Muay Thai beginnings and early career (2002–2006) Giorgio Petrosyan started his career as a -54 kg/119 lb
bantamweight at the age of sixteen and defeated a local Italian fighter in his February 2002 debut, breaking his toes while doing so. Petrosyan then made the journey to
Thailand to train, visiting the WMC Samui Gym in
Ko Samui and Tor. Silachai in
Nakhon Ratchasima. He stopped Thai fighter Petch with a
low kick in round three at Phetch Buncha Samui Stadium in Ko Samui in February 2006 before returning to Italy to compete in the
Italian Extreme IV four-man tournament in
Modena on April 1, 2006, which he ran through, finishing both opponents in the first round. He floored Richard Barnhill with a left
hook before putting him away with a low kick in the semi-finals and gave an almost identical performance in the final when he dispatched Roel Rink with a leg kick shortly after knocking him down with a right hook. This also marked the third consecutive fight in which Petrosyan had stopped opponents with low kicks. He became a
world champion for the first time on June 10, 2006, by knocking out Benito Caupain with a first round high kick to win the vacant Kombat League World -66.7 kg/147 lb Muay Thai Championship in Nova Gorica. He would go on to successfully defend this title three times before the end of the year; TKOing Johnny Tancray in round four in
Sardinia, Italy on August 5, KOing Frankie Hudders in round two in
Pordenone, Italy on September 5 and winning a
unanimous decision over Imro Main in
Enschede,
Netherlands on November 19. Moving up to
middleweight, Petrosyan marked his arrival in the weight class that he would go on to dominate by winning the eight-man 72 kg/158 lb tournament at
Janus Fight Night 2006 in
Padua, Italy, on December 2, 2006. He took a unanimous decision win against Cédric Muller in the quarter-finals and TKO'd Frane Radnić in the semis, knocking him down twice in round one with a left
cross to the
solar plexus, before beating
Marco Piqué via another unanimous decision in the final.
First defeat and subsequent kickboxing breakthrough (2007–2008) Petrosyan fought at the historic
Lumpinee Stadium in
Bangkok, Thailand for the first time on January 23, 2007, where he was also handed the first loss of his career, dropping a decision to Nonthanan Por. Pramuk. In an interview, Petrosyan said the promoters required him to drink an extra two litres of water after he weighed in at 70 kg, two kilograms below the agreed upon weight of 72 kg. The drink given to Petrosyan caused him to have stomach cramps and made it very difficult for him to fight, though he decided to go through with it anyway. After the bout, Nonthanan retired, quickly ending the possibility of a rematch. He was able to bounce back from this loss by recording back-to-back wins, a third-round TKO of Sadio Cissoko on March 17, 2007, and a unanimous decision over Arslan Magomedov on April 14, 2007, at
K-1 Italy Oktagon 2007, both fights taking place in
Milan, Italy. From there, he was offered the biggest fight of his career at that point when he replaced
John Wayne Parr, who withdrew after injuring his ribs training with
Nathan Corbett, to challenge
Buakaw Por. Pramuk for his WMC World Junior Middleweight (-69.8 kg/154 lb) Championship at
K-1 Fighting Network Scandinavian Qualification 2007 in
Stockholm,
Sweden on May 19, 2007. After five rounds, the fight was ruled a
split draw and, consequently, Buakaw retained his title. Petrosyan then went on to defeat
Abdallah Mabel twice within two months in his next couple of fights, decisioning him in Padua on May 26, 2007, and then TKOing him in Trieste on July 27, 2007. After a first-round knockout of Behrouz Rastagar in
Arnhem, Netherlands on October 13, 2007, he entered the
Janus Fight Night 2007 -72 kg/158 lb tournament (the event he had won a year previously) on November 24, 2007. In the quarter-finals, he beat
José Reis by unanimous decision. Then, in the semis, he met Abdallah Mabel for the third time in six months and bested the Frenchman once again, winning another unanimous decision. In the final, Petrosyan defeated another familiar opponent by unanimous decision, Marco Piqué, who he had also faced in the final the previous year. In early 2008, Petrosyan made the transition to
Oriental rules kickboxing when he signed with the
It's Showtime organization, making his promotional debut with a unanimous decision victory over
Luís Reis at ''
Balans: It's Showtime 75MAX Trophy Final 2008'' in
's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands on March 15, 2008. April 2008 was another pivotal month in Petrosyan's career as he made his first foray onto the
K-1 circuit, TKOing Mikel Colaj in five at
K-1 Italy Oktagon 2008 in Milan on the twelfth and forcing two second round
standing eight counts en route to taking a unanimous decision over
Chris Ngimbi at the
K-1 World Grand Prix 2008 in Amsterdam supercard at the
Amsterdam ArenA on the twenty sixth. Following a brief return to the Muay Thai scene with wins over Çağrı Ermiş in
Tilburg, Netherlands, on May 24, 2008, and Rafik Bakkouri in
Abano Terme, Italy, on June 28, 2008, Petrosyan did not fight again until November when he took to the ring twice within three weeks. On November 8, he beat
Naruepol Fairtex by unanimous decision at
Janus Fight Night: The Legend. Then, on November 29, he took another decision over
Warren Stevelmans at ''
It's Showtime 2008 Eindhoven''.
Consecutive K-1 World MAX Tournament Championships (2009–2010) Petrosyan took the World Kickboxing Network (WKN) Intercontinental Welterweight (-69.9 kg/154 lb) Oriental Championship on January 31, 2009, when he stopped David Javakhia with a
liver kick inside the opening stanza in
Turin, Italy. On March 14, 2009, at ''
Oktagon presents: It's Showtime 2009'' in Milan, he scored his first win over a truly elite fighter, taking a points victory against
Andy Souwer. Using just about everything in his arsenal to keep Andy Souwer off-balance and out of his range, Petrosyan was seemingly in control of the exchanges. However, the fight got dramatic when the judges unexpectedly ruled it a draw after three rounds, sending the fight into an extension round to decide the winner. Things got even more heated when Souwer was dropped by a punch in the extension round and referee Joop Ubeda declined to give him a count. In the end, the judges saw things the way of Petrosyan and gave him the unanimous decision, in what was considered a major upset. Sporting an impressive 53-1-2 record and now holding a victory over a two-time K-1 MAX champion in Souwer, Petrosyan was invited to compete in the annual K-1 World MAX Tournament for the first time. At the tournament's opening round at the
K-1 World MAX 2009 World Championship Tournament Final 16 in
Fukuoka,
Japan on April 21, 2009, he controlled
Dzhabar Askerov for two rounds before putting him away with a
knee to the midsection in three. Following a unanimous decision win against
Faldir Chahbari at ''
It's Showtime 2009 Amsterdam'' on May 16, 2009, Petrosyan faced another one-time K-1 MAX champion in the form of
Albert Kraus in the tournament's quarter-final stage at the
K-1 World MAX 2009 World Championship Tournament Final 8 in
Tokyo, Japan on July 13, 2009. Petrosyan defeated him soundly, winning a unanimous decision and qualifying for the round of four three months later. On October 26, 2009, at the
K-1 World MAX 2009 World Championship Tournament Final in
Yokohama, Japan, he defeated
Yuya Yamamoto in the semi-finals but suffered a broken hand in the process. In round one, he dropped Yamamoto with a left hook, but the Japanese fighter was able to return to his feet following the referee's count. He was still visibly hurt, however, and Petrosyan swarmed to knock him out with a right hook seconds later. Advancing to the final despite his hand injury, he met Andy Souwer for the second time. Petrosyan dominated all three rounds, and dropped Souwer with a knee to the body in the second, en route to a unanimous decision victory, clinching the coveted K-1 World MAX Tournament Championship. As the reigning K-1 MAX champion, Petrosyan was scheduled to face
Masato in the Japanese legend's retirement match at
Dynamite!! 2009 in
Saitama, Japan on December 31, 2009 but his broken hand kept him out of the fight and he was replaced by Andy Souwer. He instead returned to the ring on January 30, 2010, defending his WKN intercontinental title against Mohamed Diaby in Turin. Although giving up a sizable reach advantage to the lanky Diaby, Petrosyan was able to get inside and constantly connect. Midway through round one, he connected with a clean punch, dropping the Frenchman. In round two, he continued the pressure, peppering Diaby with shots and earning a second knockdown when Diaby simply could not stand any longer. Diaby gamely made it to his feet, but his corner had seen enough and
threw in the towel. He earned a unanimous decision win against
Kem Sitsongpeenong in a competitive match, the Thai fighter's first under kickboxing the rule set, at ''
Oktagon presents: It's Showtime 2010 in Milan on March 13, 2010 but reinjured his hand in doing so and thus two more proposed matchups, a March 27 meeting with Yoshihiro Sato at the K-1 World MAX 2010 –70 kg Japan Tournament in Saitama and a fight with Nieky Holzken at It's Showtime 2010 Amsterdam'' on May 29, were shelved. After healing up from his injuries, Petrosyan made his comeback to K-1 and entered into the K-1 World MAX 2010 Tournament, winning a unanimous decision against
Vitaly Gurkov in the round of sixteen at the
K-1 World MAX 2010 in Seoul World Championship Tournament Final 16 in
Seoul,
South Korea on October 3, 2010. After a clear 10-9 opening round, the reigning champion began really picking the tall Belarusian apart with
counterpunches, catching kicks and slipping punches en route to another dominant second frame. By the third round, Gurkov's nose was bloodied and busted, and the Belarusian could offer up no reply to "The Doctor's" surgical strikes. A fighter with an extensive Muay Thai background, Gurkov also spent much of the fight clinched up and was eventually yellow carded for such action. At the
K-1 World MAX 2010 World Championship Tournament Final in Tokyo on November 8, 2010, he again met with Albert Kraus in the quarter-finals and the match was identical to the pair's first meeting a year earlier as the Dutchman found himself being countered for the majority of the fight and lost a wide unanimous decision. Against
Mike Zambidis in the semis, while the short Greek aggressively pursued him around the ring with leaping hooks and haymakers, Petrosyan evaded and further countered him with punches and step knees en route to another UD victory. In the final, he faced off against home town fighter Yoshihiro Sato. Although Sato's height and reach advantage caused him some problems, Petrosyan was still able to dominate the match and took the unanimous decision victory to be crowned the K-1 World MAX champion for the second year in-a-row and become the only fighter ever to defend a K-1 MAX title. Just as in the 2009 K-1 MAX Tournament, Petrosyan broke his hand for the third time during the 2010 edition. This injury caused him to withdraw from a planned fight with
Pajonsuk SuperPro Samui at ''
Yiannis Evgenikos presents: It's Showtime Athens'' in
Athens,
Greece on December 11, 2010, in which he was replaced by Andy Souwer.
Further hand injuries and promotional problems (2011–2012) Giorgio Petrosyan was initially due to take on
Yohan Lidon at
Thai Boxe Mania 2011 in Turin on January 29, 2011, but the Frenchman withdrew in advance after conceding that he would be unable to make the -70 kg/154 lb weight limit.
Sudsakorn Sor Klinmee stepped in as his replacement and ran the Petrosyan relatively close in match that showed why both men are where they are in the sport but Petrosyan nonetheless had the upper hand throughout the fight and was able to pull off the unanimous decision victory. He then defeated
Cosmo Alexandre by UD at the
Fight Code: Dragon Series 2011 - Round 2 in Milan on March 12, 2013. Although a fourth match with Abdallah Mabel was rumoured for the May 14, 2011 ''
It's Showtime 2011 Lyon'' event in
Lyon,
France, Petrosyan eventually fought
Chahid Oulad El Hadj and, after dominating the first two rounds, accidentally kicked El Hadj in the groin in round three. El Hadj could not continue and the bout was ruled a
no contest. On July 18, 2011, in Tokyo at ''
REBELS 8 & It's Showtime Japan Countdown-1'', Petrosyan dominated
Hinata to a unanimous points victory, controlling the fight by slipping almost all of Hinata's punches, checking low kicks and catching body kicks to disrupt his opponent's rhythm. The Japanese fighter's lack of head movement also made him an easy target for Petrosyan's superior boxing. However, he broke his hand a fourth time in the match. With K-1 experiencing extreme financial difficulties, the K-1 World MAX was not organized in 2011 and It's Showtime instead held its own high-level middleweight tournament, ''
It's Showtime "Fast & Furious 70MAX"'', in
Brussels,
Belgium on September 25, 2011. Petrosyan was set to take part but his broken hand forced him to withdraw and he was replaced by
Robin van Roosmalen who went on to win the competition. After having surgery on his hand, he took to the ring again in a fight with an unheralded Zeben Díaz at ''
Street Culture, Fight Club Group & Canary Kickboxing Federation presents: It's Showtime 53'' in
Tenerife,
Spain on November 12, 2011. The Spanish judges scored the bout a
split decision in favour of Petrosyan in a fight more straightforward than the scorecards may suggest. In January 2012, Petrosyan terminated his contract with It's Showtime, which acted as his management team as well as his promoter, due to them not being able to secure the money he was owed by K-1 for winning the 2010 K-1 World MAX tournament. He stated "
I think I have shown enough patience. I have been repeatedly guaranteed the compensation due. Twelve months have passed without anything, following a number of promises to pay. I remain willing to fight for anyone interested in giving me his gala tournaments, with no limits or proprietary." Now a free agent, he returned to Italy to fight independently and in his first outing since leaving It's Showtime defeated
Abraham Roqueñi via unanimous decision at
Yokkao Extreme 2012 in Milan on January 21, 2012. Then, in a much anticipated match-up with
Artur Kyshenko at
Oktagon 2012 in Milan on March 24, 2012, Petrosyan once again displayed his dominance, outworking the Ukrainian every step of the way to take the win on all three judges scorecards.
Glory (2012–2015) Petrosyan signed with the newly founded
Glory organization a week after the Kyshenko fight and was immediately entered into the forthcoming Glory 2012 Lightweight (-70 kg/154 lb) Slam tournament. At the Lightweight Slam's opening round at
Glory 1: Stockholm on May 26, 2012, Petrosyan was drawn against Fabio Pinca in a rematch eight years in the making. Petrosyan went to work from the beginning, attacking his opponent. Pinca was able to withstand the onslaught, however, and even pressed the issue on becoming more offensive minded in the fight. As the match went on, Petrosyan used this as an advantage and methodically countered with hooks and liver kicks. Petrosyan's elusiveness was also on display as he ducked and weaved out of the way of Pinca's punches and answered with a counter strike every time before winning a unanimous decision to advance to the round of eight. Moving on to
Glory 3: Rome on November 3, 2012, in
Rome, Italy, Petrosyan went up against
Ky Hollenbeck in the quarter-finals, winning by TKO when Hollenbeck suffered a torn
anterior cruciate ligament in the second round after dropping the American with a perfectly timed left hook in the first. He then beat
Davit Kiria by unanimous decision in the semis and, in the final, faced
Robin van Roosmalen in a highly anticipated showdown. Petrosyan was able to nullify the hard-punching Dutchman by using rangy jabs and lead teep kicks to control the distance while landing power combos at will and took the unanimous points victory to win the third major tournament of his career. In a one-off match outside of Glory in Trieste on March 2, 2013, he turned in an uncharacteristically aggressive performance against
Ole Laursen as he dropped Laursen with a knee to the liver before knocking him out with a high kick immediately after, leaving the outmatched Dane unconscious on the canvas for several minutes. This was Petrosyan's his first legitimate stoppage win in three years. Cruising to a UD against Hafid El Boustati at
Glory 7: Milan on April 20, 2013, Petrosyan put on a lesson in footwork, timing, and ring generalship as El Boustati landed maybe two or three shots the entire fight, while simultaneously getting countered, punched, kneed, and body-kicked. Competing in the
Glory 12: New York - Lightweight World Championship Tournament in
New York City, New York,
United States on November 23, 2013, Petrosyan was knocked out for the first time by eventual champion
Andy Ristie in the semi-finals. He was unable to find his rhythm due to the Surinamese fighter's pressure but nonetheless remained in control for the first two rounds of the match. In the third, however, Ristie came out aggressively, landing a right hand by way of a switch-step that had Petrosyan stunned and following up with a left uppercut, putting an end to Petrosyan's forty-two fight, six year undefeated streak. After the fight, Petrosyan revealed that he had broken his hand early in the first round. Petrosyan faced Artem Pashporin for the W5 71 kg world title on February 18, 2017, at W5 Grand Prix Kitek in Russia. He won the fight by unanimous decision. In his second bout for Bellator Kickboxing, Petrosyan faced
Amansio Paraschiv at
Bellator Kickboxing 5 on April 8, 2017. He won the fight by unanimous decision. Petrosyan was scheduled to fight Jonay Risco for the
ISKA Super Welterweight (-70 kg/154 lb) K-1 Rules World Championship at
PetrosyanMania in
Monza, Italy on October 14, 2017. However, Risco withdrew due to injury and Petrosyan instead fought
Chris Ngimbi for the vacant title. Petrosyan won via unanimous decision and became the new ISKA Super Welterweight K-1 World Champion. On July 14, 2018, at
Bellator Kickboxing 10 in Rome, Italy, Petrosyan defeated
Chingiz Allazov by unanimous decision, scoring a knock down in the first round.
ONE Championship (since 2018) In April 2018, Petrosyan signed with
ONE Championship, unveiling their Super Series segment as a figurehead, a venture which would intertwine kickboxing and Muay Thai bouts within their MMA based events. Petrosyan found himself in the co-main event slot for
ONE: Heroes of Honor in Manila, Philippines, squaring off against Lion Fight veteran
Jo Nattawut, a bout the Armenian-Italian won with his technical defensive kickboxing expertise via a unanimous decision. After securing the
Bellator Kickboxing lightweight championship on a one-fight stint in July, Petrosyan returned to the Asian stage in November, for
ONE: Heart Of a Lion, taking on
Lumpinee Stadium Muay Thai champion
Sorgraw Petchyindee Academy. Petrosyan returned in February 2019, competing for a second time in his brother Armen's kickboxing promotion, PetrosyanMania. He successfully defended his
ISKA Super Welterweight (-70 kg/154 lb) K-1 Rules World Championship against Japanese kickboxer Atsushi Tamefusa. Petrosyan was expected to return to ONE later that year, having recently being announced as a participant in the upcoming
ONE Super Series Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix. The event was expected to start around May. In the Grand Prix Quarter-Finals, he faced
Phetmorakot Petchyindee Academy on May 17, 2019, at
ONE Championship: Enter the Dragon. Petrosyan lost by split decision but the result was reversed to a no contest due to illegal clinching and a rematch was scheduled for
ONE Championship: Masters of Destiny. On July 12, 2019, Petrosyan defeated Phetmorakot by unanimous decision to advance to the Grand Prix Semi-Finals, where he was scheduled to face
Jo Nattawut for a second time. On August 16, 2019, Petrosyan defeated Jo Nattawut by KO in the first round at
ONE Championship: Dreams of Gold. In doing so, he advanced to the ONE Super Series Kickboxing Featherweight Grand Prix Final, where he is scheduled to face
Samy Sana at
ONE Championship: Century. On October 13, 2019, Petrosyan defeated Samy Sana by unanimous decision in the Grand Prix Final to become the inaugural ONE Kickboxing Featherweight World Grand Prix Champion, in addition to winning a USD$1 million cash prize. Petrosyan next faced former
Glory and
Kunlun Fight champion
Davit Kiria, who made his ONE debut, at
ONE Championship: Fists Of Fury on February 26, 2021. Petrosyan won the fight by unanimous decision. Petrosyan was next scheduled to face
Superbon Banchamek for the inaugural
ONE Featherweight Kickboxing World Championship at
ONE Championship: First Strike on October 15, 2021. Petrosyan, the heavy favorite, lost via second-round right high kick knockout, suffering his first loss since 2013 and the second-ever knockout loss of his career. Petrosyan was later revealed to have suffered a broken jaw, for which he would undergo surgery to repair. Petrosyan was expected to face Khambakhadov Saifullah for the
ISKA Super Welterweight K-1 Rules World Championship at PetrosyanMania on December 4, 2021. However, the event was postponed due to Petrosyans's injury and is now scheduled to take place on April 30, 2022. Khambakhadov was replaced by Fatih Aydin. Petrosyan won the fight by TKO in the second round. Petrosyan challenged the WAKO Pro K-1 World Super Welterweight (69.1 kg) champion Sergio Sanchez at PetrosyanMania GOLD EDITION on May 18, 2024. He won the fight by unanimous decision. ==Championships and accomplishments==