Thailand's Fight Club
Inside the little-known, action-packed world of Muay Thai boxing
- By Cardiff de Alejo Garcia
- Smithsonian.com, February 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
In 1767 the Burmese captured Ayutthaya and destroyed the written records about Muay Thai. A statue now stands in Ayutthaya that tells the legend of Nai Khanom Tom, a Thai boxer taken prisoner during the Burmese invasion. In 1774, the Burmese king ordered a boxing exhibition to determine whether Burmese boxing was superior to Thai boxing. Nai Khanom Tom defeated ten consecutive Burmese opponents on a single day, March 17, which is now "Muay Thai Day" in Thailand.
During his reign from 1868 to 1925, King Chulalongkorn oversaw Muay Thai's evolution from a military practice to royal entertainment. The king invited boxers from throughout the country to fight in his presence at the Grand Palace in Bangkok. Prayukvong and Junlakan describe how the king awarded the winners honorary titles that matched their boxing styles, such as Pra Chai Choke Shok Channa (Lord Lucky Fight and Win) and Muen Cha-ngad Choeng Shok (Knight of the Clear Fighting Tactic).
By the middle of the 20th century Muay Thai had become a wildly popular commercial sport in Bangkok. Every day there are fights in Lumpini Stadium or Rajadamnern Stadium, as well as smaller stadiums in cities and villages across Thailand. Five days a week, the bouts are televised. If baseball is America's national pastime, Muay Thai could be Thailand's equivalent.
The five boxers at Saktaywan Boxing Gym were initially amused by my presence, grinning and cracking jokes about the white farang, or foreigner, whenever I couldn't keep up—which was all the time.
It became clear to me after only a few days of training at Saktaywan that Muay Thai consumed most of their lives. Thai boxers don't just train in their camp—they live there. At Saktaywan they cook meals together, share one bathroom and sleep side-by-side on the floor of a cramped shack.
The fighters train seven days a week, their schedule beginning at 6 a.m. and ending around 7 p.m. The morning starts with a 45-minute run along a Bangkok highway, weaving through crowds of schoolchildren in yellow uniforms, feeling the breeze of cars that whiz by within a foot. The five-mile run is made more difficult by having to breathe the densely polluted and humid Bangkok air.
The boxers then eat a light breakfast, sometimes not more than water and a little rice, before starting the first of two daily training sessions. They warm up by jumping rope and shadowboxing (sparring without a partner to practice technique and stretch the muscles). Then they punch, kick, knee and elbow the punching bags filled with sand packed so tightly that it feels like hitting a metal pole. Much of this contact is designed to build resistance in the shins, which are used for both kicking an opponent and blocking kicks. (Mine had dents in them the first two weeks of training, until they began to callus.) All the training takes place outdoors in 90-degree heat.
Meanwhile, Ajarn Sit calls boxers into the ring one by one, holding pads that he orders them to strike in various combinations. He is an effective motivator. I had the bad habit of dropping my hands when I got tired, leaving my face exposed. Ajarn Sit noticed. "Hands up!" he would yell, just before smacking me in the face with the pads. It worked.
My first round with Ajaarn Sit lasted about ten minutes, but the pace he demanded made it feel like ten hours. We stopped at one point to take a break—except it wasn't a break. "You push-ups now!" he yelled. The intensity of the training combined with the heat made me dizzy, and when the drill resumed I stumbled onto the mat. Ajarn Sit told me to drink some water as the boxers surrounding the ring laughed. I wanted to throw up.
When not in the ring with Ajaarn Sit, the boxers often spar with each other, either at a brisk pace with protective shin guards and headgear, where the aim is to improve timing and coordination, or at a slower tempo without the protection, working instead on technique. They practice "clinching," a kind of stand-up wrestling allowed in Muay Thai. The goal of clinching is to position your arms inside of your opponent's and grab control of the back of his head, providing leverage to knee him in the chest or, in some cases, the face.
Even during training sessions, the boxers' faces never betrayed any emotion or exhaustion. Years of these repetitive exercises had not only perfected their technique but seemingly also hardened each boxer's visage. There was no hesitation or wasted movements—only mechanical, lightning-fast blows and blocks.
After the morning session the boxers eat a big lunch and relax until the later afternoon, when they take a two-mile jog and start again. I only rarely did both sessions in a day, but even in my "limited" training of three to six hours a day, I shed 15 pounds in the first two months.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (5)
muay thai in thai land aint what it used to be !
the nation of the birth of MUAY THAI has allowed the disintegration of the sport .
yes thailand has lost its grip on the authenticity of muay thai .
they have MMA SCHOOLS teaching muay thai in thailand now !
and there owned and operated by non thai`s at that !
look at the fights from 15 years past and observe the style and intensity , there is nothing like this today .
what has become of our muay thai ?
will muay thai ever come back to what it was ?
you be the judge
Posted by gnarly on March 30,2012 | 06:10 PM
muay thai neck wrestling is being tought for free on utube.
yes there are many lessons presented by a varity of good instructors.
some of the utube lessons are very good indeed.
they teach very advanced and complicated neck fighting techniques that would be hard to find even going to train in thailand..
some of the best lessons were givin by white guys speaking clear very understandable english ..by all indications these fellow must have been greco roman wrestlers at one time or another and went over to muay thai ..
try find the two following utube videow , i truly beleave they are good .
1)kru ringle daddis utube
2)ultimate muay thai plam 1-4
i hope i put down the correct address for look up on utube
have fun and perhaps learn or review some neck fighting moves
Posted by JOE E.tinney on July 17,2010 | 11:30 PM
muay thai,,
timing and synchronazation .this comes from starting moves on a down beat from music with a 120-128 bpm tempo..
learn to start a move on a down beat and compleating on the next is of importance..
jumping rope to a given tempo will enforce mental cadence counting and sync ability ..
the MUSIC is not there for enterainment .. it should be AN ELECTRONIC METRONOME ticking out loud through the stereo!!
knee caps should be used to block incomming kicks and knees.
USE OF THE KNEE CAP for intercepting and blocking .IS of a HIGHER LEVEL technique and superior to just tacking a kick on to you shin area..
if you are not getting the training you want go to a different camp.. loyality will not help you ..
fake tradition will not make you a technical fighter ..
you must use several if not many many coaches to become a technican ..
feemur is what you should strive to become ..thinker knower of the slick stylish moves of high class muay thai..
time spent learning the ram muay is not worth the efforts.
there are more important techniques to be had!!
watch classic muay thai on utube GRFROMMTA ON UTUBE..
YOD MUAY ACHE = BEST FIGHTS OF THE WEEK IN REVIEW ..
STUDY THE 1980=1993 CHAMPIONS ..
Posted by JOE E. SMALL on December 21,2009 | 06:48 PM
ANY ONE WANTING TO LEARN AUTHENTIC MUAY THAI MUST START VERY YOUNG SAY 8 YEARS OLD ABSOLUTLY, NO LATER THAN 11 YEARS OF AGE.
ON OF THE GREATS SAID THE BASICS OF BOXING MUST BE LEARNED BEFORE A BOY SHAVES!! THIS I HAVE COME TO BELEAVE IS VERY TRUE.
AUTHENTIC WESTERN BOXING ((REAL NOT AROBO BOXING )) HAS VERY MUCH TO OFFER INTO HARD CORE MUAY THAI ...
FOOT WORK, DISTANCE TIMING. PIVIOT STEPPING, ANGLES OF ATTACT ,RING GENERALMAN SHIP,
THE ONLY THING WESTER BOXING DOES THAT IS NOT GOOD IN MUAY THAI IS WEAVING. THIS WILL PUT YOU IN A DANGEROUS POSITION!!
IF SOME ONE COULD COME INTO MUAY THAI WITH 2 YEARS OF AUTHENITCI REAL BOXING KNOWLEDGE THIS PUTS THEM LIGHT YEARS AHEAD OF THE CLASS..
THE NECK WRESTLING OF MUAY THAI IS DIRECTLY RELATED TO GRECO ROMAN STAND UP ONLY WRESTLING..NO DIRT ROLLING NEEDED.
IF YOU COULD HAVE AGAIN 2 YEARS OF PUMMELING AND UNDER HOOKS TIE UP DIRLLS AND MOST OF THE PERIFERY SKILLS .. THIS COULD BE LEARNED FROM AN ENGLISH SPEAKING G-R COACH ..
TO HAVE HEAVY WESTERN BOXING AND GRECO ROMANN WRESTLING SKILL READY GOING INTO MUAY THAI IS A HUGE ADVANTAGE ..
THE ONLY PROBLEM IS WHEN AND IF YOU ENCOUNTER SOME CLOWN INSTRUCTOR WHO KNOWS NOTHING IT WILL BECOME INSTANLY OBVIOUS TO YOU ..BOXING AND GRECO ARE INTER-RELATED TO HARD CORE MUAY THAI ... THEY ARE TOUGHT WITH OUT THE MISTERY OF THE SUPER CHI!!.
Posted by JOE E. SMALL on December 18,2009 | 06:05 PM
Hello Mr Nestor Marte. i am Fernando Nottelman. can you cend me the info about Saktaywan Boxing Camp how much does is cost me in Thai Price per Monht to stay in Saktaywan Boxing Camp all incl ? i want to Fight For Money in Rajadamnern. thank you Mr Nestor Marte.
Posted by Fernando Nottelman on December 20,2007 | 09:54 AM