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Paddy on Why Muay Thai Fighters aren't in UFC
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- čas přidán 3. 08. 2022
- Paddy the Baddy talks to Ben Garrity on why Muay Thai Fighters aren't in the UFC.
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It's a huge sign of respect that Paddy was conducting this interview in Thai.
Good one!!
😭
😂😂
Ok I lol'd 😂
Sheesh man i’m bilingual and i had a hard time understanding, your comment really sent me on a roller coaster like “or is he actually speaking thai?”
I've never tried so hard to understand my native language until hearing this dude speak
And now imagine those whose native language is not English. I had tough time understanding him.
Bro i thought i was retarded for a sec🤣🤣
I'm born and bred from Los Angeles and I understood every word. It's not that difficult is it?
@@chris.flores no, people in England always say this about scousers (people from Liverpool) because they sound so different from the rest of England. It’s just an English joke
@@malafakka8530 Is it weird that I find this easier to follow than more 'regular' American or English accents?
I’m Italian and it’s the 12th time I watch this video to understand what he’s saying.
I refuse to give up.
*He said, pineapple🍍 belongs on pizza* 🍕
@@MyselfStefanoAmen
Turn on cc
You have to use Google Translate. I believe he's from Albania.
Subtitles bro
As non English speaker, I feel damn proud that I still understand him 😅
As a native English speaker, same.
@@XtopherMartin 🤣 non native english speaker here and it´s hard....probably get 10%
I actually turned on closed captioning and 10 seconds later realized he's speaking english.
He's speaking extremely clearly.
WHAT IS HE SAYING??
As a Thai, he's 100% correct.
The Thai Culture around Muay Thai is so different. It's not about the money, it's about the respect for the culture and honoring your family.
You can litterly go to Thailand and visit some of the top legends of Muay Thai, and they live normal lives. They still train every day, holding pads, walking in flipflops and meditating.
Respect Paddy for knowing this!
Watching Sylvie von Duuglas' CZcams channel brings this to light. There's a word they use ('Ruup') that refers to the kind of swagger and 'go with the flow' attitude I've seen from Thais.
Literally* (I'm an English tutor; don't kill me)
Dude, respect for that. If that was in Europe it would all be about the money.
@@fuzzmanx exactly.
And Thais train very lightly. It's never HARD, but more fun.
And in Muay Thai fights, often the first two rounds are slow and light, then it turns up
That’s beautiful
I wish UFC fighters have more honor. It becoming WWE clown show. It kind of a joke now. It is their business and it gets rating. I mean baseball and football do well and they don’t need be a complete clown show to get ratings. The UFC might get less views, but I feel like it is more of a real sport.
ive been a guest at proper thai fights and i was blown away by watching thailands biggest mauy thai stars happily circulate through the crowds signing hundreds of autographs and posing for pics with fans in the audience. they were so down to earth and showed no signs of prima donna attitude etc, and not only that it was an all ages family friendly type atmosphere, from little kids to frail old ladys, it was not the expected crowd of bloodlusting maniacs i expected to be rubbing shoulders with lol.. the whole experience totally won me over and gave me enormous respect for the fighters who are national heros over there and for good reason as well.
Do they non stop bitch and moan about payment like UFC fighters do lol
Probably cause since the age of 6 when their ego got out of control someone was there to check em
I accidentally ended up in an alley somewhere in the outskirts of Bangkok because I heard some noise. Sounded like someone was getting their ass beat and people cheering so I had to investigate. After walking through the most quiet street you could imagine I rounded the corner to see a UFC quality like Muay Thai event with ring girls, guys flying around on cameras and a sick lineup with people from Cambodia to Canada. I didn't wanna pay crazy prices to see it, because i wasn't that interested at the time, so I asked the Thai dude how much it cost and he just laughed and pointed to a seat.
I'm so used to sports events being extremely overpriced after living in the US for a while, but the people there were literally there just for the joy of it. That's what a lot of US sports are lacking. The regular fan cannot afford tickets most of the time, so it doesn't feel real.
Anyways; I sat down and loved every second of it. The honor, the style of fighting and the atmosphere. I went to Chiang Mai afterwards to train Muay Thai and plan on doing the same in Phuket this winter. Just love the sport and the people, everything about it.
It's not often going into a dark alley after midnight really pays off, but for me it did:)
Everything is better in Thailand
I'm a big fan of Buakaw ,one of the most ferocious fighter's I've ever seen. Huge hero in Thailand and the most humble super star I have ever seen.
I visited a village of Thai fighters, kids from 6 years old to men in their 40s and 50s. I went to one of the fights, and these guys just beat the pulp out of one another. Their faces were not recognizable afterwards. However, once the matches were over, everyone was hugging and laughing, and I also learned, win or lose, they shared the money. Coming from the US, it was a strange experience.
Collectivism and selfless-ness of the Eastern culture as opposed to individuality and self-serving of Western culture.
were the matches organized?
@@CloseYourBrownEyes yes
A sense of community is nowhere to be found here like it is in foreign villages
What was the name of the village?
My respect and thanks deeply go to the one who made the subtitles
It's cool to see organizations like ONE, who convert a lot of stadium Thai fighters into Muay Thai. Makes you wonder if fighters like Rodtang will inspire the next generation to start training their wrestling/grappling earlier on 🤔
Yeah and they had Dejdamrong fight there as well in MMA. Unfortunately he lost but was a great fight
Wow, Shane in the comments, didn't expect that 😁
Love your channel!
I was thinking this same thing. Similar to the way UFC fighters have influenced younger generations to, for example, get involved in high school wrestling or BJJ to balance out karate, taekwondo, boxing, etc. at an earlier and earlier age here in the States.
That impossible for now and near future at very least. In Thailand, they are various small muaythai events for rookies to farm their experiences before they can level up. There is nothing like that for MMA. The more muaythai prospers in its motherland (as it should be), less and less kids are interested in any other martial art for professionalism.
The advent of ONE even further encourages Thai kids to go for muaythai.
The Mighty Mouse Rodtang fight was so interesting to watch. It showed a lot about Wrestling against Straight up Muay Thai.
"Boxing stance doesn't werrche, muay thai stance doesn't werrche". - 🏴👱🏼
🤣
Lmao
You mean werk(phlegm)kk
💂♂
Know warra mean
went to Thailand on vacation 14 years ago and i dragged my family to the Lumpinee stadium, they really didn't feel like it but i did not take no for an answer
and there i saw the greatest fight i've ever seen (and i've seen a lot tbh, i'm a big fan of combat sports)
it was the main fight between two young undefeated fighters of around 18 years old and these guys were unbelievably talented and their determination was crazy
the skills on display were ridiculous and it was incredibly high paced from start to finish, really not your average Muay Thai fight
you really got the sense these guys were fighting for the pride of their family, somehow their fight seemed to convey that emotion
it's like we witnessed 2 ancient warriors fighting for their families and we just happened to be lucky enough to see them
honestly i felt unworthy of watching a fight this great, words cannot do it justice
after the fight my family could not stop talking about it, they were in complete awe of what they had just seen (i was in complete awe as well, but i tried to be cool about it lol)
and still, whenever we talk about our vacation to Thailand that fight is the first thing that comes up
thanks for sharing
in germany we say geschichten aus dem paulaner garten
@@affemitwaffen stories from the pope's garden? what does that mean
@@zinowor hahaha there is a beer brand named paulaner, so in this case its refering to a "beer garden" (not sure if thats a word, but a place where you drink beer basically) so stories out of there are usually not true/over-exaggerated
That's the difference between fighting with a purpose and fighting with a paycheck. A lot of times UFC is about fighting for a paycheck, but I understand entirely what you're talking aobut with what you witnessed. Very rarely do we ever see that kind of determination or 闘志 from Westerners -- it's a very different feeling, and makes you appreciate the art and skill that they possess to exhibit their talents in the way that they do.
looking forward to the translation of this interview
I feel like Charles Oliveira incorporates a Thai stance into his game very well. He's so comfortable off of his back in guard that he doesn't care about the threat of being taken down. The stance affords him in that aggressive come forward style
ye man has godly ju jitsu
Hes on about actual thai fighters. Plenty of mma stars main weapon is mauy thai
So good watching him March forward
Great thing about MMA. You can mold your style to your strengths. Many different stances work. Oliveira, Thai stance. Rose, I'd say is a boxing stance. Early Conor, Karate. It's all about how it accents your strengths and covers your weaknesses. For the Thais, they don't have the level of wrestling and grappling to make that stance work like Oliveira does.
lol difference between incorporating it all in your fighting to using some form of it with other highly effective fighting styles. like he’s a killer with jujitsu
I attended a Muay Thai match in Bangkok in 2007 and it was a very cool experience. What was most surprising, as the video hints to, is that there's almost more pageantry and ceremony than there is fighting. It's akin to Sumo in Japan. Very structured fights, but tons of traditional choreographed dances/movements to start things off.
Hookers?
@@onceagaindc
What happens in Thailand, stays in Thailand
2007 ain't 2022(2023)
@@anouaressanoussi Yes. Because I assume hundreds of years of tradition and ceremony have changed over the last 15 years.
omg i love sumo and muay thai but sumo wrestlers are way more reveared as some unachievable being and it seems like they focus a lot on social status and heirarchy
Thank God for closed captions.
And your stupidity
I've attended muay thai fights in Thailand a few times. Last time, I remember a fight between two early teens, one took an elbow to the skull (loud thud sound), and was carted off. Insane stuff.
The greatest fight I ever saw was a Thai fight 33 years ago between two 16yr Olds. 4 rounds of brutal, spiteful, brilliant fighting. It looked like a fight to the death. When it was over there was pure respect for each other.
Glad your warp sense of entertainment enjoys brutality
Just look at Rodtang,one second he looks like he's gonna murder you, next he's on his knees bowing before you when the bell goes. Same as Buakaw. Ruthless like an ax murderer until the bell goes. It's cool to watch.
@@reconstructionwouldhavesav9472 Don't be foolish. There is a lot to be said for the effects of training in combat sports on the psychosocial development of a young person. In that respect, common sense, conventional wisdom, and the scientific literature all seem to agree that it's good in general.
@@reconstructionwouldhavesav9472 cry
@@reconstructionwouldhavesav9472 hoinestly, thats the best thing about watching sports. i think baseball, basketball, football, etc are stupid until there is a fight. at least with muay thai, they have other sorts entertainment while you wait for the fight.,
There’s plenty fighting in One Championship, and it’s class.
Mauy Thai in small gloves in One Championship is the best stand up fights in my opinion.
yes but in one its still muay thai rules. Its never muai thai vs wrestling or jiu jitsu
@@davidquinn147 read my comment again. I'm speaking about stand up fighting not mma .
You owe me a pint when I get back to work after my holiday Tom. Only joking.
Oh yes your right. Apologies for the misread. The standup in one is on another level for sure. Rodtang is a beast
Muay Thai fighters are so humble and void of any ego yet are KILLERS IN THE RING!... very inspiring
Unfortunately the guard stance is a takedown invitation
Well, if you watch ONE FC you should have noticed by now that 99% of the time a Thai loses to a foreigner he will not even congratulate his opponent or pay the respect of waiting in the ring for the announcement, so how does this fit with your fantasy of Thai fighters?
Thank God for subtitle.
One championships 4oz Muay Thai .. is the most entertaining combat sport on the planet atm.. 🔥 🔥 🔥
One full beats UFC any day
@@jordanmaclean6410 it would be so cool to see the current weight class champions from ONE vs UFC :D
Agreed! Plus you can sense their emphasis on culture, humility and respect.
@@FromPoetryToRap a place where martial arts bring the world together as one!
None of this WWE trash talking negative shit the UFC encourages.
@@andulasis6283 broooo yesss! I would pay 2x the ppv to see this. The respect and rep of both companies would b on the line. Dana and chatri would be the most stressed men in the building and it would b epic to watch
Ive spent many months in Thailand and always wondered why there was never any fighters crossing over- Especially given how dedicated and talented many of them are. Makes a lot of sense! Those fights are still amazing to watch though. There are fights nearly every single night in different venues and my favorite were the ones in the countryside. It would be like $10-15 for RINGSIDE seats and $1-2 a beer. The atmosphere was LIT and the fights were real bangers. So much fun!!
i heard that they're physically ruined by their mid 20s from all that fighting. could also be a factor.
@@Thesandchief Yeah I'd imagine they certainly train & fight often enough for that to be a factor too!
Also modern MMA is a separate sport and you need to train it and not some other sport. Given how good video preps are now a days you can't have obius weaknesses. Just look at how Ben Askrin did, fastest knockout in history.
And don’t forget the intense smell of tiger balm haha
It’s brutal those elbows to the face you may as well be hitting someone in the face with a square iron rod or a heavy blunt knife. Moves like that for killing.
Paddy you are such a down to earth lad. Big fan here. Keep rocking bro!
A true honorable fighter that respects the honor and culture of the sport. I'm liking this kid more every time I hear him speak.
First time I saw him, oh gee another Connor big mouth. Nope. Not at all.
True honorable?¿ Do you remember what he said about Georgians?¿
I love paddy, it’s as if what he’s trying to say is you should Mix martial arts for MMA.
True genuis
Who the hell knows what he's trying to say. Needs to get the marbles out of his mouth.
@@lawsonransom8318 lol
I think he's on to something
Mixed combat sports*
Thank god for CZcams subtitles.
Very are so lucky for subtitles
A new hire of mine is a young guy from Thailand. He's only been in America a few months now, really loves muay thai. Tells me about it all the time, I've always been a huge fan of it so it's really interesting hearing it from someone who did it and knows much about it.
That’s really cool.
Does he have social media? Want to learn Muay Thai later in life so I’m hoping it’d be cool to go to him for any advice on it if needed ofc.
You're lucky. Would be a great way to get started in Muay Thai
I always use my run away stance.
Never fails
U must be a white Caucasian male
I'm undefeated in the runaway stance
lame joke
'HEHEHE IM SUCH A PUSSY GUYS!!! LOL!!!'
Israel adesanya is that you?
@@Dementia.Pugilistica in sparring you chase people down all day whilst getting jabbed on the nose consistently don't you
good insight. I had to turn on CC though
I moved to Thailand half a year ago, knowing nothing about the culture nor customs. But there was a muay thai gym right across the village, so I went there and started taking private classes for 4 months straight (still going almost daily). Comperatively to what I was used to paying for stuff in TH, It was rather expensive (250$/month), but at a 5 minute walking distance and 3-4 trainings per week from 8am; that still felt like a steal.
It wasn't until my trainer told me that he'd be traveling abroad to train fighters that I found out that he's a local champion and regional legend. He had a going-away party, and so many people came.. .And here I was, no-name me chilling with this guy every other day, private training and sparring before breakfast. Getting my ass handed, but always humbly so with laughs. Now training with another trainer who has been at it since he was 6.
The experience of training with these guys is one of the main reasons why I am enjoying my stay here so much. And they are so good, whenever I thought "I had it", they would just adjust their skill like turning the volume up a little, and I'd be feeling like I am back to the first day I walked into that gym. After a few weeks I would improve, and then they would turn the volume up a bit...I am not even sure where their limit is on that, because they are training people all day long, from the morning until the evening. And then also fighting tournaments.
Very lucky
that sounds like a steal...Awesome
Sounds like a great bunch of guys. Hard to find martial artists that thread that needle between crushing trainees or just clowning around with them. Respect.
looks like you've got yourself into a very.. VERY lucky situation to be able to train with such fighters
When it always feels like going back to square one, that means we’re on the right track 👍
Myself and my maters were on hols at a bar in Koh Samui, Thailand years ago. There was a bouncer there who we all thought he was a bit wirey for a bouncer. Didnt look that intimidating. He was about the same height and physique as us. He just looked normal. Anyway later on in the night a drunken English guy was gettin aggro with other customers and also with the bouncer. The bouncer just stood there arms folded.....We were all watching to see what would happen. Eventually the drunkard went to push someone. Suddenly the bouncer, from no where & with the speed and agility of a cat, did a high kick to the guys chest and kicked him over some plants and right out the bar. Never seen anything like it. It was unreal how quick he was & how much power he got in to the kick........We made sure never to annoy a Thai bouncer after that.
Remember they do Muay Thai as part of school… I saw three English guys laughing at a Lady Boy… next thing there was nothing Lady about her and they got destroyed before licking their wounds and moving on… it was probably the funniest most disturbing fight I’ve ever witnessed 😂
@@josephedlin2172 😂😂😂 Thailand is one seriously crazy place
We made sure never to annoy any Thai bouncer after that🤣🤣🤣🤣
Just another trained fighter practising on some drunken arsehole , who woke up with a sore one saying wtf 🤣🤣🤣
I'd laugh if you said the bouncer arrived and got his ass kicked
pody the body
In my experience, the Thais love all combat sports its just that Muay Thai is their own brand. You do see Thais doing well in boxing but because it's at the lighter divisions they don't make the headlines. Why switch to a different sport when you have already made your name domestically? The rewards in boxing are much higher than UFC so that is the logical switch if you want global recognition.
Mma is so harsh on the body idk how the guys years later seem to be ok and not more damage or hooked bad on pain meds
@@ArmonAdibi 💉
I was born in Trat Thailand. Went to a muay thai training camp at age 11. Got kicked on the shins and left. Best decision I've ever made
Why?
Lmao
Been to Trat. Saw a muay tai fight in BK where this guy got his shin battered and it came up with a huge scary haematoma. I dont blame your decision to walk away!
Great grandma came over from Ireland, full blooded Murphy. Took me a bit to catch on to him, but I can understand now.
that's madness
Paddy is the man
I need to go get better and smarter
The more I see of this kid the more I like him. You can tell the way he talks about this that he has genuine interest and respect for the subject matter.
He's a racist
Paddy is definitely the future of UFC, if he plays his cards correctly.
Ppl think he's arrogant because of how he acts during his fights but he's such a nice respectful person so respectful to other people and other cultures
He sums it all up in the last 10 seconds, amazing insight.
the way paddy pronounces work (werrhk) is just wonderful
I will say ONE FC is starting to push some boundaries, the DJ vs Rodtang mixed rules bout was sick even if not official, but it shows that Muay Thai fighters are starting to take MMA a bit more seriously, there's a few fighters at ONE that have made the transition already and are doing pretty well.
Absolutely spot on... and I love Muay Thai with a passion... but pure MT or a MT based stance in MMA can be risky... you Absolutely have to melt them together... and the culture is definitely a factor. The Thais are a proud strong people for sure! Love their art and culture!!!
Pure anything in MMA is risky.
@@zacharyradford5552 everyone just regurgitating the obvious
not spot on if someone drops low for a take down they would get kicked done muay thai for a few years KICKboxing also just would have to lean and drop on top the legs are very conditioned
There’s no ground game in Muay Thai because in the real battlefield in the past. If you fall to the ground you die. You got stab, got stomp. And in real life if you fall, you got jump by several enemy. Cuz there’s no one on one fight here. If you piss someone, they always come back in group. So you gotta be on your feet to survive.
Also, Thai people think it’s not honorable to fight on the ground. It’s a culture thing.
But things started to change. Muay Thai fighter start learning MMA more each day.
Cyril Gane : Am I Joke to u ??
Paddy is true respect and honorable 🙏🏼❤️👏👍🏼
I went to some local Muay Thai fights when I was over in Thailand. It was in a small hall with a ring in the middle. They fight at all age ranges during the. Ignition and these guys are all incredibly talented. They start with the young kids first and you could be forgiven for anticipating a “kids” fight but that’s not the case. They are all very good! The pre fight rituals are also great to watch.
He's right about the stance. It also squares a fighter up and makes the susceptible to straight punches
In a boxing only setting yes but when you can throw all parts of the body the Muay Thai stance is king. Only reason it doesnt work for mma is because of takedowns. “Tell me you’ve never fought Muay Thai without telling me you’ve ever fought Muay Thai.” Is what your comment is lmao stick to whatever it is you do bevsuse you don’t know jack fucking shit about fighting clearly.
Only thing i understood clearly was the title. Everything else i had to turn off my AC, my ceiling fan, asked everyone outside to be quiet for about 2 minutes, hid in the quietest closet of my house, took ritalin to retain information and made sure to focus like ive never focused before so i can finally understand what was being said....Then i realized the closed captions pretty much did the trick
Yes, with a little practice, you will be able to understand English as it is spoken by the English natives who brought the language to the world.
When you hear how English is properly spoken by the natives in their own dialect, you begin to understand why English is spoken the way it is instead of how Americans mispronounce all the words, or I should say, with a different dialect.
Eggxactly
@@robertchiarizia9463 Paddy's regional accent is probably not the same way English was spoken when some English colonists came to America. Just because Paddy is from the UK does not mean his regional accent from 2020 is the original way English was spoken.
One dumbass joke now turning into a real discussion about dialects. Wow.
@@-whackd it IS actually how it is originally spoken. Have you been to Britain yet? In some places American, it is still spoken similar to the English who came to America. The Eastern shore of Maryland has one island where it sounds like Paddy. American English mostly sounds like immigrants speaking a second language pronunciation. Say schedule…an American says it the Dutch way.
Theatre, colour, all these are pronounced properly in Britain. The American version leaves out the subtleties in the language, so it doesn’t sound like it is spelled. In Britain they pronounce it how it is spelled.
I did kickboxing for over 4 year's then later in life did Mauy Thai for around 6 months, but had to stop as it was destroying my knees. I was getting older. My mate was a boxer and he struggled because of a boxer's stance is different from kickboxing and he'd get kicked regularly, but he had fast hands and good punch, but still he couldn't get on with being more upright.
How old were you?
@@CtrlAltDel_7 I'm 57 .
Turn your standing leg with the kick if you don't it will destroy your knee
Something similar myself. Went about 2 yrs with Thai training. Feet were messed up. Couldn’t stop some parts from bleeding. And bags. Went through bags like crazy. I went to a local gym and hit their heaviest bag. When I slapped the bag against the ceiling tiles, couldn’t hit their stuff anymore. It’s an awesome art. The consistency of kicking becomes real power eventually.
@@CtrlAltDel_7 I was about 26.
The split screen makes it look like they're holding hands.
Thank you youtube subtitles
Valentina Shevchenko would be a good example of a muay thai/kick boxing fighter (17 time world champion, and competed in that sport professionaly since the age of 14) before she came to the UFC. She's a 3rd degree black belt in Taekwondo, started at the age of 5, a black belt in Judo, and master of sport in Sambo. She's incorporated all these and others in her MMA style, which is almost unbeatable! So far!
She's amazing but in a very talentless division.
@@fvgc454ss Bantomweight division is the talentless one, except for the top 5 or so who is there? There's lots of talent in Flyweight now moving there way up, soon to be more stacked than Straweight!
My favorite Mauy Thai fighters came mostly from K1, meaning Buakaw and Yodsanklai. But it opened my eyes up to Saenchai who is the Anderson Silva of their sport
Buakaw are strong but in MMA he is a dead man TAKEDOWN and LOCK!
@@juliannakaberovsky4545 You could say the same for UFC guys competing in Muay Thai. They don't have a chance at Muay Thai rules. That's why people like Anderson Silva come to Thailand for, because they want to be better strikers.
@@juliannakaberovsky4545 🤦
MMA ARE MODERN CLOWNS ACTING TOUGH AND ROUGH BUT THEY ARE NOTHING.....ASIAN FIGHTERS ARE HUMBLE BUT DANGEROUS. DONT CHOOSE MONEY AND FAME LIKE WESTERNS CLOWNS....
@@chirovandenbos2339 what do you mean by "MMA ARE MODERN CLOWNS" 🤣
Guys help me here. Which martial art should I have to take first if I want to do MMA in future is it boxing Muithai kickboxing or bjj?
When will the English version of the interview be released?
Thai fighters would do remarkably well in MMA if they trained ground. Their striking, clinch work and conditioning is unrivaled
Unrivaled? Never heard of dutch style kickboxing .....
Even in the golden era of Dutch kickboxers the Thais beat the Dutch 9 times out of 10. Nowadays the French are better than the Dutch fighters and so are even the English. Thai boxers are unrivalled completely.
@@MoMo-ck7nc just my personal opinion, having lived and trained in Thailand for 3 years
@@MoMo-ck7nc Not even close.
@@MoMo-ck7nc name me one Dutch kick-boxer who’s better than petchboonchu in the clinch
there's been some thai guys crossing over into mma in recent years (particularly in one championship where they have muay thai, kickboxing & mma together) but yeah you can't just go in and fight like that, some adaptation is needed to incorporate grappling, ground game etc and like paddy says the stance is vulnerable to shooting. that said though, muay thai is all over mma but it's specific techniques rather than an all-round fighting style. you can totally see ppl like anderson trained muay thai cos of the wing knees in the clinch (also it's the muay thai grip round the neck), flying knees etc, and the teep (push-kick) is pretty ubiquitous in mma now as well. also muay thai leg-kicks & elbows are some of the best around
Muaythai is for Muaythai sport which is reduction of Muaythai Boran. Muaythai Boran has throwing locking and breaking technique with stance similar to MMA
Paddy’s the coolest dude in fighting rn
Likh. Workh. I love it. Listened to the whole clip and don't even know what they were talking about.
“You don’t fuck with the Thais”
I did a 2 month Muy Thai training camp at Sor Vorapin 2 in 2013z
They can generate insane power, I learnt a lot and the experience changed me.
First time I've scratched below the media hype with this kid, but he's bang on point on this.
But is he 'on pint' in the interview?!?!? ;-)
I legit had to get subtitles for paddy.
Cant wait until they release the english version of this video
Paddy is a class act. Humble and good natured. I'm going to enjoy watching you become a champion, you deserve it. Also, I'm very sorry about the loss of your friend.
lol....Paddy 'the baddy'....humble.....you're a crack up!
Dude sounds like a Warlock invoking Spells that do dmg over time.
The accent just blows my mind away. For a minute I think I got delirious. 😂
Thank god for closed captions otherwise I'd have no idea what he's talking about. Never before has it been so hard for me to understand my own mother tongue like it has watching this video.
Just today I was talking to a guy I work with from Cambodia about Muay Thai. He was interested in my training in BJJ and kickboxing and was talking about the whole spiritual and ritual side of Muay Thai over there. And then this pops up in my feed, pretty cool
Good man , Good talk
He's actually speaking Thai. Amazing
Honestly love his accent, makes me think of a good friend that moved away. Understand every wourd, no Irish, Scottish or welsh mixups.
for the 1st 15 seconds I was searching for the subtitles..LOL
One of the things I loved about living in BKK was there would be Muay Thai boxing in a ring outside the shopping center for everyone to enjoy for free. I was in a go go bar once, all the girls disappeared, and mini ring was erected on the dance floor and two Muay Thai kick boxers pretended to fight each other. It wasn't a real fight but still kind of fun. It really is part of every day life there. I did notice that the western fighters tended to lose, according to the judges, even when they had obviously won, but that's Thailand for you.
Also pretty sure you know since you lived there but they also judge Muay Thai differently then other sports so sometimes it seemed like someone won but it’s different rules
my respect is growing for this young man's skills and character... wasnt super impressed with his striking from a couple CWs I saw and of course he was almost KOd in his first UFC ... but he must be a seriously hard worker because he's gotten so much better so quickly... AND he seems to be a nice dude so he's no longer giving me the Malcom McDowell Clockwork Orange freaky vibe that he used too...
Yeah exactly, clipped by a nobody; when he meets a top 10 striker in the divison he is gonna struggle to last even one round without getting pieced up. There is levels to this game, this chump can't even understand the basic importance of not letting your weight balloon in between fights. Guy is a media whore clown.
Koooo
A nice dude? He got his Twitter account banned for hate speech and was accused of racism and anti Muslim sentiment multiple times. Look up what he said about Khabib. He's a fool
@@shah5524 That's called common sense lol
@@shah5524 His twitter got taken down because they only just realised he was ban evading from ages ago and his insta got banned earlier this year because he called someone a fat cunt.
What did he say about Khabib? He's the karen of MMA? Who tf actually cares?
I knew it wasn’t just when close caption couldn’t even figure out wtf he was saying
What I learned, is that YT subtitles are surprisingly good and useful.
Muay Thai is a standing sport, i think that comes with a certain amount of honour. Once your opponent falls or is swept you stop and allow them to get up.
Just to clear up what he's saying. Muay Thai absolutely does work in MMA and the UFC since it's been proven BUT the stance itself (elbows up, 1 knee up as a defence with all your balance on 1 leg) invites the take down, since your balance leg is your single point of failure. The art itself is very effective and destructive, just the stance needs to be worked into an MMA format for it to be effective.
Most consider Muay Thai along with Jiu Jitsu the core of MMA (strong striking with strong grappling and submissions). Ofc this is not the rule but most find this to make you a well rounded fighter, you can branch off into other areas to fill in the gaps of your martial arts.
Well said bro I understand what you’re saying. Oss
Agreed! Look at Jon Jones, Muai Thai, and Jiu Jitsu
@@sdmdrums9275 jones is a wrestling guy
I feel like Muay Thai and wrestling work better together, especially Greco Roman. The clinch carries over to all types of wrestling very well (especially Greco Roman though), and you basically know how to handfight for a good position in the Muay Thai clinch, so you learn throws, takedowns, defenses, and there is a little difference in the clinch, but it is mostly positioning, so Muay Thai helps you a lot with wrestling (except the traditional Muay Thai stance doesn’t work well with wrestling, but it isn’t hard to modify it.
@@JustFun-fe7ux true, i was just agreeing with his point
I came to the comments to see conversations about Thai fighters in mma… I totally understood everything he said
Perfect explanation
I imagine you would have adapt your styles to match MMA. So, you could never be a purest at anything and would have to mesh your styles together to be affective. There have many great fighters with a strong Muay Thai base. Anderson Silvia, Carlos Condit, and shogun Rua we're some of my favorites.
The hint is in the first M of MMA.
The Chute Boxe gym was mainly a Muay Thai gym in the 90s-00s.
And Edson Barboza!!!
Don't forget Jose Aldo, who adapted MT skills for mma very well
Your writing is a disgrace.
I practice My Tie i almost strangled myself and still can't get the loop neck twist the thumb tuck inside chin up move.
It's a proper skill kid i tell yah.
Trust me man, you’ll get it. It’s hard to keep confidence when you miss that thumb tuck but once it clicks you’ll be doing it with your eyes closed.
Wtf is my tie 😂
Stick on bow tie mate
I practice mai Thai 🥃
@@rickydenyer49 no one knows what your tie is
Thank God you can turn on captions
One thing I love about muay Thai is you can go there and train with Saenchai and it won't cost you a leg. Very down to earth humble legends.
1FC has big time muay thai fighters fight also in mma in addition to MT bouts with 4 ounce gloves
British Muay Thai is some of the best in the world & the reason Paddy has this knowledge & outlook is because where he is from, his trainers would have had to travel to Thailand a lot in the early days to get the real training in. This is why britain is well known for its Muay Thai.
The same goes for my area of the Uk, my coaches & the majority of the other coaches in the surrounding counties were the ones travelling to the source in the 80’s & 90’s. That’s why the knowledge & respect is there.
The Viral European, I agree with what you said but outside of Thailand who do you think is the second best country in the world for Muay Thai?
@@shaneashby5890 so, do you mean aside from thailand which country is the best and then which country is 2nd best? so, which country is 3rd best including thailand?? your question is very poorly worded.
@@TheNemesis442 Thailand is undeniably number one, it’s their sport. I would never insult Thai people by saying something so insulting. And is not what I meant. I was simple asking in your opinion who do you think is the second best country in the world for Muay Thai after Thailand?
@@shaneashby5890 that doesn't answer my question, learn to read.
@@TheNemesis442 Firstly, I was talking to the viral european. Secondly, the only one here who can’t read is you. I’m only responsible for what I write, not for what you understand. Thirdly, come insult me to my face.
He's sporting that Johnny Lawrence mullet that oozes "mercy is for the weak."
From the midwest United States and understood every word that was said clearly. Really can't comprehend why people don't know what he is saying.
Paddy knows his stuff…
As a native English speaker, I love that there are other native English speakers who I can't really understand without subtitles.
wtf? english is my third language and i can easily understand paddy
He sounds like English mixed with Dutch
@@jonan2199 well dutch is my first language and i dont think so at all :P. Sounds like gaelic or welsh.
I had to rewatch this three times before I realized it was in a different language
MT uses a "squared up" stance because they want to be able to throw kicks from either leg. Boxing uses more of a narrow stance because they want to protect themselves and narrow the target area. I'm less familiar with jujitsu/wrestling stances but generally for MMA I'd assume some adjustment on the fly is frequently necessary. That's part of the reason why fights sometimes look "sloppy" compared to the execution of techniques used in single-style matchups like boxing, kickboxing or grappling.
No it looks sloppy b/c a fight is sloppy. MMA is closest to an actual fight.
The stance thing is spot on, I was a boxer and some MMA guys and to be fair Thai guys used to come to our gym to brush up on boxing and spar boxers. Whilst the guys were often tough and had good hands the squared up stance made them so easy to hit (creates a much bigger target than the more side on) and also other than a few 'freaks' badly reduced their power, as often compared to a boxer they were 'arm punchers'. This is why Conor was considered a puncher in MMA but Floyd said he had no real power in boxing terms. Let me get this clear, no disrespect to MMA as in a cage a decent MMA guy would take me down and choke me out quick (unless I could land something big first) and a decent Thai fighter would wreck my damn legs 🤣
You will find that with most kickboxers that they are not that good with their hands but you will find the same holds true for Boxers that do play with Kickboxing.
Cinir was a decent amateur boxer ling before he started mma but that fight was fixed
Bro any fighter at all would kill you immediately. You're a nobody lmao
The Muay Thai stance you're referring to sounds like Dutch Kickboxing which is basically boxing mixed with Kyokushin Karate: some gyms wrongly call it Muay Thai because people like Ramon Dekkers and Rob Kaman travelled to Thailand to beat the Thais at their own game. Dekkers, Kaman, Bas Rutten, Peter Aerts and Alistair Overeem use it. If you want to see true Muay Thai in the UFC then that'd have to be Mauricio 'Shogun' Rua who is an absolute savage in MMA
@@ronki23 interesting, didn't know that and assume all those Dutch guys were Thai practitioners. Surely the traditional Thai style is still waay more squared up than a boxing stance though, just for the ability to throw a kick particular from tye back leg?
I would argue that there are different kinds of muay thai stances depending on the gym and style, that actually works in MMA. You see quite a few top Thais fighting in ONE under MMA rules lately, and some like Stamp Fairtex has been doing really good. Nice strong stance that is wider and lower than the stereotypical muay thai stance, powerful punches, kicks, and good takedown defence that leads to elbows on the opponents' back of the head.
Elbow to the back of the head is illegal in the UFC.
@@Juan800PimpBot good thing he's not talking about the UFC
The only one MMA fighter that successful made the crossover to ONE Muay Tai is:MM Demitrious Johnson! Dana tried to screw him and he was the GOAT!
I love Stamp but using woman’s mma to prove something works is pointless. They are still years behind where the men are. Also One isn’t all world beaters there. One, like Pride, is very careful with how many and what wrestlers they bring in. They are entertainment first and they are not loading the roster with wrestlers. At least not the best of the best. So you can strikers in the mix that wouldn’t make it in a wrestling heavy promotion. Given wrestling has been the most dominant you can’t really say they are going for the best fighters. This allows many of the countries with poor wrestling infrastructure to compete which is most of your Asian countries which have stronger striking cultures.
@@dperry203 They definitely do try to not let it become too much like UFC, and I agree with that move, they’re making themselves unique. More striking oriented but still has the grappling/wrestling element. That’s what draws a lot of UFC fans to them who likes to see both but don’t want to see a match with 80% of it being on the ground. Introducing Mighty Mouse into their roster was a good move too.
Hello, I am the father of a 7 year old boy who is very passionate about MMA and I would like to ask you what would be the order of the 4 basic sports to become a complete MMA fighter and I mean here Wrestling, Boxing, BJJ, Muay Thai. Which one should you start with? Should he do two at the same time? What is the order and how long should he focus on each sport? Thank you!
BOXING. Keep striking as a foundation
Dats clazy lad
The Rodtang vs Mighty Mouse fight about a month ago on One Championship was a good example of how Thai fighting doesn’t really work in mma. If you haven’t watched it it’s worth a watch.
it would work its has been done many times and so much more there is more than one stand u dont have a damn clue what ur talking about so plz dont try
That match is an example of a pure Muay Thai fighter vs a well-rounded MMA fighter. In that case, Thai fighting will not work as Rodtang's style can be countered by the different weapons that Demetrious have. Of course, Rodtang did try to switch his style using karate techniques but his ground game is absolutely zero.
Now if you're talking about an MMA fighter with Muay Thai as his main weapon... Then it would tell a different story. Same goes to an MMA fighter with Karate as main or even Jiu jutsu as main.
My point here is fighters who do not adapt different styles in their game would definitely lose. Thai fighting CAN WORK! Only if the style is incorporated with other styles too!
@@jonathanjuliman5628 I think people forget the the main point of mma is that its mixed and not pure. If you are a pure whatever stick to that type of fighting because by fighting other rules you just handicap yourself unless you adapt.
The first round Mighty Mouse was having trouble but the second round Rodtang stood no chance. He had no ground game and no defense against Demetrius.
It does work and is the base for a lot of mma striking. Like everything else though it needed some changes to suit mma that made it a bit less recognizable but if you know what to look for you'll see muay thai techniques all over mma fights
That's why Muay Thai is the best fight Sport in my opinion. It's not about the shit talk, it's not about all the drama, just pure skill and respect.
I teach karate myself. But Muay Thai I need to add into our curriculum. I own a dojo. The strikes just totally make sense. Karate has great footwork and timing. But I feel like karate needs that mix to work. It needs that harshness that Thai has. The reality of getting punched in the face.
I don't really have trouble understanding paddy, but then again I'm from lousiana and have heard cajuns speak 🤣🤣
Out of all the fighters I like paddy he down to earth. He has his character but he very respectful and real smart.
Exact quote from Ariel Helwani
Oh... Thank God here is subtitles