6'11"
Nationality
Netherlands Netherlands
Weightclass
Heavyweight
Weight
132 KG / 291 LBS
Social Media
Nickname
None
Age
49

Fighter Stats

Glory Record 4-0-0 (3 KO) Wins-Losses-Draws (KOs)
Average Fight Time 05:02 Fight Duration
Knockdown Ratio 4:0 Knockdowns Landed : Knockdowns Absorbed
SLpM 10.82 Strikes Landed per Minute
SApM 4.02 Strikes Absorbed per Minute
Striking Differential 6.8 Difference between SLpM and SApM
Striking Accuracy 48.12 % Proportion of Strikes Landed

Fighter Media

Fighter Record

Result Opponent Event Method Watch
Win Rico Verhoeven Glory 4: Tokyo
Quarter-final
2012-12-31
UD
Win Brice Guidon Glory 4: Tokyo
Tournament
2012-12-31
TKO
0:57 of Round 2
Win Daniel Ghita Glory 4: Tokyo
Final
2012-12-31
KO
2:52 of Round 1
Win Errol Zimmerman Glory 1: Stockholm
Headline event
2012-05-26
TKO
2:20 of Round 3

Fighter Bio

Twitter Semmy  Schilt

Semmy
Schilt
4-0-0 (3 KO) Netherlands

4 x K-1 World GP Champion

GLORY Grand Slam Tournament Champion

Former GLORY Heavyweight Champion

Semmy Schilt towers over the kickboxing world both literally and metaphorically. Standing at 2.12 metres (just under 7 feet) he is the tallest of the world’s elite kickboxers and also the most accomplished. His four K-1 World Grand Prix wins equal those of the legendary Ernesto Hoost but Schilt is the only person ever to win three of the tournaments back-to-back. Schilt’s background is in Ashihara karate. The style is a branch of the Kyukoshin karate tree and it shares that system’s fondness for hard sparring and heavy contact in training. Add to that the fact that Schilt hails from Rotterdam, a hard docklands city in the north of Holland, and you can understand why he is such a tough customer. Sometimes fighters who enjoy a size or weight advantage use that to compensate for a lack of technique. But Schilt is a technically-precise fighter and while he generally doesn’t deploy a wide arsenal in his fights, he is very good at sticking to a strategy and he causes a lot of damage when he lands. With 130 kilos behind each blow even the most glancing shot from Schilt is enough to stun an opponent and so they approach him with extreme caution. Schilt’s kickboxing record shows how difficult he is to deal with. He has 38 wins and just six losses. Of those losses three are to the three-time K-1 Grand Prix winner Peter Aerts, who is one of the all-time greats of the sport, and one is to the former K-1 heavyweight champion Badr Hari. Only the best of the best can beat Schilt and as most of the world’s biggest names are now signed with GLORY, that is where Schilt has chosen to test himself. And as he is ranked as the number one heavyweight in the world by most kickboxing media, his presence automatically makes the GLORY heavyweight division the kickboxing world’s toughest.