Congratulations to Lok Oumry.
 
May  be he can bring USA Cambodian boxing team to challenge those Khmer 
Boxers  in Cambodia.?
 
=======
 
 
 
Kickboxer Brought  Beloved Sport Stateside 
By Nuch Sarita, VOA Khmer  
Original report from California
05 October 2009
 Ban Oumry and his trainees in their club, Long Beach,  California
A former well-known Cambodian kickboxer  is promoting the Cambodian sport 
in the US in an effort to safeguard its  uniqueness. Oumry Ban, 65, who was 
known along with other Khmer kickboxers in  and out of Cambodia in the 1960s 
and 1970s is now transferring his skills to  martial arts students in Long 
Beach, Calif. 
At the age of 14, Oumry Ban came across a group of fighters training; they  
told him he was “too small” to fight, but he insisted, and they began 
training  him. He trained for three days before he was put in the ring, where 
he 
was  walloped, but the fighters saw in him a tough kid.  
By 16, he’d won his first bout, by knockout. By 20, he’d won his first  
national title. He fought 309 times between 1962 and 1975, winning 278 times,  
200 by knockout. 
“I weighed only 50 kilograms, but I fought the renowned Chea Sarak, who  
weighed 70 kilograms,” Oumry Ban said in a recent interview. “The people 
wanted  to see the fight, because I was small and he was big. The other 
renowned 
 [fighters], such as Chhoeun Chumnit, Chey Kuong, Chey Bun Chhoeur were 
bigger  and heavier than me.” 
Antony McDavid, one of Oumry Ban’s trainees, said Cambodian fighters favor  
the use of elbows, which often makes for exciting and bloody bouts.  
“Oumry trained a lot of people,” McDavid said. “The Khmer kickboxing uses  
elbows and knees. That is real dangerous. The regular kickboxing is safe 
because  the boxers wear a lot of padding, but over here we just go bone to 
bone. So it  is pretty intense. When Master Oumry demonstrates a kick or block 
technique,  students can see the form that made him famous.” 
Ron Smith is Oumry Ban’s assistant instructor at the Long Beach Khmer  
Kickboxing Center. Smith is also a professional promoter with resources and  
contacts nationally and internationally. 
“I find a fight for a fighter, and I go with the fighters to the fight,” 
he  said. “I’m in their corner. I’m there with them all the way, and we come 
back  home and celebrate.” 
Oumry Ban came from a poor background and competed to earn money to feed 
his  family and himself. 
In 1970, he joined the army, where he first started as a soldier. Oumry Ban 
 told VOA that the army realized what a celebrity he was and sent him back 
to  Phnom Penh to continue boxing. In April 1975, the Khmer Rouge took over 
the  country, and he was forced to work in the rice field like the other  
Cambodians. 
Oumry Ban said he could not hide his identity as a champion fighter. He  
recalled bowing to the Khmer Rouge with his palms together.  
“I only fight for money, to feed my family,” he told them. “I am poor.”  
In November 1978, after hearing from a cadre that more vicious Khmer Rouge  
soldiers had arrived at different communes, Oumry Ban made his way with 11  
people into the mountain range of Phnom Kravanh, where he survived by 
stealing  rice from the stems at night. 
In May 1979, Oumry Ban met by accident a Vietnamese soldier who told him 
that  Vietnam had occupied the country, and he could go home. When he came 
back to  Phnom Penh, he was distraught to learn of the deaths of two brothers, 
a sister  and his mother. 
Oumry Ban and his family made to the US, via the Philippines, in 1981. His  
first stop was Chicago, then Long Beach in 1986. He met Soth Poline, who 
knew  him as the great Oumry Ban, and spent $20,000 to create the Long Beach  
Kickboxing Center in 1987.

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