1 [upd]: K1 World Gp 2006 Japiso
: Round 1 started cautiously. Goodridge landed leg kicks, but Le Banner answered with a thunderous overhand right that split Goodridge’s eyebrow. The doctor was called — fight continued. In Round 2, Le Banner unleashed a legendary combination: left hook to the body, right cross to the head, then a left high kick that caught Goodridge behind the ear. Goodridge fell face-first. The referee stopped it at 1:42 of round 2.
Ernesto Hoost ’s departure marked the end of the "Golden Era" of K-1 fighters from the 90s, opening the door for a faster, more explosive generation. k1 world gp 2006 japiso 1
Preserving this specific Japanese ISO is incredibly valuable to the fighting game community because it keeps the optimal, uncompressed audio tracks, original sponsor logos, and native fighter licensing completely intact. It provides an unfiltered window back to 2006, when Tokyo was the undisputed capital of the combat sports universe. : Round 1 started cautiously
The 2006 K-1 World Grand Prix was won by Semmy Schilt, but the heart of the tournament belonged to Jérôme “Japiso” Le Banner. His left hook, his bloody battles, and his deep connection with Japanese fans turned him into a legend. Whether you remember him as Le Banner, Geronimo, or Japiso, his first fight of the 2006 campaign — the knockout of Gary Goodridge — remains a brutal piece of kickboxing poetry. In Round 2, Le Banner unleashed a legendary