28-10-0
Brice Nectar Guidon
classements réels
Inactive
Taille
198 CM / 6'5"
Nationalité
France France
Catégorie de poids
Heavyweight
Poids
108 KG / 238 LBS
médias sociaux
Surnom
Nectar
Âge
37

Combattant Statistiques

Glory Record 0-4-0 (0 KO) Wins-Losses-Draws (KOs)
Temps de combat moyen 03:05 Fight Duration
Rapport de Knockdown 0:7 Knockdowns Landed : Knockdowns Absorbed
SLpM 11.58 Strikes Landed per Minute
SApM 10.93 Strikes Absorbed per Minute
Différentiel frappant 0.65 Difference between SLpM and SApM
Précision frappante 46.89 % Proportion of Strikes Landed

Combattant Médias

Combattant Record

Résultat Adversaire Événement Méthode Regarder
Pertes Jahfarr Wilnis Glory 10: Los Angeles
Superfight
2013-09-28
KO
0:38 of Round 2
Pertes Daniel Ghita Glory 9: New York
Superfight
2013-06-22
KO
0:49 of Round 1
Pertes Semmy Schilt Glory 4: Tokyo
Tournament
2012-12-31
TKO
0:57 of Round 2

Combattant Bio

Twitter Brice Nectar Guidon

Brice
Guidon
0-4-0 (0 KO) France

World Pro League Champion

W.P.M.F. World Muay Thai Champion

French Savate Champion

For many years the first name that came to mind when French kickboxing was mentioned was the living legend Jerome Le Banner. But now there is a new heavyweight prospect carrying the tricolour into battle - the 26 year old Brice Guidon, known to his countrymen as ‘Nectar’ because of his ‘sweet style’ in the ring. In fact, Guidon trained with Le Banner for a time and was a member of the Le Banner Xtreme Team before branching out further afield with training at Amsterdam’s iconic Meijiro Gym. Now Guidon has his own team, Nectar Boxing Camp, although he conducts training for his big bouts under Meijiro’s veteran trainer Andre Mannaart. Guidon had his first professional fight at age 21 but even before then he was marking himself out as a future contender. In 2002 he won the French Cadet Championship and a year later he won the Junior French Championship at 91 kilos. Since turning professional he has steadily bulked up and now regularly hits the scales at over 100 kilos. He turned professional in 2005 and a year later he was fighting in a K-1 event taking place in his native France. Every year since then he achieved something new - in 2010, he won the both the W.P.M.F. World Super Heavyweight Muay Thai title and the W.P.M.F. European Heavyweight Muay Thai title, a significant achievement. That earned him a call from GLORY and in 2011 he was the runner-up in the 2011 United Glory World Series, losing to the stand-out prospect Gokhan Saki. The loss did not discourage him - after all, he had beaten such names as the powerful Mourad Bouzidi on his way through he tournament - and early in 2012 he captured a minor world title at super-heavyweight. But that was a mere starter for 2012’s main course - entering the GLORY heavyweight division. His old friend Gokhan Saki awaits him, as does another previous conqueror, Semmy Schilt.