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 5 of 5)
When Nestor Marte came to Bangkok in December 1989, he brought with him a letter written in Thai by the fluent relative of a friend that said, simply, "Hello, my name is Nestor Marte. I would like to learn Muay Thai." He hired a tuk-tuk, a three-wheeled open-air taxi, to drive him around Bangkok in search of Thai boxing camps.
"Everybody I met in Thailand thought I was crazy," he said. "At the time it was unheard of for foreigners to come to Thailand and train in Muay Thai."
On that first day, Marte met Ajarn Taywan, the founder of Saktaywan. Marte struggled at first. He spoke no Thai and was ignored by the other boxers. He would awaken covered in mosquito bites because he had discarded the hot blanket he was meant to sleep on to keep the bugs from coming up through the floor. Ajarn Taywan assigned a ten-year-old boxer to stay behind with Marte during the early morning runs to make sure he could find his way home after falling far behind the group.
But over time Ajarn Taywan took a liking to Marte, often inviting him over for dinner. Slowly, Marte learned Thai, and his boxing skills improved quickly as his body adjusted to the intense training. A 6-foot-4-inch Dominican weighing 190 pounds, Marte was too large to fight in Rajadamnern or Lumpini, so instead he fought in four special holiday festivals against opponents his size. He won all of them. Eventually Marte saw Ajarn Taywan as an adopted parent. He moved back to New York in 1996 and opened Ultimate Gym, returning to Bangkok several times a year to sharpen his skills.
When Ajarn Taywan died in 2004, Saktaywan closed temporarily. Its stable of professional boxers, whose prize money gave the camp its livelihood, disbanded to fight for other camps. Unwilling to watch Ajarn Taywan's legacy disappear, Marte pledged to restore Saktaywan to its former glory. "I was pretty much starting from scratch," he said. He began financing the camp, investing several thousand dollars to renovate the facility, hire a head trainer and purchase four new boxers from other camps, who in their prime can cost 100,000 baht, or roughly $3,000 apiece.
When Saktaywan officially reopened in January 2006, a group of Buddhist monks in orange robes blessed the grounds. But despite his efforts, Marte learned in December that Ajarn Taywan's daughter had sold the campgrounds to a family who wants to build an apartment complex on top of the gym. Saktaywan will likely close for good this month, so Marte has gathered all the camp's equipment to take back to New York for use at Ultimate Gym. And he's trying to secure a visa for Ajarn Sit, who may find himself unemployed, to teach Muay Thai alongside him in New York.
Several days after we discovered the camp had been sold, I sat with Ajarn Sit on the same bench where he had first introduced himself. Shadowboxing in front of us was his pudgy three-year-old son Sanooka, wearing tiny Muay Thai shorts and a pair of red boxing gloves that looked bigger than his head. He punched awkwardly and repeatedly tripped over himself trying to kick the air.
I asked Ajarn Sit if he thought that someday Sanooka would become a Muay Thai champion. He chuckled: "Oh yeah, man. Sanooka soop-uh fight. Soop-uh good, man."
Freelance writer Cardiff de Alejo Garcia reported this story from Bangkok, where he spent four months training in Muay Thai at Saktaywan Boxing Gym.
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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