Cade Albracht Captures ISKA Muay Thai Super Welterweight National Title in Newark, Delaware
NEWARK, DELAWARE — Under the bright lights and relentless pressure of national-level competition, Cade Albracht fought his way through four grueling bouts in two days to capture the ISKA Muay Thai Super Welterweight Title at the International Sport Kickboxing Association Eastern Nationals on May 9th and 10th.
The road to the championship was anything but easy.
Competing against some of the toughest strikers in the region, Albracht entered the tournament with a simple mindset — fight as much as possible, gain experience, and test himself against the best available competition. By the end of the weekend, he walked away not only with valuable rounds and hard-earned lessons, but with a national title wrapped around his waist.
Albracht fought twice on Saturday and twice again on Sunday in a demanding tournament format that tested conditioning, composure, and durability as much as skill. Each fight brought a different challenge. Different styles. Different tempos. Different levels of pressure.
But through every round, Albracht stayed composed.
He pushed forward with sharp Muay Thai fundamentals, controlled aggression, and the kind of grit that only shows itself when fatigue sets in and the stakes rise. By Sunday evening, after four battles in less than 48 hours, Albracht stood victorious as the new ISKA Muay Thai Super Welterweight Champion.
The final bout ended in dramatic fashion, with Albracht securing a knockout victory to close the tournament and cement his championship run.
The achievement marks another major step forward for the young fighter, who continues building a reputation for seeking out difficult fights and embracing the grind of competition rather than avoiding it.
Tournament weekends like this are not won by talent alone. They are won through months of preparation, discipline, roadwork, sparring, sacrifice, and the willingness to keep walking forward when the body is exhausted.
In Newark, Delaware, Cade Albracht did exactly that.
And after four fights in two days, he left with a national title.
