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Oleg Pryimachov

Ukrainian kickboxer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Oleg Mykolayovych Pryimachov (Ukrainian: Олег Миколайович Приймачов; born November 11, 1989) is a Ukrainian Muay Thai and kickboxing fighter. In amateur Muay Thai, he is a five time IFMA world championship gold medalist and a two times World Games gold medalist. As a professional in kickboxing, he competes for Glory.

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Biography

Pryimachov was born and raised in Lubny where he started sports with football. After serving a term in the army, he graduated from college and started to work at his local tax office. He started training in Muay Thai at the age of 21 and competed both as an amateur and as a professional in parallel of his day job for multiple years.[1]

From the first day of the full-scale invasion of Russia into Ukraine, Pryimachov joined the ranks of the Poltava Teroborona and started to conduct free training of soldiers for the Legion of volunteer battalion.[2][3]

He later joined the special unit "Artan" of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine.[4] For his engagement he received the Order of Merit of the first degree.[5]

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Kickboxing career

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Early career

Pryimachov faced Alexander Volobuyev on February 24, 2021, at W5 Fighter Moscow X. He lost the fight by split decision.[6]

On November 8, 2012, Pryimachov faced Mihail Koldorkin at W5 FIGHTER. He won the fight second-round knockout.[7]

On November 16, 2013, Pryimachov faced Kirill Ivanov at W5 Grand Prix Orel XXII. The fight was declared a draw.[8]

On November 29, 2014, Pryimachov defeated Ivan Bartek by decision at the W5 FIGHTER "CROSSROAD OF TIMES" event.[9]

On June 27, 2015, Pryimachov took part in the KICK & WIN Summer Grand Prix 2015. In the semifinals he defeated Andrey Osadchy by decision. In the finals he defeated Andrey Embolayev, also by decision.[10]

On September 4, 2015, Prymachov defeated Vladimir Oleynik by decision at the multi discipline event Battle of Champions 8.[11]

Chinese circuit

On June 25, 2016, Pryimachov faced Sergej Maslobojev at Faith Fight Fighting Championship. He lost the fight by unanimous decision.[12]

On October 28, 2016, Pryimachov faced Man Jiangang at Wu Fight in Foshan, China. He won the bout by knockout.[13]

Pryimachov faced Hao Guanghua at Wu Lin Feng World Championship 2017 on January 14, 2017. He won the fight by first-round knockout.[14]

Pryimachov was scheduled to face Julius Mocka at EM Legend 18 on April 28, 2017. Mocka was replaced by Mongolian fighter Ankhaa. Pryimachov won the fight by first-round knockout. Pryimachov was scheduled to face Fabio Kwasi at EM Legend 19 on May 27, 2017.[15] He won the fight by doctor stoppage in the second round.

On January 20, 2018, Pryimachov faced Carlos Ulberg at EM Legend. He won the fight by unanimous decision.[16] Pryimachov and Ulberg rematched on April 21, 2018, at EM Legend 30. Pryimachov lost the bout by unanimous decision after he received an 8 count.[17]

On June 27, 2019, Pryimachov defeated Aleksandar Danilovic by first-round knockout at the Megdan 5 event.[18]

Glory

Ath the end of 2019 Pryimachov signed a two-year contract with the Glory promotion.[19] His debut was postponed multiple times, first due to the COVID-19 pandemic and later due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[20]

Pryimachov signed a new contract with Glory in 2024 and was scheduled to debut against Abderrahman Barkouch at Glory Collision 7 on December 7, 2024.[21] He won the fight by unanimous decision.[22]

Pryimachov takes part in the Glory 99 “Heavyweight Last Man Standing Tournament” Opening Round event where 32 heavyweight fighters compete on April 5, 2025 in Rotterdam, Netherlands.[23] He faced Sofian Laidouni and lost by first round technical knockout.[24]

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Championships and accomplishments

Amateur

Fight record

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References

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