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Archived - Gila Muay Thai - May 8 1975 | Preserve The Legacy Project (magazine fragment, jpegs)


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Gila Muay Thai May 8, 1975

quality jpegs of the edition from Sylvie's beginning collection, if anyone can translate (machine or otherwise), comments welcome on content. Insight into the era. You can follow this sub-forum and get email alerts for any new postings. If you share images from these captures please credit the Muay Thai Library Preserve The Legacy project and this forum. Any support for the project by subscription is seriously appreciated.

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front cover (Pudpadnoi, possibly winning the King's Fighter of the Year?) Inside there is photospread coverage of his 1975 win over Ruengsak on May 2nd.

GilaMuayThai-May81975-MuayThaiLibraryProject(1).thumb.jpg.5a1554c22d3ac7657802ba8827924200.jpg

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    • This is somewhat far afield, but also somewhat interesting under the notion that there are fundamentally two kinds of economies working in tension, perhaps even underpinning the logic of Western cultural development as well. It occurs that this wage vs prize difference is found in the analyzing logic of Christianity itself, in particular in Romans 6:23 "For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord." ( τὰ γὰρ ὀψώνια τῆς ἁμαρτίας θάνατος, τὸ δὲ χάρισμα τοῦ θεοῦ ζωὴ αἰώνιος ἐν Χριστῷ Ἰησοῦ τῷ κυρίῳ ἡμῶν.) I've never really thought about just how much this theological picture is a contrast between "wages" and "gift" (the in-surplus-of-earned prize). Opsonia is literally the payment of wages, a fee, a monetary payment. Transcending this horizon of labor and its wage, long before our modernities of capitalism, is the "gift", which is bestowed in this logic, by the Master, in a hierarchy relation. Key to the Christian logic is that one cannot "earn" heaven/salvation/eternal Life. It is only with the hierarchy proper of putting oneself beneath the authority of the "lord" can the gift/prize be bestowed. It perhaps explains how Christianity conceptions developed in parallel with rising Capitalist wage/labor identities, forming a strong enough tension with the material realities of labor markets and wages. 
    • I'm more of a grappler too. It took me about three years to adjust my mind to Muay Thai.  It's easier to feel swamped in something unfamiliar, plus large gloves feel all wrong when I parry or trap.  I also found that I'd sink my weight when I should go light as an opponent gets close.  Initially, I was only happy clinching or going for sweeps and trips.   My style is still pretty unconventional but I can go a round with a smaller or less trained opponent and not get hit once now and then.  Set up strikes with shovel kicks and low kicks, sweeps, and grabbing their guard.  Glove blocks use your grappling skills too.   Grabbing someones guard and using your knees is good too.  
    • Sylvie's trained a lot with Namsaknoi over the last few months at Singmawin, and even sparred and clinched with Jongangdam a bit. It was very cool to watch Jongangdam's style in the fight, never having seen him fight. He fought with great timing, and managed distance in ways that Namsaknoi (who instructs at Singmawin) teaches, with rhythm and off-beats and lowish power accuracy, adding in teeps and jabs. It's a great fight because he's forced to adjust when Kom (red) smartly decided to refuse to fight in space where he's at a disadvantage. I love how Jongangdam does not trade bite-down combo for combo, against the Muay Maat attack, but is constantly using his eyes. I also kinda love his slurvy left hook in the first few rounds which looks like it has both quickness and hidden weight. link timestamped to 36:21  
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    • I'm sorry I don't really know. Sylvie is in touch with a collector and this person is where she buys hers, but there are not multiple copies available. Maybe someone else would know of a larger source.
    • Where can I find some physical old Muay Thai magazines? I am located in Bangkok. Thanks
    • I can only comment on Perth. There's a very active Muay Thai scene here - regular shows. Plenty of gyms across the city with Thai trainers. All gyms offer trial classes so you can try a few out before committing . Direct flights to Bangkok and Phuket as well. Would you be coming over on a working holiday visa? Loads of work around Western Australia at the moment. 
    • Hi, I'm considering moving to Australia from the UK and I'm curious what is the scene like? Is it easy to fight frequently (proam/pro level), especially as a female? How does it compare to the UK? Any gym recommendations? I'll be grateful for any insights.
    • You won't find thai style camps in Europe, because very few people can actually fight full time, especially in muay thai. As a pro you just train at a regular gym, mornings and evenings, sometimes daytime if you don't have a job or one that allows it. Best you can hope for is a gym with pro fighters in it and maybe some structured invite-only fighters classes. Even that is a big ask, most of Europe is gonna be k1 rather than muay thai. A lot of gyms claim to offer muay thai, but in reality only teach kickboxing. I think Sweden has some muay thai gyms and shows, but it seems to be an exception. I'm interested in finding a high-level muay thai gym in Europe myself, I want to go back, but it seems to me that for as long as I want to fight I'm stuck in the UK, unless I switch to k1 or MMA which I don't want to do.
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