Fahsuchon_Sit-O

Fahsuchon Sit-O

Fahsuchon Sit-O

Thai Muay Thai fighter


Fahsuchon Sit-O (ฟ้าสุชล ศิษย์โอ) is a Thai retired Muay Thai fighter.

Quick Facts Born, Other names ...

Career

Fahsuchon was born on April 14, 1983, in the Buriram province where he started training and competigng in Muay Thai at the age of 7 alongside his brothers. He competed all around Isan out of the Sit-O camp.[2]

In Bangkok Fahsuchon was renowned for being a technician and having the best push kick (teep) on the circuit. He became the inaugural 112 lbs Thailand champion in 2000. The same year he was elected Fighter of the Year by the Sports Writers Association of Thailand. He also captured the 115 and 118 lbs Thailand titles as well as the Lumpinee Stadium bantamweight title in 2001.[3]

Fahsuchon left the Bangkok circuit in the late 2000s and became a trainer at Tiger Muay hai in Phuket while still competing on smaller cards in the region. For his last fight Fahsuchon took part in the last ever gala at the old Lumpinee Stadium, he rematched Thailand Pinsinchai for a 1 million baht side-bet. He won the fight by decision.[4] He participates in the training of his son Sayluad TigerMuayThai and his nephew PhetUtong Or.Kwanmuang who also was elected fighter of the year.[5]

Titles and accomplishments

  • Lumpinee Stadium
    • 2001 Lumpinee Stadium 118 lbs Champion
  • Professional Boxing Association of Thailand (PAT)
    • 2000 Thailand 112 lbs Champion
    • 2001 Thailand 115 lbs Champion
    • 2001 Thailand 118 lbs Champion

Awards

Fight record

More information Date, Result ...

References

  1. Trefeu, Serge. "The Sit O Camp". siamfightmag.com. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  2. Trefeu, Serge. "Fahsuchon Sit O - Interview". siamfightmag.com. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
  3. Lanchas, Julien. "Vidéos : dernier gala au Lumpini PETBOONCHU conserve sa ceinture contre SAENCHAI". muaythaitv.fr. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  4. "Os melhores lutadores de muaythai de todos os tempos". acervothai.com. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  5. Trefeu, Serge. "The Trophies of Muay Thai in Thailand". siamfightmag.com. Retrieved 6 September 2023.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Fahsuchon_Sit-O, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.