32-2-0 (11 KO)
Amel Huch Huch Dehby
classements réels
Inactive
Taille
170 CM / 5'6"
Nationalité
France France
Catégorie de poids
Bantamweight
Poids
55.4 KG / 122 LBS
médias sociaux
Surnom
Huch Huch
Âge

Combattant Statistiques

Glory Record 2-2-0 (0 KO) Wins-Losses-Draws (KOs)
Temps de combat moyen 10:30 Fight Duration
Rapport de Knockdown 0:0 Knockdowns Landed : Knockdowns Absorbed
SLpM 9.26 Strikes Landed per Minute
SApM 8.79 Strikes Absorbed per Minute
Différentiel frappant 0.47 Difference between SLpM and SApM
Précision frappante 46.98 % Proportion of Strikes Landed

Combattant Médias

Combattant Record

Résultat Adversaire Événement Méthode Regarder
Pertes Anissa Meksen Glory 53: Lille
Co Headline event
2018-05-12
UD
Pertes Tiffany Van Soest Glory 36: Collision
Superfight
2016-12-10
UD
Victoires Isis Verbeek Glory 36: Collision
Superfight
2016-12-10
UD
Victoires Jiwaen Lee Glory 35: Nice
Superfight
2016-11-05
UD

Combattant Bio

Twitter Amel Huch Huch Dehby

Amel
Dehby
2-2-0 (0 KO) France

France Pro champion K1
2 time Pro European WKN champion
4 times Pro WKN World champion
 
France’s Amel Dehby says her route into kickboxing was “very simple - my father was a trainer himself and one day he brought me to the gym and that was it, I was hooked. I found myself and my passion in this sport. It allows me to be myself and be a bit crazy at the same time.”
 
She started training at five years old and has been immensely successful. Between the ages of 9 and 20 she won pretty much every available title in France. 
 
On turning professional she went undefeated, until running into Tiffany van Soest in the final of the GLORY Women’s Super-Bantamweight Grand Prix at GLORY 36 OBERHAUSEN.
 
She says a defining moment for her was in 2010 when she went to Canada to challenge for a title. The first half of the fight went against her and she suffered some hard time; she found herself able to dig deep mentally and come back to win the fight and the title. 
 
“That fight was when I really found myself and found out who I am,” she says.
 
Dehby is also a trainer herself now and says she would like to help more girls get into the sport. She says the sport is “misunderstood as violent, when actually the basis of it is respect, for yourself and your opponent.”