It’s true forgot to hold a kick back after coming from Muay thai sparring and damn near snapped the person I was sparring with in taekwondo’s leg completely forgot to get back in the taekwondo mindset I still had death on my mind from Thai training it’s tough luckily I stuck with taekwondo to get the control over my kicks vs just slinging them thangs in Muay Thai😂
@@IwasabletoDisappearafterlitsennah, most muay thai beginners would probably have joint problems but pros or even people who stretch won't be facing that problem.
@@IwasabletoDisappearafterlitsenjust got back home from my first ever mauy thai session.. my joints hurts like a bitch.. my trainer helped me out with some stretching and said it'll hurt for a couple of weeks and you'll get used to it. So.. I hope everything will be alright. 😊😊 But yes.. loved it.. it really unleashes something inside you. I feel really good and I'm definitely gonna continue. 😊
@@stenindsilva8487everything will be fine you’ll come back even stronger and be surprised how just 2 months of conditioning your shins and body/training will do to you Trust if you add aggression to Muay Thai like boxing you’ll become a weapon in a street fight and fights too
not entirely true homebody, my brother was muay Thai and I was a boxer, dude bullied my shins constantly when we fought and was amazed on how much they could take before I folded. People tend to forget that with all that, "footwork" comes with training. Meaning that there is strength in the legs, just not as much as other martial arts of course XD
@@mr.sunnyg5510if you do land a knockout punch early sure, but you are not prepared for any kicks/elbows or w/e else muay thai fighters trains to do. I only done boxing but i know for a fact how bad boxing stance leave u open for everything except punches
@@willr8974 As a Muay Thai guy we respect boxing as well. Different sports, different skillsets but both require the same intensity and toughness to compete
@@luisdawnfinder3188i've met both of them, a cocky muay thai who think they can take on the world (which is understandable), and a really humble and down to earth muay thai practiotioner
@@Tr8nthe did had one sparing session FIlMED, he might have fought other times not recorded, but his philosophy for fighting is correct many fighters, used it
@@minhnguyenhoang437 Firstly, a sparring session is not a fight. Secondly, nobody says Muhammad Ali MIGHT have had a fight or MIGHT be able to fight. We need to remember Bruce Lee was an actor. Enter The Dragon was a movie, not loive footage or even a documentary. As fighter, he would not stand a chance even against the worst modern day UFC fighter of his weight division
You forgot one of the most savage comebacks from Muay Thai after the footwork line : "One or two low kicks and you won't have that footwork either mate"
@@becomeunlimitedmuay thai fighters are also trained to take punches not just kicks In fact elbows arguably hurt more A muay thai fighter can take a punch And definitely a victim if those shins calves or thighs are exposed
@@blank9433 Pretty close rules? K1 had to change their rules because they were sick of the Nak Muays demolishing the kick boxers every tournament. So they restricted the rules to handicap the Nak Muays
You gotta remember, kick boxing was literally invented to compete with Muay Thai. The Nak Muays were dominating every karate tournament, so they created kick boxing so they had more of a chance. I used to think kick boxing was a spin-off of boxing, where you got to use kicks (as the name suggests) but it’s actually a spin-off of Karate funnily enough.
@@Tr8ntactually K1 changed the rules due to multiple reasons Semmy schlits hugging strategies Baukaw embarrassing their japanese superstar masato And Alistar overeem (which was more of a health issue) The clinch being boring to casuals to
I call bs. The only time ANY fighter will get pissed, if you don't play by rules. Where you sparring in boxing rules? Or mixed. Because ain't no way a boxer gets pissed of like that.
first, on the street 97.3% of people will trip if they try do a kick, so they will stick to fists. second, if you were sparring by boxing rules and u kicked him ofc he is gonna get pissed, like, you broke the rules. Boxing is also a sport, not everybody trains boxing to be good on the street or something
@@sseempire870597.3% of people? By people do you mean people who don’t do a form of kickboxing or TKD? Or just the average joe, if you think someone who has trained to do kicks, will just automatically slip and fall when kicking in a street fight, that’s literally cope
As someone who's been doing muay Thai for 2 years, I can confirm that the 5th one is very lethal, especially if you attack your opponents wife with it.
pureness in one art wont work against someone with a mix of arts. Because every art has flaws that get complemented with another art (eg. boxing, TKD, BJJ). I'd rather be average at many arts than very good at only one while being ignorant of the others
Not necessarily, a nak muay (muay thai fighter) will destroy most if not all martial artists at the same level I they do different martial arts, except for wrestling/grappling. A mid level nak muay would beat a same level kickboxer, karateka, boxer, taekwondo fighter, or other fighter
@@liampender-thaw4988that's absolutely bullshit. In this case, all a boxer has to worry about is approaching past low kicks. If he's in elbow and knee range he's in range to punch faster and harder. The game plan for a boxer would be to play near the outer range of the kick and try to bait one out or rush past it to get inside
@@mrlolas5114 muay thai has an actual clinch though, not just the hugging in boxing. Too close for powerful punches from the boxer, but the right range for short elbows and knees, as well as sweeps
@liampender-thaw4988 there is no "too close" aside from a clinch and if the boxer is slow enough to let himself get in a clinch he deserves whats coming
@@kieranlazenbury8773 Cool, except I'm a nak muay, and that's not how it works. You don't just take an elbow to the jaw and keep going. Elbows end fights. There is no exchange where they land clean and stay standing.
muay thai is literally the “you don’t want this. not cuz i’m cocky, but because i know how to break you in more ways than i can think how NOT to break you.” sport
" we take victims " 😂😂😂 Lol, as a muay thai beginner thats exactaly what ive been thought , this a martial art created for war its not meant to be used recklessly . Much respect for all martial arts . Peace.
i must say the most beautiful feeling i get is from mastering boxing(olympic style) but muay thai is litteraly you aiming for the opponents destruction(when used in full potential) yeah you know people out and the air out off people in boxing too. but you dont break skulls and posibbly limbs like MT, so its more like a 50/50 thing for me, i love both sports/arts just as much@@Fantasy_Tales_of_Wonder
The secret of the 5th limb has been reviled it, can only be activated during intense situations I've only seen it once and it was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen...another arm gre out💀
@@mikehunt4797 yeha what I mean is boxers aren’t trained to protect from kicks so they talk about knocking out and punching but most other MMA destroys boxing bcz of the amount of variability that comes with them like Muay Thai or kickboxing
@@wtmusic515 true. As far as I know Muay Thai is balanced, unlike my prior sport Taekwondo where we prioritize kicks over hand techniques (I practiced WTF, not ITF)
@@rainydayzzz713 I can understand your confusion, I was too before. But WTF is World Taekwondo Federation, the version of Taekwondo more used for competition, and ITF is International Taekwondo Federation, a more traditional practice of Taekwondo where punches to the face are allowed.