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Fight 244 - Sylvie Petchrungruang vs Jomkwan Klangsangsarakam


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I just watched the fight video with the voice over commentary. ( I saw it live too. I missed the 1st round live but saw it from 2nd round middle on)

congratulations!! 🎊 

( no further  comments Bc I’ve only been doing MT for 5 months so I have no real insight or in-depth knowledge. I just enjoy watching and listening. And learning if im

luck enough) 

 

who is the other fighter that is on here that you said fought really well even though it was her 2nd fight only? Congrats to her also.

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On 7/28/2019 at 9:29 AM, MadelineGrace said:

 

who is the other fighter that is on here that you said fought really well even though it was her 2nd fight only? Congrats to her also.

That was me 😊.

Wow what a great mention makes me so so happy!

I also saw the fight in person (well obviously) and to people who were not there, the video does not make the size difference justice. I was so surprised by the sudden KO because Sylvie looked so much smaller and I remember thinking that "jeez so much power in that small body". Sylvie arrived during fight 4 I think and she was fight 8. And they drove all the way from Pattaya. It's a pretty insane thing to do, so many hours in the car and then arrive an hour before your fight. 

Her opponent's corner man you see in the video ended up wrapping my hands and helping me on with my gloves. He was very cool and calm and great to be around to calm fight nerves. And the cat was super cute. 

 

Edited by LengLeng
Elaboration
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Congrats Sylvie and Congrats LengLeng! :)

 

Jomkwan fought well and aggressive but I felt like beginning in round 3 the fight was beginning to take a somewhat visible toll on her. When she was down so long in the end I couldn't help but wonder if maybe one of her ribs had cracked or something. I once saw a fighter KOd with a broken rib which looked similar. Hope she recovers soon! I enjoyed watching her as well as Sylvie!

Those knees were the bomb once again! Well aimed, powerful snipershots :)

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On 7/28/2019 at 9:29 AM, MadelineGrace said:

I just watched the fight video with the voice over commentary. ( I saw it live too. I missed the 1st round live but saw it from 2nd round middle on)

congratulations!! 🎊 

( no further  comments Bc I’ve only been doing MT for 5 months so I have no real insight or in-depth knowledge. I just enjoy watching and listening. And learning if im

luck enough) 

 

who is the other fighter that is on here that you said fought really well even though it was her 2nd fight only? Congrats to her also.

LengLeng, oh man... her knees and elbows were awesome. Her opponent was also very strong with punches and I heard a few of them even from far away from the ring. It wasn't close though, LengLeng blew the fight out. Awesome, awesome performance, really.

 

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5 minutes ago, Xestaro said:

Congrats Sylvie and Congrats LengLeng! 🙂

 

Jomkwan fought well and aggressive but I felt like beginning in round 3 the fight was beginning to take a somewhat visible toll on her. When she was down so long in the end I couldn't help but wonder if maybe one of her ribs had cracked or something. I once saw a fighter KOd with a broken rib which looked similar. Hope she recovers soon! I enjoyed watching her as well as Sylvie!

Those knees were the bomb once again! Well aimed, powerful snipershots 🙂

Thanks so much. Jomkwan is such a great fighter, I really wish I could see more of her... when not against me.

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2 hours ago, LengLeng said:

Her opponent's corner man you see in the video ended up wrapping my hands and helping me on with my gloves. He was very cool and calm and great to be around to calm fight nerves. And the cat was super cute. 

 

Ah! That's cool that Jomkwan's corner helped you get ready. I arrived during her teammates fight, which I think was bout #2. I was setting up my mat and talking to the promoter, so I didn't really get to watch her in the ring but saw that she was dealing with some serious leg kicks afterward.

A few of your knees had both my husband and my cornerman going "oooiiii" as we watched from our mat 🙂

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2 hours ago, Sylvie von Duuglas-Ittu said:

Ah! That's cool that Jomkwan's corner helped you get ready. I arrived during her teammates fight, which I think was bout #2. I was setting up my mat and talking to the promoter, so I didn't really get to watch her in the ring but saw that she was dealing with some serious leg kicks afterward.

A few of your knees had both my husband and my cornerman going "oooiiii" as we watched from our mat 🙂

That was fight 3. I thought she (Bangfaiknam) was amazing and very surprised she didn't get the win. Also big size difference. 

And thank you thank you thank you. I feel I don't deserve the praise but considering the judges decision it really helps to hear. On my way back to Bangkok with a long list of issues to work on. 

Best of luck for tonight. Hope you get another KO. 

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14 hours ago, LengLeng said:

That was me 😊.

Wow what a great mention makes me so so happy!

And the cat was super cute. 

 

Congratulations LengLeng 

id love to watch yours on video too if it’s available 

 

( how did I miss a cat? 🐈🤣 I do love cats) 

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    • This was good on Reddit a few years ago:   The Game Logic of the Danced Off 5th Round in Thailand's Muay Thai I was having a great conversation with Sylvie about the nature of Thailand's Muay Thai this morning, and why when you have the lead in the fight, traditionally, you begin to retreat and defend that lead, instead of marching forward and adding more pressure. You ostensibly "perform your lead" by taking defensive tactics, which to many parts of the world looks like the opposite of "fighting". In a comment on Reddit I was trying to explain this phenomena through how someone like Usain Bolt will ease up and coast into the last 15 meters, in a kind of dominance while everyone else is burning hard, because of a kind of excess, "I don't even have to punch it to beat you". This is a big part of the Muay Thai aesethetic. You can read that comment here: https://www.reddit.com/r/MuayThai/comments/pxtv2x/i_think_people_do_not_understand_how_thailands/hesx7fs/?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 The reason for this is that Thailand's Muay Thai is about dominance, not aggression. Aggression can be a tool toward dominance, but it's only one tool in the tool box. A lot of this stems from the fact that Thailand's Muay Thai evolved to express a Buddhistic culture (and a reason why I'd argue that turning MT promotions into hyper-aggressive shows can contain a hidden cultural betrayal), but as you can see from the Usain Bolt analogy, in the West we can understand this kind of "ease into the tape" signature of superiority. Even in Western boxing we can admire the artful boxer who just toys with his opponent's aggression with an artful jab, evasiveness or movement (think Ali or Mayweather), its not all that far from parts of our own sports values. It's enough to say this led to a really interesting analogy Sylvie gave me regarding the much derided 5th round dance off in Thailand's Muay Thai. Let's say right off there are admittedly big problems with the 5th round dance off. It's safe to say that it is an aspect of Muay Thai that has become distorted and exaggerated, and not only produces unexciting ends to fights, its become the signature of big name gambling's powerful influence in the sport. This post is really about the underlying logic of the dance off, and besides its current flaws, what positive values it is expressing, helping explain how it is also viewed. Why do two fighters dance off the 5th round at times? Why does a fighter who is behind not keep trying, keep fighting?! When one fighter is signaling an insurmountable lead, why isn't the other fighter "heroically" relentless in pursuit? Chess Gives A Clue Sylvie's analogy comes from Chess. 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In these cases its explained that the chess board of the fight, the position that fighters are responding to, involves the heavy thumb of powerful gamblers. You touch gloves not only because of the "position" of how the fight was fought, but also understanding the powers that shape the fight as well. You can see that the lead in front of you is of a type that you would look stupid if you fought against it. You would look like you didn't understand the game and how it is won. How the 5th round is fought has changed over the decades, to be sure. It has stretched too far into a direction, but the logic of the danced round remains the same, that of the Chess match. Taking Ideology Into Context Too I also think that there are cultural elements that make this hard to read from a Western perspective. In the West we have a big celebration of the Little Guy. In the mythology of the West we have the story of the insignificant man who through "hard work" overcomes all odds against him. 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In "seeing the mate" in advance you to some degree transcend your situation by demonstrating that you understand it, you see the position on the board from above, you have that IQ...but you are also trapped by it, you accept THIS loss, in the name of having perhaps a better chance to win the next time. This isn't to say that dancing off the 5th round is the right thing to do, in any particular fight, or even to say that the practice of the 5th round in today's Muay Thai doesn't need to substantively change, it does. But it's to explain the logic of it. Today's Muay Thai in Thailand is trying to take the big name Gambler's thumb off the scale, not an easy task because gambling itself is woven into the seriousness of matches, a fighter's identity, and the passion for Muay Thai itself. It's instead to try and explain the nature of some of the thinking that is beneath a 5th round performance. It is not just fighters taking a break "because they fight so much". 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