169-38-3 (27 KO)
 'The Professor' Petch
Current Rank
Featherweight Champion
Height
171 CM / 5'7"
Nationality
Thailand Thailand
Weightclass
Featherweight
Weight
64 KG / 141 LBS
Social Media
Nickname
'The Professor'
Age
27

Fighter Stats

Glory Record 13-1-0 (2 KO) Wins-Losses-Draws (KOs)
Average Fight Time 11:51 Fight Duration
Knockdown Ratio 2:0 Knockdowns Landed : Knockdowns Absorbed
SLpM 8.74 Strikes Landed per Minute
SApM 6.29 Strikes Absorbed per Minute
Striking Differential 2.45 Difference between SLpM and SApM
Striking Accuracy 54.7 % Proportion of Strikes Landed

Fighter Media

Fighter Record

Result Opponent Event Method Watch
Win Kosei Yamada GLORY RIVALS 4
Featured fight
2022-12-25
UD
Win Abraham Vidales Glory Collision 4
Championship Bout
2022-10-08
UD
Win Serhii Adamchuk Glory 75: Utrecht
Championship Bout
2020-02-29
UD
NO CONTEST Kevin VanNostrand Glory 72: Chicago
Championship Bout
2019-11-23
MD
Win Anvar Boynazarov Glory 67: Orlando
Championship Bout
2019-07-05
UD
Win Serhii Adamchuk Glory 63: Houston
Championship Bout
2019-02-01
UD
Win Robin van Roosmalen Glory 59: Amsterdam
Co Headline event
2018-09-29
UD
Win Kevin VanNostrand Glory 55: New York
Co Headline event
2018-07-20
UD
Win Abdellah Ezbiri Glory 53: Lille
Featured fight
2018-05-12
KO
1:40 of Round 2
Win Zakaria Zouggary Glory 49: Redemption
Featured fight
2017-12-09
KO
2:10 of Round 3
Win Lei Xie Glory 46: Guangzhou
Superfight
2017-10-14
UD
Loss Robin van Roosmalen Glory 41: Holland
Superfight
2017-05-20
MD
Win Aleksei Ulianov Glory 39: Brussels
Tournament
2017-03-25
UD
Win Serhii Adamchuk Glory 39: Brussels
Final
2017-03-25
UD
Win Stanislav Renita Glory 35: Nice
Superfight
2016-11-05
UD

Fighter Bio

Twitter  'The Professor' Petch


Petch
13-1-0 (2 KO) Thailand

Achievements:

GLORY 53 - Performance of the Night
GLORY 39 - Featherweight Contender Tournament Champion
GLORY 41 - Fighter of the Night
WMC Lightweight World Champion (135lbs)
Thailand (PAT) Super Featherweight Champion (130lbs)
Thailand (PAT) Bantamweight Champion (118lbs)

Petchpanomrung comes from a small village called Kiat, in the rural and impoverished province of Buriram. It’s a poor area; life is hard. Families frequently apprentice their young boys to a Muay Thai camp and the boy’s earnings will then supplement the family income.

That was the route which brought Petchpanomrung into the sport. Born as Aiamsiri Pansang, his family apprenticed him to the ‘Kiatmookao’ camp when he was seven years old; he had his first fight a couple of years later. 

In the Muay Thai tradition, fighters do not compete under their birth names but are instead assigned a ring name. The first part of the name is chosen for the fighter by his team; the latter half is the name of the team itself.

In the Buriram province is an ancient temple - over a thousand years old - called Hin Panom Rung (The Stone Castle of Panom Rung). It sits on the rim of an extinct volcano and is dedicated to Shiva, king of the Hindu gods (the temple was erected during the Khmer Empire).

Petch’ is a word for diamond. And so the ring name translates as ‘The Diamond of Panom Rung’. For the second half of his fight name, Petchpanomrung uses the name of his team, as is the custom. 

Kiat’ is the name of the village, ‘Moo’ means ‘street’ and ‘Kao’ is the number nine (hence you will also often see the gym referred to as Kiatmoo9). 

It’s a simple name - Kiat Street 9 - but there’s nothing mundane about the gym. For over two decades it has produced champion after champion, taking local boys and turning them into world-beaters.

Still, Petchpanomrung has achieved levels of success unprecedented even by such an accomplished team. He fought his way into the top ten of both the Lumpini Stadium and Rajadamnern Stadium rankings (Thailand’s top two arenas) before his team had him pivot to fighting under kickboxing rules.

On arriving in GLORY, he made an impression immediately. Victory in a Contender Tournament led to a challenge against then-champion Robin van Roosmalen, with Petchpanomrung losing by way of a controversial decision.

Several more wins followed, including victories over top contenders such as Zakaria Zougarry and Abdellah Ezbiri, before Petchpanomrung got a rematch with Van Roosmalen at GLORY 59. 

This time there were no gray areas - Petchpanomrung dominated all five rounds of the fight to take the world featherweight championship from Van Roosmalen and become the second Thai champion in GLORY history.