Rico Verhoeven
Rico Verhoeven is the most dominant heavyweight kickboxer of his generation. 13 GLORY title defenses, world number-one ranking since 2014. He just stepped into a boxing ring to challenge for the WBC heavyweight title in front of the Giza pyramids and lost on split decision. Brave attempt. Predictable result. Worth talking about why.
The kickboxing career
Pro since 2004. Crossed every major organization — GLORY, K-1, It's Showtime, SUPERKOMBAT. Held the GLORY heavyweight belt from 2013 to 2016 and defended it a record 13 times. The longest-reigning champion in the sport's modern era and arguably the best heavyweight kickboxer Holland has produced since Ernesto Hoost.
Verhoeven's style is the technical kickboxer's style — long range, jab and teep, body kicks to set up the head, never out of position. He doesn't have the raw power of Badr Hari but he doesn't beat himself either. He's never been finished as a professional. Read that twice. Heavyweight kickboxing produces a lot of knockout reels. Rico is not in them.
If you want to actually watch the work, the GLORY back catalogue is on YouTube and worth several hours. For training at home, Hayabusa T3 16oz gloves are the standard. A 100lb heavy bag with stand for the basement, Fairtex shin guards if you ever spar.
The boxing crossover
The Egypt fight was ambitious. WBC heavyweight title shot, big stage, big money. The result was less surprising than people are making it. Boxing and kickboxing are different sports that share a ring. Kickers who cross over almost always struggle for the same reasons: hand range is calibrated for kicking, head movement is built around defending kicks, and the rhythm of a 12-round boxing match is alien to anyone trained on 5 three-minute rounds with kicks in the mix.
Verhoeven actually did better than most predicted — split decision in a sport that traditionally punishes crossover athletes. The judging was reasonable. He didn't get robbed and he didn't win. He fought to the cards.
For anyone tempted to do the reverse — boxer crossing into kickboxing — the lesson is identical. Different sport, different game, two years to adapt, not two months.
What's next
Verhoeven says he'll continue in both. He won't, not seriously. The body is 35, the calendar can't carry two sports. Expect him to do one more kickboxing title defense and then either retire or coast on the legacy.
The GLORY heavyweight division has a Tyrone Spong / Jamal Ben Saddik generation coming up that's been waiting for the belt to be vacated for years. The next title picture is going to look different.
For coaches and fighters using his fundamentals, the resource to read is the classic kickboxing technique manuals. For modern hybrid training, John Danaher's modern combat books bridge the disciplines.
The honest take on the experiment
It wasn't a mistake. Crossover fights pay better than any kickboxing title defense ever will, and Verhoeven is at the age where you start banking the money. The Egypt purse alone is worth two years of GLORY purses combined. He didn't win the belt, but he didn't get hurt and he got paid.
The bigger question is whether the legacy gets diluted by what happens next. If he keeps taking boxing fights and keeps losing, the kickboxing peak gets harder to remember. If he stops here — one swing, one near-miss, back to the day job — the experiment becomes a footnote rather than a downfall.
Watch the man's old GLORY fights. They're the actual record. The Egypt fight is the asterisk.
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