Senegal’s new world kickboxing champion Mouhamed Tafsir Ba smashed an uppercut into the punching bag in a dilapidated room in a military barracks. Bare-chested, muscles glistening with sweat, he works on the bag, delivering punches at a dizzying speed.
This is the punishing regime that helped Ba win the under-90kg category at the World Association of Kickboxing Organizations World Cup in Uzbekistan last month, giving Senegal the first world title in its history in a sport that is attracting a growing number of fans in the west African country.
In the women’s competition, his compatriot Ndeye Khady Diallo won a second consecutive silver in the lightweight under-60kg class.
Photo: AFP
The results show the rapid growth of a discipline that only appeared in Senegal about 30 years ago.
Kickboxing is developing fast in the country, driven by a handful of tireless enthusiasts, despite a lack of resources. Back at the barracks, coach Phamora Toure is training the national team, demonstrating moves and advising fighters.
The former African champion, who discovered the sport by watching the films of Belgian action star Jean-Claude Van Damme, is one of the pioneers who launched kickboxing in Senegal in the late 1990s.
“Between 2022 and now, we have had a rise in membership of more than 300 percent,” said Yakhya Diop, the president of the Senegalese Kickboxing Federation, who estimates the number of fighters at about 6,000 in around 50 clubs.
Toure came across future world champion Ba while attending a classic boxing competition.
“I saw his qualities and his potential if he started to work on his kick,” he said.
In less than three years, the Senegalese-Guinean, from a working-class district of Dakar, has reached the top.
“I wanted to emigrate, to travel to a country like France or the United States because I thought that if I wasn’t there, I could never succeed,” 23-year-old Ba said.
“Since I discovered combat sports, I decided to stay here,” he said.
“By being Senegalese, by training here, you can become a legend, you can become a world champion,” he said.
Before discovering kickboxing, Ba tried his hand at karate, roller skating, circus acts, gymnastics, kung fu and boxing. Now he only dreams of becoming an MMA champion, inspired by the rise of stars such as Francis Ngannou, a Cameroonian, Nigerian-New Zealander Israel Adesanya and South Africa’s Dricus du Plessis.
The Senegalese have a long tradition of combat sports — wrestling remains one of the most popular sports in the country.
However, being a high-level athlete in Senegal has its share of difficulties. One of the fighters’ biggest fears is injury because treatment is expensive, rarely reimbursed and most are uninsured.
As a result, “it’s hard to find sparring partners because they refuse to accept certain hits to avoid getting hurt,” Ba said.
The fighters also suffer from a lack of funding to travel to competitions and even to get to training sessions.
“The cash comes from our pockets,” Diop said.
In an attempt to attract new recruits to kickboxing, often from disadvantaged areas, the federation has slashed the price of the license required to take part from 10,000 CFA francs to 3,000 CFA francs (US$16.47 to US$4.94).
While the number of registered fighters has increased, the federation has to survive on an annual budget of less than 2,000 euros (US$2,161), Diop said.
He is hoping the positive results at the world championships will help the sport develop “a high performance center,” attract sponsors, increase revenues and train a new generation of elite kickboxers.
Amadou Keita, who at 12 years old is one of the bright new hopes, trains alongside his idols.
“When we see them training, never giving up, it’s inspiring. I want to become world champion like them,” he said.
Brazil has four teams, more than any other country, in the expanded Club World Cup that kicked off yesterday in the US, but for SE Palmeiras, the competition holds a special meaning: winning it would provide some redemption. Under coach Abel Ferreira since 2020, Palmeiras lifted two Copa Libertadores titles, plus Brazilian league, cup and state championships. Even before Ferreira, it boasted another South American crown and 11 league titles. The only major trophy missing is a world champions’ title. Other Brazilian clubs like Fluminense FC and Botafogo FR, also in the tournament, have never won it either, but the problem for Palmeiras
Paris Saint-Germain’s Lee Kang-in has pleaded with South Korea fans to get behind the team at the 2026 FIFA World Cup after more boos were aimed at coach Hong Myung-bo despite leading them to qualification. South Korea reached next year’s finals in North America without losing a game, but that does not tell the whole story. The country’s soccer association has been in the firing line, having scrambled about to find a successor after sacking the unpopular Jurgen Klinsmann in February last year. They eventually settled on Hong, the decorated former skipper who had an unsuccessful stint as coach in 2013-2014, during which
Lionel Messi drew vast crowds and showed flashes of his brilliance when his Inter Miami side were held to a goalless draw by African giants Al-Ahly as the revamped FIFA Club World Cup got off to a festive start on Saturday. Fans showed up en masse for the Group A clash at the Hard Rock Stadium, home to the NFL’s Miami Dolphins, but Messi could not fully deliver, his best chance coming through a last-second attempt that was deflected onto the crossbar. Inter Miami next face FC Porto on Thursday in Atlanta, while Al-Ahly, who benefited from raucous, massive support, are to
Ferrari’s F1 fortunes might be flagging, but the Italian team start this weekend’s 24 Hours of Le Mans as favorites, targeting a third consecutive triumph in motorsport’s fabled endurance classic. Roger Federer is acting as celebrity starter with the tennis icon getting the 93rd edition of the jewel in four-wheeled endurance racing’s crown under way tomorrow. Twenty-four hours later, through daylight, darkness and dawn, the 21 elite hypercars are to battle it out over 300 laps (more than 4,000km) in front of a sold-out 320,000 crowd burning the midnight oil with copious quantities of coffee and beer. Ferrari made a triumphant return after