
Originally Posted by
Jason Mallory
In Tim's defense I think he meant he didn't see much authentic Muay Thai in America as it is taught in Thailand.
tim is right. having an american kickboxing background, I tell my students who come in and claim to have muay thai training, the first thing I ask is to let me see their back leg round kick. I'm amazed by the switch step that proceeds and telegraphs their intentions allowing me to either fade off of it safely or to shuffle in and jam it. there are a handful of guys in the U.S. qualified to teach muay thai, and the rest are just mimicing what they've seen in videos or in mma matches. Most of american kickboxing is deeply rooted in tkd, bill wallace, chuck norris, joe lewis, are some of your old school kickboxing guys who pioneered american style kickboxing. Joe lewis has extensive training in tkd, jkd, and parker kenpo. Truly one of the greatest fighters of all time ( and no, I am not talking about the boxer joe lewis). But don't let this discourage you, american kickboxing has a larger arsenal of weapons than traditional muay thai, adding the spinning kicks that as tim said are considered disrespectful in thailand. And spinning kicks are very effective from outside angles with a lot of power when excuted right. Just remember that in mma today, the ground game has taken a backseat to standup, as saw in this last pay per view. brilliant ground guys choosing to abandon their bread and butter, and choosing rather to stand and bang. problem is that there are less and less technical guys who truly understand proper footwork, and proper hand techniques combined to flow as they did before the big mma craze took hold.