Kincl’s Career Crossroads: A Tragicomic Match

Patrik Kincl.Photo: MMA octagon

The week passed and Patrik Kincl is still thinking. After a lost title battle in Eden with Machmud Muradov, he considered to end his career, already had hints in a cage, but pulled the handbrake, took time. On Sunday he released his view of YouTube. There are two roads, betting on the last run, trying to climb the top, if not, would go into training and building the gym in Hradec Králové. How will he decide? So far he knows one. He doesn’t know.

“So far I need to compare everything in my head, with a team, with people I have near me. I have nothing yet to decide, I will describe your current situation,” Kincl began with his testimony, which has not brought the solutions, but indicated where the former Oktagon champion could run.

“I’m quite broken, you may imagine what my leg is doing. I don’t go completely and dancing,” admitted Kincl, who caught a lot of low kicks on his front leg, which then affected his movement in the duel.

The leg will be okay in a few days, the main thing is now the head, which will decide what to do next. “Before I break down the tragicomic match, I am at the crossroads. I wanted to end after the match. I took off my tapes, but in the end I thought I was going to discuss it with the team first,” the Hradec wrestler admitted the idea of ​​closing a professional career.

He still has this thought march in his head, but he is not alone. “If I was able to give it more, this preparation was good, hard, stood a sea of ​​money. People helped me with a camp in Thailand, I don’t know how to look into their eyes. I wasn’t able to sell it. It was overclocking 20 to 30 percent,” Kincl picked.

Handbrake, power in a cage with a hand brake, this view from the outside was inflected immediately after the match. Kincl confirmed him after a few days.

“Now I am at the crossroads, I was wondering whether to help the sport from the perspective of the coaching and managerial parts, to create the ideal conditions for the emerging generation in Hradec. Now the conditions are bad,” Kincl said the second direction he has in his head.

“As far as the fighter career is concerned, I feel on top, but if I can’t sell it, it doesn’t matter how one feels. What is concerned about the coaching career, it is something I believe would fulfill me and certainly will be.” The duration time lasts.

You can listen to the whole video here.

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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