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Top Female Muay Thai Fighters and Fights - Full Fight Video Thread


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Meksen said on facebook that she was being sabotaged the whole time and got robbed. Apparently someone backstage ran over her foot with a cart, a ringside doctor put disinfectant in her eyes, the other girl was headbutting without being penalized and the judges robbed her. A clash of heads did cut Meksen's nose really badly, but it didn't seem intentional to me. 

 

Not saying none of that happened because China is notoriously very difficult to win in, and can be inhospitable (stories told to be sure). But...if you haven't lost much in your life (and not fought people who can make you lose due to advantages), you don't really know what losing feels like, or why it happens. Fighters with almost impeccable records sometimes lack perspective, though on their own they can be great.

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Ticha vs Lisa, I think this is a WMC title fight at 51kg:

 

Lisa almost took that fight. Ticha wanted nothing to do with that right hand, and was starting to fade. But then in classic Thai female style she waited for the optimum moment and performed dominance brilliantly (that head jerk in the clinch was a thing of beauty in terms of dramatic impact and timing).

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Amy Pirnie vs Dakota Ditcheva - Yokkao | March 25th, 2017

The Yokkao broadcast version of this fight will be up eventually, but until then, this edit of their stream. And below a cut up of Amy's dominant trips and sweeps from the fight:

I can't emphasize enough how impressed I am with Amy. Everything here is very advanced. Her control of space is like fighting on another plane, and her clinch has so much solid technique, it isn't even a fair fight at that distance. Props to Dakota who is making her way and on her own path as a fighter, but Amy has put the work in over the years and it really shows.

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I'd love to see Amy and Loma fight. Clinch vs clinch with fighters who both use sweeps, trips and dumps.

 

Imo, Amy might win for other reasons (size advantage, crisp confident striking), but in the clinch it would be Loma. These kinds of trips Amy used work against people less familiar with clinch, those not raised with 1000s of hours of clinch where fundamental balance is established, whereas Loma's attack throws pretty much work against anyone. We'll see though, if Loma can throw Phetjee Jaa when they finally face, whenever that is, a fighter with a very firm base, that will be the proof of her throwing greatness.

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Amy Pirnie vs Dakota Ditcheva - Yokkao | March 25th, 2017

The Yokkao broadcast version of this fight will be up eventually, but until then, this edit of their stream. And below a cut up of Amy's dominant trips and sweeps from the fight:

I can't emphasize enough how impressed I am with Amy. Everything here is very advanced. Her control of space is like fighting on another plane, and her clinch has so much solid technique, it isn't even a fair fight at that distance. Props to Dakota who is making her way and on her own path as a fighter, but Amy has put the work in over the years and it really shows.

Tv version of the fight.

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This is only part of a round from Lookboonmee Gym's facebook page. 

 

https://www.facebook.com/lookboonmee/videos/1431915516879311/

 

Here's a video of Loma's fight against Petchnaree from last month. Her opponent was 5kg bigger than her as you can tell in the video, but skills count for more than size when you're at that level in the fight game. Our clinch master Loma shows you how to sweep and throw your opponent with style! Suphisara

 

 

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田嶋はる VS 小林愛三 ROAD TO KNOCK OUT.1 2017.5.10 のコピー
ROAD TO KNOCK OUT.1 2017.5.10
キックボクシングイベントKNOCK OUT(ノックアウト)公式サイト

This is Haru Tajima (red) vs Manami Kobayashi (blue). Haru was unceremoniously stripped of her WPMF 105 lb world title, which she had won from Duangdaonoi Looklangtan, when she found out through word of mouth that two Thais were fighting for it out of nowhere, Phetjee Jaa winning that title recently.

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WMC World Title fight ▶ Antonia Shevchenko VS Isa Tidblad Keskikangas

April 29, 2017 from the Muay Ying - มวยหญิง facebook page

 


 


 

Youtube

 

 


 

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Little Tiger (red) vs Koto Hiraoka (blue) - 45 kg 3 Rounds Krush Promotion - (Little Tiger is the WPMF 100 lb World Champion)

WOW! That was such an awesome fight! I wonder if there'll be a rematch because that was such a great match-up between the two! 

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Women's Fight Muay Thai World Championship | 2017.06.08 | Tisha Wor.Por.Sukhothai (THA) vs Fani Sasiprapagym (GRE)

Women's Fight Muay Thai World Championship | 2017.06.08 | Saosingh Mor.Rattanabundit (THA) vs Juliana Muaythaiacademy (BRA)

Women's Fight Muay Thai World Championship | 2017.06.08 | Fahseetong Sitsureung (THA) vs Claire Wor.Santai (AUS)

Women's Fight Muay Thai World Championship | 2017.06.08 | Petchmaipa Mor.Krungthepthonburi (THA) vs KC Sinbimuaythai (USA)

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    • Really enjoyed this title fight between Jaroensook and Captainteam, a classic stand off between Muay Khao and Muay Femeu. Jaroensook is out of the Boon Lanna gym in Chiang Mai and Hill Tribe (and ethnic minority in the North) which has had some modest success in Muay Thai, and Captainteam is Kru Thailand's son, and one of the more femeu specialists in the sport now. I didn't really know Jaroensak so the first round mislead me. He looked really comfortable leading with hands and I thought he was going to be a Muay Maat fighter (Boon Lanna has had a few aggressive Muay Maat fighters), but in the second round he went straight into Muay Khao persistence hunting, never rushing, just getting positive entry positions (better than in the first round) and starting to foil TeamCaptain's excellent throw-game. I'm pretty much always going to subconsciously watch for Muay Khao vs the femeu specialist, so nothing against TeamCaptain (love Kru Thailand!), it was just great to see that classic match up and the dynamics of yore. Also the finish - which looked borderline foul-ish, but clean enough - came out of nowhere in a way that is exactly how Muay Khao style works. You just start slowly degrading the ruup of the femeu fighter, not really winning the point fighting game, not even looking like you are having an effect yet, but then suddenly a door opens, the ruup is broken and open just for a moment and your "doh" (your continuous rhythms) just take the opening almost unconsciously.    It's also kind of cool to see Jaroensak achieve some clinch position success with a variety of Long Clinch, a style of clinch somewhat perfected by Tanadet Tor Pran.49. Below is a film study I edited together of his approach: This is an article we put out on Tanadet's Long Clinch style with video and screenshots.  Jaroensak doesn't lay out quite like Tanadet, and doesn't have full, wide manipulative base, but several times he got very strong positions in the clinch passing into Long Clinch dynamics for a few beats. Tanadet is Hill Tribe and from Chiang Mai, so I wonder if there was some influence or cross-over? He used to additionally train at the original Lanna Muay Thai, the gym Boon's gym has grown out of. You can find Tanadet's Muay Thai Library sessions here where he teaches the Long Clinch technique and style: #56 Tanadet Tor. Pran49 - Mastering Long Clinch (63 min) watch it here This is one of the most interesting and, if mastered, dominant clinch positions one can use, and the entire session is devoted to it. I filmed with young Long Clinch master Tanadet, and discover all the small refinements he created that turned what for many fighters is just a transitional position, into an entire system of attack. This is a rare session, capturing a little known and used clinch system.
    • There can be no doubt that Thailand's culture is a hybriding culture, a synthesizing culture that has grown from the root weaving diversity from influences around the world, reaching well back to when the Ayuthaya Kingdom was the commercial hub for the entire mercantile region, major influences stretching in trade all the way to China and all the way to Europe, if not further, while - and this is important - still maintaining its own Siamese (then Thai) character, a character that was both in great sympathy towards these integrative powers, but also in tension or contest with them. This being said, I think there is a rather profound misunderstanding of the nature of Thailand's traditional Muay Thai and the meaning and value of its underpinnings in the culture, when seen from the West, and this is the (at times) assumed majority of thinking of fighting as "labor", and the rewards or marking of that labor as some kind of "wage". This is often the conceptual starting place from which Westerners think about the value and possible injustices of Thailand's Muay Thai, often boiled down to the question: Is the fighter getting a "fair wage"?  I do think there are strong and important wage oriented justice scales that can be applied, but mostly these are best done in the contemporary circumstances of Thailand's new commodification of Muay Thai itself...that is to say, to turn traditional commitments and performances INTO labor, that is to say, to capitalize it. It is then that the question of labor and wage holds the best ground. 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To be sure, Capitalism is deeply interwoven into the fabric of Thai culture, and has been for much of the 20th century, but this weave is perhaps best understood terms of how Siam/Thailand's traditional Muay Thai is of the threads of greatest resistance to Capitalism itself (along with its atomizing, individualizing, labor/wage concept of human beings). When we think of the values that not only motivate fighters, but also structure and give meaning to their fighting, at least across the board of the Muay Thai subculture, we really are not in the realm of individualizied workers who sell their labor within a labor market. (This mischaracterization is perhaps most egregious when discussing Child and Youth fighting from a Western perspective, where it is very commonly repictured as "child labor" (ignoring the degree to which such terminology completely recasts the entire question of the meaning and value of fighting itself, within Thai culture). 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