By Sean Fagan
Muay Thai is the national sport of Thailand and is beloved by fans around the world. This striking art form involves eight points of contact – two fists, two elbows, two knees, and two shins – making it one of the most dynamic and exciting martial arts disciplines to watch.
The sport of Muay Thai has produced some of the most incredible fighters of all time. Here, we rank the top 3 best Muay Thai fighters of all time.
Samart Payakaroon is widely regarded as the best Muay Thai fighter of all time. Born in 1962 in Bangkok, Thailand, Samart began training in Muay Thai at a young age and made his professional debut at just 14 years old. Over the course of his storied career, Samart won an incredible four Lumpinee Stadium championships across four different weight classes. He was known for his incredible speed, agility, and devastating kicks. In addition to his success in the ring,...
By Sean Fagan
Muay Thai pad work: the essential conditioning tool for fighters and enthusiasts alike. Not only does it hone your technique and improve your striking power, but it also helps you work on your timing and agility. To capitalize on all these benefits, it's vital to include a range of different combinations throughout your pad work sessions. Here are some of the best Muay Thai combinations to use during your pad work.
The jab, cross, hook, low kick (as well as its reverse counterpart: jab, cross, hook, body kick) is the quintessential go-to combination for any Muay Thai fighter worth their salt. It's a simple yet effective one that can be easily tweaked according to your opponent's movements. It's also great for honing your technique, particularly your footwork, weight shifting, and timing.
Elbow strikes are one of the most feared and effective weapons in Muay Thai....
By David Dack
If you're a Muay Thai fighter looking for ways to improve your stamina and endurance, look no further than running.
Here's the truth. Logging the miles is a key part of Muay Thai training and something you should be doing religiously if you want to stay in fighting shape.
In Thailand, most Muay Thai trainees are required to run a few miles before and often after their pad work and sparring sessions. In fact, "no run, no fight" is one of the most popular sayings in the Muay Thai training world.
The question is, how does actually running help you improve as a fighter and how to get started? Keep on reading for the answers.
In this article, I'm going to explain some of the benefits that running offers Muay Thai fighters, as well as show you how to incorporate road work into your workout routine without risking injury or burnout. I'll also delve into some of the training approaches you can follow to develop...
By Chris Starkhagen
Muay Thai is one of the toughest sports to train for -- and probably the most grueling thing you'll ever endure.
It's hard. It's painful. It's relentless. Muay Thai is like the training montage in Rocky.
With that said, don’t be scared, as there are tremendous benefits worth every drop of sweat.
And trust me: you're gonna sweat. Because Muay Thai trainers emphasize perseverance over everything else:
It will transform you both physically but moreso mentally. The martial arts skills you master translate into your life in ways that you never thought possible, things just go smoother.
By the end of each training session, you’ll feel an urge to get back in again, to grow, to progress, and become stronger.
Let's take...
By Sean Fagan
It's a little strange to consider, but a centuries-old fighting system might be the best core workout out there!
First, a little history lesson: Muay Thai is the national sport and a cultural martial art of Thailand. It originates several hundreds of years ago when used as a close-combat form that utilized the entire body as a weapon. Muay Thai employs stand-up striking, along with many other grappling techniques (called "clinching").
Muay Thai's discipline is referred to as the "Art of Eight Limbs" as it involves the use of elbows, fists, knees, and shins. Like many other forms of martial art, the practitioners, called nak muay, invest in themselves and their fighting success by strengthening their bodies to almost unthinkable heights.
The main goal in fighting Muay Thai is to beat down your opponent mostly through strikes. It’s ultimately good for both defensive and offensive fights. But, in the modern...
By Ashley Reign
We've all been there. You're training at the gym or practicing on your heavy bag in the garage. Even as you were gloving up, you promised yourself you were about to have a next-level workout and, for the most part, you’ve been killing it.
Then out of nowhere, that negative voice shows up in your head with all the bravado of your drunk Uncle Herb at a family reunion. “You’re going to be so sore tomorrow if you keep this up,” it says. “Throw in the towel and let’s go eat some chips,” it says.
Before you know it, you're concentrating more on whether or not it has a point than on your workout. That voice and its countless excuses belong to something I’ve come to call your “inner critic.”
The bad news is that we all have an inner critic that’s constantly out to keep us from achieving our goals. The good news is that it’s totally possible to...
By Ashley Reign
If you want to cut weight, boost your metabolism, and build muscle, then incorporating HIIT style workouts into your Muay Thai training is a solid way to go.
In case you’re unfamiliar, HIIT (or High-Intensity Interval Training) involves mixing short bursts of intense, beastmode-level exercise with periods of rest or lower-intensity exercise.
HIIT is so effective that it’s a great way to get in a next-level workout even when you're short on time. Studies show that the average HIIT workout can have just as many (or more) health benefits as a moderately-intense workout that’s twice as long.
One of the best things about HIIT is that it's a style of training that can be applied to a wide variety of exercises. As a fighter, that means that you can reap all the benefits it has to offer simply by using it to practice your favorite moves and combos in a specific way.
TABATAS: WHAT ARE...
By Evan Lee
Not being able to access a gym sucks. However, that should not prevent you from still improving your Muay Thai skills.
Today, we will be going over how to improve one of the most important skills in Muay Thai and the foundation of everything: you.
What you are capable of in Muay Thai is dependent on what your body is capable of. It is not just dependent on what techniques you know, though there is that.
Want to be able to confuse your opponents with body kicks and head kicks? You need the flexibility to be able to do so.
Want to be able to hop around your opponents like Saenchai or Lomachenko? You need strong legs and strong balance.
Want to be able to swarm your opponents and completely overwhelm them with an unending volume of strikes from the opening bell to the final horn? You need to work on your cardio.
It is easy to underestimate your physical attributes and think that...
By Evan Lee
The roundhouse kick is arguably the second most common and second most important kick you will ever learn in Muay Thai, with numero uno being the teep.
Before we go into all the mistakes it is possible to make when throwing the roundhouse kick, you must first understand why the roundhouse kick is even more important in Muay Thai than in MMA or even kickboxing.
In Thai stadium scoring, kicks and knees are scored higher than punches. Not only that, a “block” with the arms (like the double forearm block) does not count as a block.
If you’ve ever been kicked hard in the arms by a true nak muay, you know why… because it still hurts.
Aside from that, there is another reason you should be spending more time trying to master your roundhouse kick. It is the most powerful tool you have to land a knockout.
You may have trouble knocking people out with punches, but you will not...
By Evan Lee
If you are unable to train yourself, one of the best things you can do is study the greatest fighters that there have ever been in order to figure out why they were among the greatest of all time.
Or if you’re extremely lucky, you could train with those that are among the greatest of all time so you can get all the information right from the source.
Our very own Sean Fagan is one of these lucky guys.
In this video, he is training with the legendary Namsaknoi, also known as “The Emperor.”
Namsaknoi is a three-time Lumpinee champion across three different weight classes (112 lbs., 130 lbs., and 135 lbs.). He holds a record of 280 wins, and just 15 losses, and 5 draws. He went unbeaten as the 135 lbs. champion for six years.
The Emperor has beaten the likes of Lamnamoon, a legendary clinch fighter; Samkor, a legendary kicker and one of the hardest kickers of all time; and ...
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