He gets his ass kicked. He learns from it. And he shows it. He explicitly points out that Muay Thai master was holding back. Jesse, you have my respect.
What catches me the most about this video is how humble you are. I've practiced BJJ, Krav Maga, and now Muay Thai, and with each, you find the same, the ego, the pride, and the inability to learn from your opponent, especially in defeat. You, kind Sir, embody the spirit of Martial Arts. It was a pleasure to watch.
I just got my brown in KENPO!.... "standing jiu-jitsu" is the guide book!...to each its about what works I THINK FOR THE PERSON! IMO!. me I'm pretty witty improve! [KENPO'S benefit] then structure jiu-jitsu practices. See it's what u FEEL!. I RESPECT ALL but!!! BUSHIDO everyone IS A BLACK BELT or their BROTHER or UNCLE is a black BELT etc etc etc! Sure sure Than why does 98% Don't actually practice!.... SENSAI. TOLD ME I HAVE 5 CLASSES THIS WEEK!..... HEY JIU-JITSU GUYS! [HE teaches a FEMALE DEFENSE] he wants me to get beat up by woman! "Sure MASTER. punish me ok!"
You are right! The first time I submitted a guy ( for the record he don't want let me do it) he seeked revenge in red fury..after few days the master stopped him and tell him:whe are here to learn..in victory and defeat..but most important..he's not your enemy..sometimes you win..sometimes you lose..the life is made of that..but you got to respect..always..
400 fights, at that level, since he has 9!? With that much experience his Ring IQ must be insane! he can probably read people so damn well he can tell what they're going to do before they even do...... All the small little details of fighting that most people never learn that take a lifetime to master, he's got them! mad mad respect! imagine being able to learn from someone like this
The purpose of ritual are; 1. Thankful of their teachers 2. Prepare the mind or concentration 3. Warm up body 4. Servey and monitoring the fighting area.
@@ftd7435 this is even further excentuated when you look specifically at the ram muay in the wai kru ram muay, a lot of the dances are meant to be artistic representations of Buddhistic spiritual stories and such, and incredibly popular one in thailand is the creatiom story about Garuda(I think thats the spelling, its the eagle one) which is a creation story borrowed from Indian culture.
GREAT VIDEO!! As a boxer I once challenged a Karate Practitioner! It went back and forth.Both of us landing devastating shots but his low kicks and kicks to the body were killing me.I admitted defeat and joined a Kickboxing gym soon after! We became good friends and still train together till today.
Fun Fact about weird dance/ritual before fighting: It's called ram muay or wai khru. The wai is a traditional Thai greeting with the palms together as a sign of respect. Khru is the Thai word means 'teacher'. Ram is the Thai word for dancing in classical style, and muay means 'boxing'. The full term can therefore be translated as 'war-dance saluting the teacher', but Thai speakers generally shorten it either to wai khru or ram muay. The ram muay shows respect and gratitude to the boxer's teacher, parents, and ancestors. In the old days when boxers fought in front of the royalty, the ram muay also paid respect to the king. Upon entering the ring, fighters circle the ring in a counter-clockwise direction and pray at each corner. They bow their heads at every corner three times in salutation to Buddha, Dharma, and the sangha of monks. They then commence the ram muay, the movements of which are said to be based on Hanuman(The india super monke). The ram muay is a personal ritual, ranging from the very complex to the very simple, and often contains clues about who trained the fighter and where the fighter is from. The ram muay is accompanied by music, providing a rhythm to the boxer's movements. Btw, muay thai was a traditional martial arts.
Indian wrestlers also worship Hanuman the monkey God. They also use tools (på svenska: stora påkar) to stregthen the arms similar to some okinawan tools. There is historical evidence that chinese where influensed by indian martial arts that went through the Himalaya (including white crane qigong "dayan" which went through Himalaya and influenced kung fu, long boxing, taiji). The indians mixed their own styles with greek styles from mesopotania and Alexander the great.
Loved how you respected both arts, this is not the typical video about what's the best art. It's about beeing humble and learning from the other. Great channel.
is amazing how the champion doesn't even look like it, at least in the physical way. looks more like the normal guy you would cross everyday, and yet the guy is a beast. so the lesson here: never judge a book by its appearance. great video, Jesse!
The voices he produces are for lowering the tension while sparring. Sometimes Thai box sparring gets a bit too agressive so fighters make '"funny" sounds to show that they are still relaxed
Thats a big whole lie. Its typical grunts just search for muay thai grunts on youtube That have NOTHING to do with deescalating why are you saying that No Thai on this world that practice will laugh if you make this sounds
@@tamo9659 I am a lifelong muay thai practitioner and at least in scotland there is zero reason for those noises other than culture. Anyone saying otherwise is disingenuous or hasn't trained.
I like that Jesse turns everything into a learning experience. He doesn't get frustrated or angry. He asks questions because he wants to learn. Zero ego and I respect that greatly.
Jesus, when Poonnasit came in at 4:21 with his bag he looked like an average asian coming straight out a supermarket. Humble and inconspicous, but a killer in the ring when things get serious. Awesome.
Yep you got it right, the mentality for each hit in Muay Thai is to trespass the other person's body part, so they use body weight, tempo and everything handy to accomplish that.
Reading this made my brain go aaaaaall the way back to my childhood when I learned one meanings of kata Gekisai, which was basically "attack and destroy."
I've trained in both disciplines. Ultimately Karate focuses on speed, while Muay Thai focuses on delivering power with each strike. Muay Thai seems to be more practical in a street fight, with more weapons.
Which one did you prefer and which would you say was better or more rounded? I’ve trained in Thai, however my gf is a Karate 3rd Dan. I understand the basics of karate and that it is more focussed on speed than Thai.
@@martynodonnell8467 personally, I like Thai. I think, in a street fight it’s more effective. Karate is great too, but it takes years of dedicated to become a good Karatéka, while training in Thai can produce results faster. Knowing both would be best.
@@extremelucky1 yeah Karate practitioners tend to have more longevity. Perhaps it’s to do with it not being as taxing, not focusing on fighting in ring and being in top condition as much as learning the art. Thai practitioners tend to not have as much longevity. However due to it being a lot more simpler and easier to pick up, it tends to be quicker to learn. In saying that I have a close friend who took Thai, with proper discipline and dedication, for over 20 years, who turned pro. Therefore there are exceptions.
7:50 the noises are a tradition. Usually in competitions and fighting, it’s meant to be somewhat fun. The noises are usually like Ooh-wayy, in English it would be more like complements to your opponent
When you said "... and restore the honor of Karate" I had to smile. I just knew what was coming. Your videos are so awesome, dude. I just found you and can't stop binge-watching.
The fact that he can make such seemingly calm, innocent, and comical noises whilst easily destroying a bigger opponent just makes him seem 10x more awesome.
It's hard to explain what those sounds mean, but the best way I can put it in words... it's like an acknowledgement of a technique being used. Like, when a good kick is thrown out. "Oooweei!!!!" Almost like the Karate "Osu!" but more casual.
@@1Invinc its common in thai culture "ouwieiiii" "ouuueei" its like "wow" but it is used here as like a joke because when they fought he was mainly just joking around im pre sure
Dear Jesse! Thanks to you this video inspired me to start my Muay Thai career in the Netherlands, i've been in my first training this week, if i will be a world champion im going to mention you, as the man who started all this. Thank you
I really like how Poonnasit tried to match Jesse's level in the spar, and it was only when Jesse showed that he was stronger than expected that he decided to go harder. Really shows the respect muay thai practitioners have for their sparring partner.
The first time I was allowed to spar in Muay Thai at my gym, my sparring partner was one of our competitive fighters and he was an incredible sparring partner. My gym doesn't allow actual sparring until you have been training for at least 3-4 months and I was excited to finally spar and put to practice everything I had learned. My partner and I went back and forth doing 4 for 4 and I landed a few clean strikes and got a little cocky and stepped up the intensity. As soon as I did that he was keen to let me know I was out of place and matched my intensity and put me in my place real quick lol. @@lemyoboi
well, the point of his video, or rather the message he wanted to bring across, was that despite our different styles it is more important what unites us than what sets us apart!
@@amoreazione3563 exactly. And that karate is really not great for fighting but more conditioning 😂 Not saying it can’t be used cause GSP in the ufc used karate a ton but he also mixed it up with other styles so it worked great for him.
@Just Smoking Boxing is even better. Most muay thai practicioners dont have good boxing. And when youre out there, in a bar, wearing your skinny jeans, you cant throw proper kicks or stuff.
Hi Jesse, the “OO WEEH” sounds are typical of Thai fighters during sparring. Those sounds are meant to prevent a tense atmosphere and keep the sparring relaxed and relatively light. So when you hit your opponent, or when you get hit, you make an “OWAY” sound to show your opponent your not getting emotional or anything.
THe most frightening part is that he looks just like anyone else, he should be forced by law to wear a sign that reads "danger: can kick your head off if pissed"
He’s actually THANKING his teacher because we were taught that Muay Thai is a weapon of friends and enemies. In combat your enemy but outside combat your friends.
I love this new generation of Karate practitioners who are venturing out into the worlds of Muay Thai, BJJ, MMA trying to learn and evolve. It's so refreshing after decades of snobby dismissiveness. I also love the humility of being able to showcase what a beast somebody from another style is without feeling like it's a threat to all of your own hard work. Much respect Jesse.
Jesse is a True martial artist. He practices his art with passion, loves it but is open to other ideas. It isn't just about what style you train in, it is also about the person and what they bring to the art.
One of the biggest problems with most martial arts that take a lateral stance such as karate, boxing and taekwondo for example is how the lead leg remains extended at all times, Muay Thai has an advantage over such methods because while taking such a wide stance does allow you to generate more power when throwing from the hip (especially when you sit on your punches) doing so unfortunately comes at a cost when you're in front of a competent muay thai practitioner, in a lateral stance it leaves your lead leg constantly out there open to inside and outside leg kicks because all your weight is being distributed down the center of your body, in muay thai we stand with our shoulders square horizontally and the lead foot is not being placed more than a foot away from the back leg where all the weight is centered i'd say 80 percent of your weight is moved to the back leg, you can see how the muay thai champ can keep his front leg raised because of it quite a lot because of this which allows him to use his front leg like a jamming stick to keep the distance between you any time he feels you're going to close the distance, this is something muay thai truly excels at and probably one of the most effective aspects of the art itself which imo is revolutionary ... the bouncing of the lead leg up and down also acts as a sort of spring which provides quicker reaction time when you need to check leg kicks or deliver a strong front leg teep (muay thai equivalent of a front push kick), you can also generate huge momentum when you eventually plant the front foot to deliver a back leg round house or are devastating knee when your opponent is coming in for an attack.
That's why in modern kyokushin almost no one uses wide stance and people are taught how to perform the techniques from basic MMA short stance. Because not only in sports, but also in real fight it makes you much less vulnerable. But wide stance still can help if you are dealing with boxer, for example, as it increases your range and piercing power.
At the same time, I feel like a wide stance allows you to move backwards quicker and avoid the kick itslef, while with a muay thai stance if you don't see it coming is harder to dodge. That's a feeling I've gotten from sparring with guys that had practiced taekwondo or karate. Or maybe, you know, they were just better than me xD
@@KARATEbyJesse the Front Kick is performed with the Rear Leg. The Snap Kick is performed with the Lead Leg. Is there anything like the Snap Kick within the Karate family? (also these are called Teeps when you push instead of kick)..
Did the gentleman arrive at the gym carrying a shopping bag for his gear? No fancy gym bling for a Muay Thai champion, a Lumpinee champion no less. Humble, beautiful people 🙏
If you train 3 days a week for 4 months straight in muay thai, you can easily destroy almost anyone in a fight if they haven’t learned themselves a martial art, doesn’t matter how big or strong they are, muay thai is BRUTAL, especially when it comes to the kicks
@@pwnwin I learnt muay thaI in France in the 80's with Pud Pad Noï , a former world champion ; I could recognize the same kind attitude and strong/fluid/natural moves in this video : great !!
I went to Thailand with a friend who has many years of practicing boxing/kickboxing/muaythai (I only knew grappling). My friend payed for private lessons with a former champ. I was filming so that my friend could look at his technique afterwards. I was shocked. My friend is 90kg, extremely strong, agile and fast, a monster of a man, but this taiguy who weighed like 60-65kg just dominated my friend when they did some sparring. I could not believe it. It was like a giant was toying with a child. Over and over my friend got tricked, with feigns, unreal timing, trips that put my friend on the ground so the whole floor shock. It was like watching neo from the matrix.
@@savagedoritos6587 you cant body slam a guy that is a master in the clinch, and with throws, and minces your leg's meat, they know what they are doing bro, it is impossible to get close with them, or even touch them.
That's what sets champs and high level pros aside from the rest of us mortals. What they may lack in power (and maybe even technique) they'll compensate with fighting IQ, muscle memory, speed, timing and toughness. Thais specially, since they can rack hundreds of bouts in a career. Always respect them, even if you have 20 years of sparring under your belt. If you want to have any chance to beat them, you better be a pro or a champ too.
That was nice to watch, as I never understood the rivalries between styles. You and your opponent focus on sharing and respecting each other and that stands for every martial art in the world.
I know him personally while has was in Thailand and when he just got a Championship. One thing I can guarantee you is he is a nice guy but in the same time he is the devil fighter. He is a great fighter.
Wai Kru is one of the tricks. In addition to the remembrance of teachers 1. It's a meditation practice. 2. to warm the body 3. It is a walk to explore the condition of the field in the past, the field was a soil field. 4. Make him know which school you graduated from gym.
The dance/ritual done in Muay Thai is called a Wai Khru. Traditionally, it was to show respect to the four directions, the ancestors, the Muay Thai master, and the opponent, and the final move of the dance was emulating a shovel digging a grave to show they were ready to die. The Modern form was created in 1941, with essentially the same emanings.
Jesse, I’m so impressed by your approach to share your experiences with all the Martial Arts and it’s great to see humble Experts like this Thai guy. Thanks 🙏
The thing is Muay Thai is sooo brutal and efficient. It's powerful and practical especially in close quarters clinching. That's why I love it. Though I'm an Eskrima practitioner but I sorta pick some techniques from different martial arts for practicality.
Exactly i ditched my karate acting classes when i got man handled by a Muay Thai amateur who was just 6 months into his training, it was so embarrassing for me especially being a brown belt and training for years on end to master my art. Karate definitely has couple of good things to borrow from, but on it's own the modern karate is the least effective form of martial art. Also being black belt in karate is essentially ensuring your bragging rights and scaring away people who know nothing about fighting. Very few martial arts take into consideration how vicious people are in real streets fights, muay thai & Brazilian Ju Jitsu are one of them. In real world situations you would be knocked tf out before you are even done bragging about your black belt. I have been training in muay thai for last 8 months, and i feel it's too practical and deadly already, i can deal far more fatal damage to my opponents, karate seems like circus show in comparison.
@@Tate525 I have to disagree with you on some of your points. Karate if practiced correctly is really effective. It's significant striking can be deadly and it contains hits with every part of your body ( hands, knees, legs, elbows ) + it has some grappling and takedowns. Unfortunately modern Karate fights have very limited contact witch Indeed gives a Karate fighter a great disadvantage in a really situation because he isn't used in full contact hits ( neither giving them nor taking them). Muay Thai on the other hand still remains a very tough sport and it's athletes are generally much more prepared for a real situation. Overall I personally don't think any of these martial arts is superior, the outcome of a figth depends on the figthers and not the superiority of one's style over another's.
@@orestismilas7660 I am not talking about Okinawan Karate, the one that we get trained in modern mc dojo's is a Japanese karate and it's a living joke and embarrassment to it's original form. I really do no trust any dojo's in US and even in Japan. Karate that is not Okinawan, is probably not karate, it's so stripped out to the point it's really unrecognizable.
His advice to relax when sparring was a pointer to the moment you kicked his head. He was relaxed and you were anxious and stressed and that led to the kick landing. Probably he felt it and instinct took over. He again regained co.poaure when he laughed at the clinch.
@@BioTheHuman of course it isn't a serious fight, it isn't sanctioned, there's no referee, no medical professionals around, no corners, they aren't even fighting in the same fighting style, this is obviously just a friendly spar
@@BioTheHuman I spar at my kickboxing gym with guys who are composed and controlled and guys who think they are fighting an MMA PPV. Those guys get a taste of whatever they dish by anyone they dish it to and most of the time they don'tlike it. Sparring should be at 10-15%, it's to practice your techniques and to gain knowledge in reading other pll's moves. It's not to hurt each other.
The exact reason I like to spar good fighters is they can control their power and pace. You watch them beat the stuffing out of each other and then spar with a beginner and treat them gently.
I love (and kinda hate) to face good sparring partners. Its humbling and suddenly you need to mind your openings. But I also love to spar with noobs. Suddenly you get a chance to use those flashy low% techniques and maybe land them. And in grappling the most fun is to grapple weaker guys or girls. Because they cant "cheat" and use pure power to deny my moves. So I can relaxe. Use just a fraction of my strength, and focus on the Technical aspects. I mean, sure I try that with strong people to, but margins are so small and The flow just becomes different
Great video. I have trained with him and his twin brother in Thailand Hua Hin and in Sweden. Both are extremly humble and friendly but real killers when its time to fight. They have such an amazing control over their techniques so him and his twin ( their nicknames are "F" & "O") would actually spar for hours without shin protection and they would never injure eachother. Masters of the sport.
Muay Thai guy first walk in with jacket on look like a fruit sales men. Turns he is selling oranges, fresh, all pulp. Get it, get it, he can beat you to a pulp. (okay I put head down in shame and leave now)
I love how Poonnasit walked in with his grocery bag and his street clothes and looked totally non threatening. Just like any regular guy walking down the street. You would have no idea that being stuck in the ring with him would be a horror show.
You're so right...! It's about a familiar or tribal mentality. At least it SHOULD be. You want to BUILD UP fighters/warriors but not to destroy them. That's not the goal of sparring and training. There should be no place for "only ego". For sparring lessons and training fights a wise guy once said to me: "There are no winners and no loosers. There are only brothers! It doesn't matter who 'wins'. It's about fighting, doing well and learn".
When he is explaining near the end he seems like a normal guy, chill, maybe even a bit scrawny, imagine you go drinking one night in thailand and you feel a bit brave and you bump into him and you get into a fight with him. Never underestimate anybody…
This video is 3 years old at my time of watching. Muay Thai has been such a blessing in my life. It taught me so much about myself. It taught me how to be humble especially. Thank you for taking the time to learn about the art sir. 🙏 Thank you to Ajarn Rey for teaching me these lessons as well.
That the Muay Thai veteran with 400 fights would win and was holding back was pretty obvious, and we pretended not to know it for the sake of entertainment. We also pretended Jesse did really want to "defeat MT for revenge of the honor of Karate", even though we know he is not that kind of guy. The final moral was also obvious, but it's worth repeating, because in each new generation petty rivalries can be born. Still, Jesse did a great job, as always.
Muay Thaï are one of the most deadliest martial arts in the world. They're making there body hard and condition. Well I'll say muay thai is more brutal than karate. Just a bit brutal than karate ya know..
@@menandropanoy9844 part of that is the method. Muay Thai is insanity. like actual insanity. how many of their pro fighters haven't been concussed less than a dozen times? whereas other arts would like you to be able to not be brain damaged or broken by the time you can retire.
@@TGPDrunknHick - I wrote this at the top, but I want to paste it here as a reply to your message: Even watching Muay Thai makes me a little nervous, and I wouldn't try it even if I were not already severely handicapped. On one of my many trips to Thailand I got to know a Thai family that owned a massage parlor (a real one, not a sex front.) They took me to their house a few dozen meters from their shop, and introduced me to the owners' crippled son. They told me he was brain damaged from getting kicked in the head doing Muay Thai. He couldn't talk, and he couldn't even stand up without a lot of help. They thought that meeting a white foreigner may make him happy, so that's why they wanted me to meet him. Anyway, ever since I met him and saw him like that, Muay Thai gives me the willies.
The ritual he did is a ritual that every mush Thai boxer need to do before boxing ,it purpose is to remind them to be thankful of their teacher who teach them how to boxing
@@cesararias8303 yeah we used to practice it a lot in my days as a teenager doing Muay Thai. There's different variations too, I think that stems from the different regions and fight camps throughout Thailand. I loved Muay Thai, trained for years in my youth, won a few inter club fights, but unfortunately I wasn't disciplined enough. The lore of girls and hanging out with friends in parks getting drunk on a Friday night got in the way. I went back to it on and off in my 20s and 30s just for the focus on fitness and self defence. The fitness and conditioning side of Muay Thai is unbelievable and very hard. I respect all martial arts and combat systems, but for those who want to improve striking, fitness and their stand up game, I urge them to get into Muay Thai.
Hi man, really enjoyed the content. Aek is a true legend, i trained for a month with his twin brother at Sitjaopho camp. They are famous for their clean form and balance. Even Lawren Kenshin made a video about 'em not long ago
Jesse, you totally grasped the spirit of martial arts revealing what's connecting our arts. The search of excellence through hard work and respect.. Let's all remember your words. Best
8:08 I think he was really snapped. For Thais, getting feet to the head is the worst kind of humiliation. But it seems like he regained his composure before going all out on you.
@@Mayanksharma-ss8xj Some people laugh to re-direct certain emotions, too. I wouldn't be surprised if he beat himself up (figuratively speaking) over that mistake and had to remind himself that this was not the proper environment to be upset. These people can show up satan with the hellish standards they put onto themselves so that they stay in the winners' mindset.
@@sorenkorvberg8736 In sparring, you don't land head kicks like that, you pull back or land on gloves. Thais almost never do hard sparring. The Thai was going super easy till he head kicked, then he had to show him what's up.
My dad (founder of the first official kickboxing gym in Spain) trained under Kurosaki while living in Brussels, and he has nothing but admiration for him.
Yeah, but not many other martial arts than Muay Thai have people starting their professional career when they are children. For the pro thais it's not only art, it's also work and a way to pay for their education in the training camp. Like imagine what it is like to start having to fight when you are nine to pay for school. You can't fight two times a year , you have to fight at least once a month, for 10-15 years. You have to fight injured or when you don't feel like it. It is cruel in a way, but it also breeds an art and a mentality that is not found in any other arts imho. It is not a hobby or a lifestyle, it's a livelihood, and as such is rationalized to it's most economic elements. If a Muay Thai technique looks a certain way, then there's always practical reason for it.
@@MajorRoy This is very true. I'm Thai, I know that all of the Muay Thai legends all came from the very poorest regions of Thailand. Its win or your family staying dirt poor farmers forever.
"Ooooiii!!!" That's a sound effect that is basically, "Oomph! Ooh la la!" Keeps a fighter from tensing up & just have fun. Now, as a nak muay myself I will tell you our secret: we are always *timing* our opponent & any flashy kicks he throws, we'll either deflect or catch it & counter. And any hard hits will have an answer! It is muay thai to always respond with a comeback, never to let an opponent get away scot free. So, remember Jesse. If you landed a hit? You must also be ready to evade your opponent's counter. Muay thai is very straight to the point & yet very fluid at the same time. You move forward? We "jab" you with a teep kick. You don't check a low kick? You'll get a truck-load of low kicks! You throw high kicks? You're gonna see real life Matrix! Muay thai is fun, composed but straight to the point you'd be dumbfounded after getting floored. That's part of the learning process! Haha! Nice sparring, man. You guys look like you're having so much fun... 👍👍
@@PauloTkd No. A 'kihap' is a shout that serves to rile up the practitioner for an adrenaline burst, as well as to intimidate an opponent but in muay thai? Shouting is a display of weakness. We nak muay maintain composure, relax & study our opponent's timing & reaction. The "ooi" sound isn't emitted spitefully out of agression but rather, playfully. We're just having fun in the ring because at the end of the day? The better conditioned & experienced fighter wins. No need to shout, no need to throw 'hadouken' or other flashy moves. It's all in the conditioning. The fight itself don't lie.
To find a fighter who is willing to broadcast their defeats with such humility and good humor, is the true spirit of martial arts and the mindset of a master. To accomplish this so young is a huge achievement. Well done! 🙏
The Muay Thai Dance or the Wai Kru Ram Muay is a pre-fight ritual used to warm up and stretch and for fighters to pay respect to their teachers and other people who helped them on their fight journey. “Wai” is a Thai greeting and “Khru” is teacher, “ram” means dance, and “Muay” means Boxing.
Waey wa-hey Hoey Are the sound we make in sparring Those sound show relaxing and playfulness in sparring In muay thai, sparring is called Len Cherng Len in thai mean play Cherng is like skill Len Cherng means that we play the techniques of MuayThai with partner Len Cherng can be Cherng Koah (play with clinching and knees) Cherng Tae (play with kicking) And more And you should be very serious careful when those sound disappear or change lol Sometimes it means that you have to skip your dinner haha
@@sonicartzldesignerclan5763 Sometimes it's just grunt. Sometimes he just said what he's doing (Teep). We Thai people use those sound to show playfulness in sparring and make opponent know that we're not being serious.
With a humble heart, he joined his hands and bowed down as a sign of respect. Such a great humility. Very good video Jesse, thanks a lot for sharing this knowledge.
The end was so cool. I’ve never seen anyone do a technique for technique comparison like that. I think many times people are fighting, it’s harder to see the exact techniques unless you are training and experienced with that particular martial art. I am not very familiar with karate, so seeing the comparisons at a slower speed was cool
you'r talking about 11:23. Comparing Karate vs Muay Thai moves is interesting, esp the front kick (Kte uses the rear leg, MT uses the lead leg) and roundjhouse kicks (K: snapping; MT: complete follow thru)
@@Defender78 well, the MT chose the lead leg for the front kick but there is also a MT rear leg front kick (more powerful but slower) and there is also a MT side kick.... but yeh it was cool and interesting
@@flowingwind2199 For a start , I'd say anyone with this level of experience in martial arts would know what the wai khru /ram muay dance is. At least have seen it before etc etc So the OP means he pretends to know less than what he actually knows for entertainment and for teaching those that don't know as much about the topic.
He's so slim yet so powerful. Pretty cool video and I'm glad you didn't let the pride of your karate expertise get in the way of you learning something from him.
This is some of the most entertaining, inspirational and touching content I found of UA-cam lately. Really glad I was able to find this channel. Keep up the great work, brother!
What martial art should I face next? 🤔
Kung fu
BJJ
Pilipino martial arts
Krav Maga
Kyokushin karata
He gets his ass kicked. He learns from it. And he shows it. He explicitly points out that Muay Thai master was holding back. Jesse, you have my respect.
Underrated Comment 👍
he took the loss like a boss, and i love and respect it
Well it seems like there is some weight differences
@Marcus D GREAT and who? jesse or poonasit?
@Marcus D GREAT don't give the guy ideas. Manny may no longer be in his prime but if it's boxing we're talking about he can still decimate.
The karate guy is so humble. He's a true martial artist as he is open to the idea of learning from others without ego getting in the way.
🤣🤣🤣🤣 humble
@@MultiSciGeek your so right 2 totally different things!
no
@@MultiSciGeek oh legendary psychic, tell us more of your wisdom
สุดยอดเลย ครับ อยู่ที่การเรียนรู้ การเข้าใจ ไม่มีถูก ผิด แต่ล่ะศาสตร์ มวยไทยคนนี้ ชื่อ อะไร น่ะ
He was giggling because every time you clinched or threw a kick, your head was wide open for a vicious elbow and he knew it.
He should get beat up by a boxer next. Boxers are the only dudes that actually throw clean punches every one else focuses on kicks to much
@@joselanda8796 I think it’s because boxers aren’t allowed to kick hmmmmmmmm🧐
@@joselanda8796 Holland Kickboxing focuses alot of Boxing. Research Ramon Dekkers R.I.P
@Heche !1 hmmmmmmmm
@@joselanda8796 mma
What catches me the most about this video is how humble you are. I've practiced BJJ, Krav Maga, and now Muay Thai, and with each, you find the same, the ego, the pride, and the inability to learn from your opponent, especially in defeat. You, kind Sir, embody the spirit of Martial Arts. It was a pleasure to watch.
Wow, thank you! 🙏
I just got my brown in KENPO!.... "standing jiu-jitsu" is the guide book!...to each its about what works I THINK FOR THE PERSON! IMO!. me I'm pretty witty improve! [KENPO'S benefit] then structure jiu-jitsu practices. See it's what u FEEL!.
I RESPECT ALL but!!! BUSHIDO everyone IS A BLACK BELT or their BROTHER or UNCLE is a black BELT etc etc etc! Sure sure Than why does 98% Don't actually practice!.... SENSAI. TOLD ME I HAVE 5 CLASSES THIS WEEK!..... HEY JIU-JITSU GUYS! [HE teaches a FEMALE DEFENSE]
he wants me to get beat up by woman!
"Sure MASTER. punish me ok!"
@@maRanTCaseYga237???
You are right! The first time I submitted a guy ( for the record he don't want let me do it) he seeked revenge in red fury..after few days the master stopped him and tell him:whe are here to learn..in victory and defeat..but most important..he's not your enemy..sometimes you win..sometimes you lose..the life is made of that..but you got to respect..always..
I’m from Thailand and his praying is like showing the respect to like the master and to like boxing and the sport it a tradition it actually beautiful
That's like so cool like good to know like thanks for the info.
@@jimmy-jay1762 like I know right
Wow like that’s like kinda like cool like
This is like getting like way out of hand......like
That’s so long tho
"He held back?"
With 400 fights under his belt, I would hope he held back.
Yeah that’s fair
400? Jesus Christ what a warrior
With 400 fights... he has to hold back... has to... like... mandatory... he HAS TO HOLD BACK!
@@amitmukherjee1455 sorry mate
400 fights, at that level, since he has 9!? With that much experience his Ring IQ must be insane! he can probably read people so damn well he can tell what they're going to do before they even do......
All the small little details of fighting that most people never learn that take a lifetime to master, he's got them!
mad mad respect! imagine being able to learn from someone like this
The purpose of ritual are;
1. Thankful of their teachers
2. Prepare the mind or concentration
3. Warm up body
4. Servey and monitoring the fighting area.
I add one more from the East-Asian's point of view : Safety and protection from the God(s).
Wow.........You are good man.
That's right !
And 5 is they fight with confident and thinking they can win but don’t overconfident.
@@ftd7435 this is even further excentuated when you look specifically at the ram muay in the wai kru ram muay, a lot of the dances are meant to be artistic representations of Buddhistic spiritual stories and such, and incredibly popular one in thailand is the creatiom story about Garuda(I think thats the spelling, its the eagle one) which is a creation story borrowed from Indian culture.
GREAT VIDEO!! As a boxer I once challenged a Karate Practitioner! It went back and forth.Both of us landing devastating shots but his low kicks and kicks to the body were killing me.I admitted defeat and joined a Kickboxing gym soon after! We became good friends and still train together till today.
Do you know what style of karate he did?
@@TravellerTinker yes i would love to know that too
Maybe kyokushin
@@CovertPhilosopher Kyokushin is very well known for its low kicks so i think its Kyokushin.
@@gambeer134not every hard style is kyokushin
If you wanna win, stop them before they do the ritual dancing thing because they’re summoning their power
Guy : Doing Ritual
Guy 2 : Kicks face
It's called "wai kuru" for reminding there teachers but the hidden idea is to stretching the legs the body yo warming up
he was having his own anime flashback to give him buffs
Hahahahhahahahah😂
@@delaqroix wai kru se dice, no wai kuru
Fun Fact about weird dance/ritual before fighting: It's called ram muay or wai khru.
The wai is a traditional Thai greeting with the palms together as a sign of respect. Khru is the Thai word means 'teacher'. Ram is the Thai word for dancing in classical style, and muay means 'boxing'. The full term can therefore be translated as 'war-dance saluting the teacher', but Thai speakers generally shorten it either to wai khru or ram muay. The ram muay shows respect and gratitude to the boxer's teacher, parents, and ancestors. In the old days when boxers fought in front of the royalty, the ram muay also paid respect to the king.
Upon entering the ring, fighters circle the ring in a counter-clockwise direction and pray at each corner. They bow their heads at every corner three times in salutation to Buddha, Dharma, and the sangha of monks. They then commence the ram muay, the movements of which are said to be based on Hanuman(The india super monke). The ram muay is a personal ritual, ranging from the very complex to the very simple, and often contains clues about who trained the fighter and where the fighter is from. The ram muay is accompanied by music, providing a rhythm to the boxer's movements.
Btw, muay thai was a traditional martial arts.
Love it! Thanks for the info
Thanks 🙏🏼
STOP
@@KARATEbyJesse maybe you get hit to much. More physical for you
Indian wrestlers also worship Hanuman the monkey God. They also use tools (på svenska: stora påkar) to stregthen the arms similar to some okinawan tools.
There is historical evidence that chinese where influensed by indian martial arts that went through the Himalaya (including white crane qigong "dayan" which went through Himalaya and influenced kung fu, long boxing, taiji). The indians mixed their own styles with greek styles from mesopotania and Alexander the great.
Loved how you respected both arts, this is not the typical video about what's the best art. It's about beeing humble and learning from the other. Great channel.
Eh, que haces aca? jajajsdasda
El mundo es un pañuelo por lo que se ve. XD
Concordo
NO MAMES
vamos milei wacho
is amazing how the champion doesn't even look like it, at least in the physical way. looks more like the normal guy you would cross everyday, and yet the guy is a beast. so the lesson here: never judge a book by its appearance. great video, Jesse!
I see love in Poonnasit's eyes, there's no hatred or anger in those eyes
I was going to say, the energy off this guy is incredible. That's what a real master of something looks like
He's a buddhist
@@fevereaa Inner Peace.....
Many of them, opponents in the ring but became very good friends.
@@Ajjiam yeah muay thai legends used to practice toghether sometimes!
The voices he produces are for lowering the tension while sparring. Sometimes Thai box sparring gets a bit too agressive so fighters make '"funny" sounds to show that they are still relaxed
Thats a big whole lie.
Its typical grunts just search for muay thai grunts on youtube
That have NOTHING to do with deescalating why are you saying that
No Thai on this world that practice will laugh if you make this sounds
@@sonicartzldesignerclan5763 Bro what are you Talking about, it’s definetly used to calm down. It’s literally saying „ouch“ when you hear the OhAi..
guys it's not that deep.... it's just to have fun
Pretty sure that's Ooei- which roughly translates to 'come on'
@@tamo9659 I am a lifelong muay thai practitioner and at least in scotland there is zero reason for those noises other than culture. Anyone saying otherwise is disingenuous or hasn't trained.
I like that Jesse turns everything into a learning experience. He doesn't get frustrated or angry. He asks questions because he wants to learn. Zero ego and I respect that greatly.
Either win or learn! 👍
That is why I am a subscriber. He leaves any 'My Style VS Your Style' completely out of the discussion.
I absolutely love the genuine scholarly attitude Jesse takes.
Excellent vid Jesse thanks
A true marshall artist
Jesus, when Poonnasit came in at 4:21 with his bag he looked like an average asian coming straight out a supermarket. Humble and inconspicous, but a killer in the ring when things get serious. Awesome.
Imagine being the fool who would judge this guy by appearance alone and try to mug him. The fool would wake up in the hospital, if at all.
reminded me of one punch man T_T
Karate style : hit and pull back
Muay Thai : hit and destroy
Yep you got it right, the mentality for each hit in Muay Thai is to trespass the other person's body part, so they use body weight, tempo and everything handy to accomplish that.
not necessarily
Reading this made my brain go aaaaaall the way back to my childhood when I learned one meanings of kata Gekisai, which was basically "attack and destroy."
@@TenchigumiYup Karate's no joke
Tkd: hit hit hit hit hit hit hit
Karate: I predict your movements.
Thai Boxing: I predicted that your predicted my movements.
Audience: 👀👀👀
Bruh 😂👌💯
Joseph Joestar
Karate again: I predicted that you predicted that I predicted your movements..
Muay Thai: I have outsmarted your outsmarting
Literally every anime
I've trained in both disciplines. Ultimately Karate focuses on speed, while Muay Thai focuses on delivering power with each strike. Muay Thai seems to be more practical in a street fight, with more weapons.
Which one did you prefer and which would you say was better or more rounded?
I’ve trained in Thai, however my gf is a Karate 3rd Dan. I understand the basics of karate and that it is more focussed on speed than Thai.
@@martynodonnell8467 personally, I like Thai. I think, in a street fight it’s more effective. Karate is great too, but it takes years of dedicated to become a good Karatéka, while training in Thai can produce results faster. Knowing both would be best.
@@extremelucky1 yeah Karate practitioners tend to have more longevity. Perhaps it’s to do with it not being as taxing, not focusing on fighting in ring and being in top condition as much as learning the art. Thai practitioners tend to not have as much longevity. However due to it being a lot more simpler and easier to pick up, it tends to be quicker to learn. In saying that I have a close friend who took Thai, with proper discipline and dedication, for over 20 years, who turned pro. Therefore there are exceptions.
@@martynodonnell8467 exactly. Karate has a lot of facets besides fighting, whereas, Muay Thai is down to business
guaranteed a muat thai fighter laying people out in a street fight haha
Bro really did the classic "Friendship is power" and thought we wouldn't notice 💀
Naruto aah line 💀
"Just stay away from him"
One of the best martial arts advice i've ever heard in my life
If you master this one ... you do not need another. Seriously... a definite strength of some karate styles.
@@PrydeFoltz shiai kumite
Well. He was right... Solid advice from a friend. XD
7:50 the noises are a tradition. Usually in competitions and fighting, it’s meant to be somewhat fun. The noises are usually like Ooh-wayy, in English it would be more like complements to your opponent
It means something like "Nice one" or "Good job" and the person saying it is having fun.
To be easy, It was like "Ayyy" or "Wow" or "Nice----"
It's actually intimidation
@@sf1292 nah it's not, I'm a Thai so I know it isn't an intimidation
It was more like "Ayyyy" "Wow" "Nice" like the person above said.
@@sf1292 It’s really not. Like others posted is more akin to “nice one!” more than anything else.
"What martial art is the best?"
Legend himself: "Do what you love to do."
So beautiful and kind, right?
100%
his inner honest self: "cough...muaythai....cough....cough"
@@HunGerMovies not really, any martial art will work as long as its the right one for you.
@@SyllatheSpiderNerd not in real life, irl you need to be more diverse, not just ground fight, not just kicking, etc.
When you said "... and restore the honor of Karate" I had to smile. I just knew what was coming.
Your videos are so awesome, dude. I just found you and can't stop binge-watching.
The dance in the beginning is to boost our damage intake by 25%
It's called an animation buff, and a good player would have canceled it just with an auto attack.
Bcs it frustrates people?
Taunt and warming up
It's a warming up..loosing the body.
it's kind of concerning how many people didn't get the joke
“The human brain isn’t good at reacting, but it is good at predicting”
My brain who isn’t good at both: interesting...
😅🤣
Little bit of combat focus never hurt anyone, you will learn, i have hope for you!
My teacher always wants us to react and not to think about there next move. But i cant help it when i can read the person really good
I'm good at reacting and not predicting.
I'm with you mate
The fact that he can make such seemingly calm, innocent, and comical noises whilst easily destroying a bigger opponent just makes him seem 10x more awesome.
It's hard to explain what those sounds mean, but the best way I can put it in words... it's like an acknowledgement of a technique being used.
Like, when a good kick is thrown out. "Oooweei!!!!"
Almost like the Karate "Osu!" but more casual.
It's actually a gesture of respect too.
Sounds like Bruce lee
@@1Invinc its common in thai culture "ouwieiiii" "ouuueei" its like "wow" but it is used here as like a joke because when they fought he was mainly just joking around im pre sure
If you're kendoka, judoka, karateka, consider it like kiai, but for every occasion
Dear Jesse!
Thanks to you this video inspired me to start my Muay Thai career in the Netherlands, i've been in my first training this week, if i will be a world champion im going to mention you, as the man who started all this. Thank you
Go Go bro i support you
หวังว่าคุณจะเป็นนักสู้ที่ยอดเยี่ยม อดทนฝึกไว้
I really like how Poonnasit tried to match Jesse's level in the spar, and it was only when Jesse showed that he was stronger than expected that he decided to go harder. Really shows the respect muay thai practitioners have for their sparring partner.
I love how you saw it on his face the moment it happened. Like he was going "Oh! Time to play!"
@@kilgornsiegebreak8527 Play? PLAY? PLAY!
No he was gone get fuqqed by the Muay Thai fighter, if he goes all out.
The first time I was allowed to spar in Muay Thai at my gym, my sparring partner was one of our competitive fighters and he was an incredible sparring partner. My gym doesn't allow actual sparring until you have been training for at least 3-4 months and I was excited to finally spar and put to practice everything I had learned. My partner and I went back and forth doing 4 for 4 and I landed a few clean strikes and got a little cocky and stepped up the intensity. As soon as I did that he was keen to let me know I was out of place and matched my intensity and put me in my place real quick lol. @@lemyoboi
When the tiger play with you, let tiger be happy, never make tiger angry. 🤣🤣🤣
Muay thai was basically made when a Thai dude was like "how can I use all my limbs like baseball bats?"
Then baseball was invented.
and thats how strong thai fighters are especially their shin bones because of the conditioning
That’s why I transitioned from kempo karate to Muay Thai
More like "how can I break a baseball bat with my limbs..."
@@hemi5.7awdpursuit5 i mean, you can do them in conjunction, look at Stephen Thompson for example
“It’s time to restore the honor of Karate”
Gets absolutely destroyed.
Aye good fight tho
well, the point of his video, or rather the message he wanted to bring across, was that despite our different styles it is more important what unites us than what sets us apart!
@@amoreazione3563 exactly. And that karate is really not great for fighting but more conditioning 😂 Not saying it can’t be used cause GSP in the ufc used karate a ton but he also mixed it up with other styles so it worked great for him.
@Just Smoking Boxing is even better. Most muay thai practicioners dont have good boxing. And when youre out there, in a bar, wearing your skinny jeans, you cant throw proper kicks or stuff.
@Tyler Ton Punches are much easier to land than elbows. Elbows to the head are nothing compared to intercontinental ballistic missile to the face.
ผมน้ำตาไหล ตอนที่คุณไหว้มวยไทย ไหว้ครูมวยไทย คุณอยู่ต่างประเทศมานานแล้ว คุณอาจจะไม่ทำก็ได้ แต่คุณทำ ขอบคุณมากครับ
ช่ายยย
ในนี้มีเขมรด้วยนะ5555
ต้องตามไปเชคบินแม่งกว่าเราจะมาถึงจุดนี้พิสูจน์ตัวเองให้คนดูถูกมาเท่าไหร่ ชนะมาเท่าไหร่ปราบศิลปะการต่อสู้ทุกแขนงอยู่ๆจะมาเคลมแบบมักง่าย ทั้งที่แชมป์ระดับประเทศของมันยังกระจอกแพ้นักมวยไทยไม่มีชื่อ แพ้นักมวยฝรั่งเพิ่งฝึกมวยไทยเลย@@สาคู-ณ1ช
Hi Jesse, the “OO WEEH” sounds are typical of Thai fighters during sparring. Those sounds are meant to prevent a tense atmosphere and keep the sparring relaxed and relatively light. So when you hit your opponent, or when you get hit, you make an “OWAY” sound to show your opponent your not getting emotional or anything.
I like it! It just threw me off 🤪
It's even funnier if you're French as it's sounds like "oh oui". I was also intrigued at first training in Thailand
A french Muay Thai fighter ..... Oui ! Oui ! Oui!
Not muay Thai this is modern so called thai boxing - mixed muay Thai Okinawa karate boxing .
That is exactly what you'll find if you spar with a Korean tkd guy, like a kiai, but longer, more drawn out and with more vowels!
This guy is humble, cool, strong and extremely wise that I can't believe he's not a fictional character in anime or something.
I hate to break it to you, but you just described every Muay Thai fighter from Thailand.
THe most frightening part is that he looks just like anyone else, he should be forced by law to wear a sign that reads "danger: can kick your head off if pissed"
He’s actually THANKING his teacher because we were taught that Muay Thai is a weapon of friends and enemies. In combat your enemy but outside combat your friends.
Muay Thai fighters stand no chance against Daido Juku (Kudo) fighters.
@@nr1NPC Anyone can act tough on the internet.
I love this new generation of Karate practitioners who are venturing out into the worlds of Muay Thai, BJJ, MMA trying to learn and evolve. It's so refreshing after decades of snobby dismissiveness. I also love the humility of being able to showcase what a beast somebody from another style is without feeling like it's a threat to all of your own hard work. Much respect Jesse.
Such a humble guy with wise advice. He didn't say anything about what martial art is the best but to practice and train the one you enjoy most.
I love the fact that Jesse is so humble and doesn’t feel like he has to prove anything.
I love that fact and also that even though we all know it and yet he still narrates that he´s out for blood
Yeah!! I totally agree with you that he is so humble.
I really like this kind of man, no matter what MA style he keeps practicing.
Jesse is a True martial artist. He practices his art with passion, loves it but is open to other ideas. It isn't just about what style you train in, it is also about the person and what they bring to the art.
Priceless
Totally agree.
“What brings us together is far more important than what sets us apart”
Beautiful quote
Amen 🙌
One of the biggest problems with most martial arts that take a lateral stance such as karate, boxing and taekwondo for example is how the lead leg remains extended at all times, Muay Thai has an advantage over such methods because while taking such a wide stance does allow you to generate more power when throwing from the hip (especially when you sit on your punches) doing so unfortunately comes at a cost when you're in front of a competent muay thai practitioner, in a lateral stance it leaves your lead leg constantly out there open to inside and outside leg kicks because all your weight is being distributed down the center of your body, in muay thai we stand with our shoulders square horizontally and the lead foot is not being placed more than a foot away from the back leg where all the weight is centered i'd say 80 percent of your weight is moved to the back leg, you can see how the muay thai champ can keep his front leg raised because of it quite a lot because of this which allows him to use his front leg like a jamming stick to keep the distance between you any time he feels you're going to close the distance, this is something muay thai truly excels at and probably one of the most effective aspects of the art itself which imo is revolutionary ... the bouncing of the lead leg up and down also acts as a sort of spring which provides quicker reaction time when you need to check leg kicks or deliver a strong front leg teep (muay thai equivalent of a front push kick), you can also generate huge momentum when you eventually plant the front foot to deliver a back leg round house or are devastating knee when your opponent is coming in for an attack.
That's why in modern kyokushin almost no one uses wide stance and people are taught how to perform the techniques from basic MMA short stance. Because not only in sports, but also in real fight it makes you much less vulnerable. But wide stance still can help if you are dealing with boxer, for example, as it increases your range and piercing power.
At the same time, I feel like a wide stance allows you to move backwards quicker and avoid the kick itslef, while with a muay thai stance if you don't see it coming is harder to dodge. That's a feeling I've gotten from sparring with guys that had practiced taekwondo or karate. Or maybe, you know, they were just better than me xD
Oh jeez 😂 I knew it was bad news when he started doing the rituals
Haha that makes 2 of us 😅
3 of us lmao
FYI The arrows hurt the most! P.S. Keep practicing your low kicks on Icy Mike's head.
The ritual is called Wai Kru
@@KARATEbyJesse the Front Kick is performed with the Rear Leg. The Snap Kick is performed with the Lead Leg. Is there anything like the Snap Kick within the Karate family? (also these are called Teeps when you push instead of kick)..
You know that Poonnasit is some sort of final boss-type character when rocks up to the gym carrying his gear in a reuseable shopping bag.
love this comment 😅
That's where he keeps his buffs.
Did the gentleman arrive at the gym carrying a shopping bag for his gear? No fancy gym bling for a Muay Thai champion, a Lumpinee champion no less. Humble, beautiful people 🙏
When people show up with their gear in a plastic shopping bag... you know you’re going to get smashed haha
If you train 3 days a week for 4 months straight in muay thai, you can easily destroy almost anyone in a fight if they haven’t learned themselves a martial art, doesn’t matter how big or strong they are, muay thai is BRUTAL, especially when it comes to the kicks
What about self teaching? My country is full of taekwondo,karate and an indonesian fighting atyle but no muay thai
He fights like a beast, but his face says: 😁
He looks like he play with his kid or something
😂😂😂
"When sparring, just have fun." He said it.
@@pwnwin I learnt muay thaI in France in the 80's with Pud Pad Noï , a former world champion ; I could recognize the same kind attitude and strong/fluid/natural moves in this video : great !!
I went to Thailand with a friend who has many years of practicing boxing/kickboxing/muaythai (I only knew grappling). My friend payed for private lessons with a former champ. I was filming so that my friend could look at his technique afterwards. I was shocked. My friend is 90kg, extremely strong, agile and fast, a monster of a man, but this taiguy who weighed like 60-65kg just dominated my friend when they did some sparring. I could not believe it. It was like a giant was toying with a child. Over and over my friend got tricked, with feigns, unreal timing, trips that put my friend on the ground so the whole floor shock. It was like watching neo from the matrix.
What if your friend was allowed to bodyslam the guy, then your friend would have dominated.
@@savagedoritos6587 you cant body slam a guy that is a master in the clinch, and with throws, and minces your leg's meat, they know what they are doing bro, it is impossible to get close with them, or even touch them.
@@savagedoritos6587 His friend will eat elbow and knee unlimited before body slam.
Heaps of Tactics in Muay Thai. Everyone focuses on their Attack, as out and out assault, but they are extremely tactical fighters!
That's what sets champs and high level pros aside from the rest of us mortals. What they may lack in power (and maybe even technique) they'll compensate with fighting IQ, muscle memory, speed, timing and toughness. Thais specially, since they can rack hundreds of bouts in a career.
Always respect them, even if you have 20 years of sparring under your belt. If you want to have any chance to beat them, you better be a pro or a champ too.
"It's time to restore the honor of Karate".
He restores what means to be human.
That was nice to watch, as I never understood the rivalries between styles. You and your opponent focus on sharing and respecting each other and that stands for every martial art in the world.
I appreciate that!
I know him personally while has was in Thailand and when he just got a Championship. One thing I can guarantee you is he is a nice guy but in the same time he is the devil fighter. He is a great fighter.
they are totally different when they are in the ring i guess
One of the Sitjaopho twins right?
@@noddingbart6915 Yes. His brother is Petch-Tho Sitjaopho.
@@KevinMartinez- So this is O?
@@noddingbart6915 Yes.
Wai Kru is one of the tricks. In addition to the remembrance of teachers
1. It's a meditation practice.
2. to warm the body
3. It is a walk to explore the condition of the field in the past, the field was a soil field.
4. Make him know which school you graduated from gym.
The dance/ritual done in Muay Thai is called a Wai Khru. Traditionally, it was to show respect to the four directions, the ancestors, the Muay Thai master, and the opponent, and the final move of the dance was emulating a shovel digging a grave to show they were ready to die. The Modern form was created in 1941, with essentially the same emanings.
I think about it when I see that dancing like tell your opponent ready to die 😮
Jesse, I’m so impressed by your approach to share your experiences with all the Martial Arts and it’s great to see humble Experts like this Thai guy.
Thanks 🙏
The thing is Muay Thai is sooo brutal and efficient. It's powerful and practical especially in close quarters clinching. That's why I love it. Though I'm an Eskrima practitioner but I sorta pick some techniques from different martial arts for practicality.
Best style is "no style". Take what's useful for you and make your own style.
@@erikseavey9445 best style is the style your most comfortable with. But for me im good at copying different fighters stance and combos
Exactly i ditched my karate acting classes when i got man handled by a Muay Thai amateur who was just 6 months into his training, it was so embarrassing for me especially being a brown belt and training for years on end to master my art. Karate definitely has couple of good things to borrow from, but on it's own the modern karate is the least effective form of martial art. Also being black belt in karate is essentially ensuring your bragging rights and scaring away people who know nothing about fighting. Very few martial arts take into consideration how vicious people are in real streets fights, muay thai & Brazilian Ju Jitsu are one of them. In real world situations you would be knocked tf out before you are even done bragging about your black belt. I have been training in muay thai for last 8 months, and i feel it's too practical and deadly already, i can deal far more fatal damage to my opponents, karate seems like circus show in comparison.
@@Tate525 I have to disagree with you on some of your points. Karate if practiced correctly is really effective. It's significant striking can be deadly and it contains hits with every part of your body ( hands, knees, legs, elbows ) + it has some grappling and takedowns. Unfortunately modern Karate fights have very limited contact witch Indeed gives a Karate fighter a great disadvantage in a really situation because he isn't used in full contact hits ( neither giving them nor taking them). Muay Thai on the other hand still remains a very tough sport and it's athletes are generally much more prepared for a real situation. Overall I personally don't think any of these martial arts is superior, the outcome of a figth depends on the figthers and not the superiority of one's style over another's.
@@orestismilas7660 I am not talking about Okinawan Karate, the one that we get trained in modern mc dojo's is a Japanese karate and it's a living joke and embarrassment to it's original form. I really do no trust any dojo's in US and even in Japan. Karate that is not Okinawan, is probably not karate, it's
so stripped out to the point it's really unrecognizable.
Poonnasit looks like an amazing and humble person, and also a terrific fighter.
His advice to relax when sparring was a pointer to the moment you kicked his head. He was relaxed and you were anxious and stressed and that led to the kick landing. Probably he felt it and instinct took over. He again regained co.poaure when he laughed at the clinch.
Isn't the objective of fighting hurting each other? 🤨
@@BioTheHuman hurting ur opponent/competition not ur teacher or ppl from the same gym
@@acheleon7038 I thought they were doing a serious duel
@@BioTheHuman of course it isn't a serious fight, it isn't sanctioned, there's no referee, no medical professionals around, no corners, they aren't even fighting in the same fighting style, this is obviously just a friendly spar
@@BioTheHuman I spar at my kickboxing gym with guys who are composed and controlled and guys who think they are fighting an MMA PPV. Those guys get a taste of whatever they dish by anyone they dish it to and most of the time they don'tlike it. Sparring should be at 10-15%, it's to practice your techniques and to gain knowledge in reading other pll's moves. It's not to hurt each other.
True mastery display. The humbleness, respect and skills shown are natural traits found in real masters.
The exact reason I like to spar good fighters is they can control their power and pace. You watch them beat the stuffing out of each other and then spar with a beginner and treat them gently.
100%
I think that's one of the most efficient ways of telling apart a real advanced artist
The good fighters are good masters in practice.
True 👍
I love (and kinda hate) to face good sparring partners. Its humbling and suddenly you need to mind your openings.
But I also love to spar with noobs. Suddenly you get a chance to use those flashy low% techniques and maybe land them.
And in grappling the most fun is to grapple weaker guys or girls. Because they cant "cheat" and use pure power to deny my moves. So I can relaxe. Use just a fraction of my strength, and focus on the Technical aspects. I mean, sure I try that with strong people to, but margins are so small and The flow just becomes different
Great video.
I have trained with him and his twin brother in Thailand Hua Hin and in Sweden.
Both are extremly humble and friendly but real killers when its time to fight.
They have such an amazing control over their techniques so him and his twin ( their nicknames are "F" & "O") would actually spar for hours without shin protection and they would never injure eachother.
Masters of the sport.
Exactly as it should be and is in all Muay Thai camps in Thailand..Sanuk Sabai:)
Muay Thai guy first walk in with jacket on look like a fruit sales men. Turns he is selling oranges, fresh, all pulp. Get it, get it, he can beat you to a pulp. (okay I put head down in shame and leave now)
Sit in the corner right now
@@dannyhipolito817 yes sir
He's the long loooong man
Bye bye
😂😂😂
People thought Muay Thai is pure vicious and deadly but what I witness in this video was pure art and gracefulness.
มวยไทยท่าที่อันตรายๆมากๆเขาห้ามเอามาแข่งขันเพราะคู่ต่อสู้อาจบาดเจ็บหรือตายได้
But they also are really scary, the was he kicked, the way he punched, the elbow... those looked lethal
He was being a good sparring partner and letting you set the pace, then after a while he raised it just enough to teach you a thing or two!
I love how Poonnasit walked in with his grocery bag and his street clothes and looked totally non threatening. Just like any regular guy walking down the street. You would have no idea that being stuck in the ring with him would be a horror show.
Important lesson to never underestimate anyone. Roid heads need to learn this real quick
OMG I had the exact same thought
And that lovely smile of him though, people there except the ones he knows absolutely have no idea LOL
Dude, so Happy to see 2 people having a good time while sparring. That is what is all about.
You're so right...!
It's about a familiar or tribal mentality. At least it SHOULD be. You want to BUILD UP fighters/warriors but not to destroy them. That's not the goal of sparring and training. There should be no place for "only ego".
For sparring lessons and training fights a wise guy once said to me:
"There are no winners and no loosers. There are only brothers! It doesn't matter who 'wins'. It's about fighting, doing well and learn".
@@stephanlude5951 ok for Trainer Gae...A Monk from Thailand. Beautiful interviews
When he is explaining near the end he seems like a normal guy, chill, maybe even a bit scrawny, imagine you go drinking one night in thailand and you feel a bit brave and you bump into him and you get into a fight with him.
Never underestimate anybody…
I respect this a lot, 2 warriors learning from each other. Like the old saying goes, sparring is a conversation never turn it into an argument.
Hey there!
@@THEDONSTR8Fightah76 Yo
Never take advantage of a superior fighter's generosity.
This video is 3 years old at my time of watching. Muay Thai has been such a blessing in my life. It taught me so much about myself. It taught me how to be humble especially. Thank you for taking the time to learn about the art sir. 🙏 Thank you to Ajarn Rey for teaching me these lessons as well.
That the Muay Thai veteran with 400 fights would win and was holding back was pretty obvious, and we pretended not to know it for the sake of entertainment.
We also pretended Jesse did really want to "defeat MT for revenge of the honor of Karate", even though we know he is not that kind of guy.
The final moral was also obvious, but it's worth repeating, because in each new generation petty rivalries can be born.
Still, Jesse did a great job, as always.
Muay Thaï are one of the most deadliest martial arts in the world. They're making there body hard and condition. Well I'll say muay thai is more brutal than karate. Just a bit brutal than karate ya know..
@@menandropanoy9844 part of that is the method. Muay Thai is insanity. like actual insanity. how many of their pro fighters haven't been concussed less than a dozen times? whereas other arts would like you to be able to not be brain damaged or broken by the time you can retire.
@@TGPDrunknHick Its very interesting how the thai guys work to make their bodies an actual weapon. Their bones are just like a metal bar.
@@TGPDrunknHick - I wrote this at the top, but I want to paste it here as a reply to your message: Even watching Muay Thai makes me a little nervous, and I wouldn't try it even if I were not already severely handicapped. On one of my many trips to Thailand I got to know a Thai family that owned a massage parlor (a real one, not a sex front.) They took me to their house a few dozen meters from their shop, and introduced me to the owners' crippled son. They told me he was brain damaged from getting kicked in the head doing Muay Thai. He couldn't talk, and he couldn't even stand up without a lot of help. They thought that meeting a white foreigner may make him happy, so that's why they wanted me to meet him. Anyway, ever since I met him and saw him like that, Muay Thai gives me the willies.
400 fight no one has 400 fight
I love how everyone has advice on how to face a Muay Thai champion,90% here would be destroyed in 10 seconds.😂
Agreed but more like 99.9%
More like 1.5 sec ( including the time to hit the mat )
Gun
Cause everyone is a martial art expert on the internet
Not me bro im tough az bro...ill waste everyone
The ritual he did is a ritual that every mush Thai boxer need to do before boxing ,it purpose is to remind them to be thankful of their teacher who teach them how to boxing
Uhh.. Well its actually to warm up and stretch..
@@Lily_ch_en In physical yes but it really meant to that
@@Lily_ch_en nope it’s called wai kru ram muay ( wai kru ) it’s ment to show respect to your gym/teacher
@@cesararias8303 yeah we used to practice it a lot in my days as a teenager doing Muay Thai. There's different variations too, I think that stems from the different regions and fight camps throughout Thailand. I loved Muay Thai, trained for years in my youth, won a few inter club fights, but unfortunately I wasn't disciplined enough. The lore of girls and hanging out with friends in parks getting drunk on a Friday night got in the way. I went back to it on and off in my 20s and 30s just for the focus on fitness and self defence. The fitness and conditioning side of Muay Thai is unbelievable and very hard. I respect all martial arts and combat systems, but for those who want to improve striking, fitness and their stand up game, I urge them to get into Muay Thai.
Only the wai kru in the wai kru ram muay is for thanking the krus.
Hi man, really enjoyed the content. Aek is a true legend, i trained for a month with his twin brother at Sitjaopho camp. They are famous for their clean form and balance. Even Lawren Kenshin made a video about 'em not long ago
I've watched this so many times!
Haha awesome!! 🙏
Idk why, but I do too
Same here! As a Muay Thai fighter so cool to see. Also the foot jab is a great kick to keep distance and set up punches! Great video!
Who would say that I would see you here, I did not expect it.
Me too I watch this about 10 times
The voice "owei" is to keep the sparring fun、techniqcial and peaceful.
his chants are the hymns when you are about to meet your MAKER..
Yea that jesse is too serious 🤣
He not only held back, he is just playing with you. He's being merciful or else you will be destroyed.
@Basit Amiri he's pretty humble imo
You realize that the muay thai guy is a champion in his sport right?
Yeah he could have really hurt you
Yes
Jesse, you totally grasped the spirit of martial arts revealing what's connecting our arts. The search of excellence through hard work and respect.. Let's all remember your words. Best
8:08 I think he was really snapped. For Thais, getting feet to the head is the worst kind of humiliation. But it seems like he regained his composure before going all out on you.
Look at his face he is laughing and not pissed at all
@@Mayanksharma-ss8xj Some people laugh to re-direct certain emotions, too. I wouldn't be surprised if he beat himself up (figuratively speaking) over that mistake and had to remind himself that this was not the proper environment to be upset. These people can show up satan with the hellish standards they put onto themselves so that they stay in the winners' mindset.
bruh, its a fight, I still think they all know that anything can happen, for headkicks are allowed....
@@sorenkorvberg8736 its not a fight. Its sparring
@@sorenkorvberg8736 In sparring, you don't land head kicks like that, you pull back or land on gloves. Thais almost never do hard sparring. The Thai was going super easy till he head kicked, then he had to show him what's up.
The other guy is so humble, and respect for not hitting each other hard
My dad (founder of the first official kickboxing gym in Spain) trained under Kurosaki while living in Brussels, and he has nothing but admiration for him.
Cool!! 💪
Podrías decir el nombre del gimnasio y donde está situado??
This guy draws dope comics
His English sounds like coming from a vietnamese person, is he mixed or full Thai ?
@@pedronavarrofernandez1443 has oido el nombre?
Dude. I don’t do martial arts but now you’ve inspired me to keep my regiment for a few months!
The man has over 400 professional fights. That is deadly no matter the martial art style.
Yeah, but not many other martial arts than Muay Thai have people starting their professional career when they are children. For the pro thais it's not only art, it's also work and a way to pay for their education in the training camp. Like imagine what it is like to start having to fight when you are nine to pay for school. You can't fight two times a year , you have to fight at least once a month, for 10-15 years. You have to fight injured or when you don't feel like it. It is cruel in a way, but it also breeds an art and a mentality that is not found in any other arts imho. It is not a hobby or a lifestyle, it's a livelihood, and as such is rationalized to it's most economic elements. If a Muay Thai technique looks a certain way, then there's always practical reason for it.
@@MajorRoy This is very true. I'm Thai, I know that all of the Muay Thai legends all came from the very poorest regions of Thailand. Its win or your family staying dirt poor farmers forever.
Unless you do aikido
@Mataias Rodcas yes
Yes matter the martial art style
"Ooooiii!!!" That's a sound effect that is basically, "Oomph! Ooh la la!" Keeps a fighter from tensing up & just have fun. Now, as a nak muay myself I will tell you our secret: we are always *timing* our opponent & any flashy kicks he throws, we'll either deflect or catch it & counter. And any hard hits will have an answer! It is muay thai to always respond with a comeback, never to let an opponent get away scot free. So, remember Jesse. If you landed a hit? You must also be ready to evade your opponent's counter. Muay thai is very straight to the point & yet very fluid at the same time. You move forward? We "jab" you with a teep kick. You don't check a low kick? You'll get a truck-load of low kicks! You throw high kicks? You're gonna see real life Matrix! Muay thai is fun, composed but straight to the point you'd be dumbfounded after getting floored. That's part of the learning process! Haha! Nice sparring, man. You guys look like you're having so much fun... 👍👍
I think that's really one of the things Karate has in common with Muay Thai which people really don't notice and i like how you explained it btw
Are these sounds similar to Taekwondo and karate kihap?
@@PauloTkd No. A 'kihap' is a shout that serves to rile up the practitioner for an adrenaline burst, as well as to intimidate an opponent but in muay thai? Shouting is a display of weakness. We nak muay maintain composure, relax & study our opponent's timing & reaction. The "ooi" sound isn't emitted spitefully out of agression but rather, playfully. We're just having fun in the ring because at the end of the day? The better conditioned & experienced fighter wins. No need to shout, no need to throw 'hadouken' or other flashy moves. It's all in the conditioning. The fight itself don't lie.
@@Z4U3398 very good your explanation! Thanks!
some say "ahhyyeee" but can't find the reason why.
To find a fighter who is willing to broadcast their defeats with such humility and good humor, is the true spirit of martial arts and the mindset of a master. To accomplish this so young is a huge achievement. Well done! 🙏
This maybe one of the greatest videos I’ve watched in years.
The Muay Thai Dance or the Wai Kru Ram Muay is a pre-fight ritual used to warm up and stretch and for fighters to pay respect to their teachers and other people who helped them on their fight journey. “Wai” is a Thai greeting and “Khru” is teacher, “ram” means dance, and “Muay” means Boxing.
Now I understand the Ryu and Sagat rivalry...
@Tyler Ton He almost won too
@@pointbreak1501
Should’ve*
I don’t see Ryu beating sagat statistically unless he embraces dark hado
Hadoken!
@@CameronKujo Yes....thats what I said..
@@CameronKujo Although in V Ryo beat M.Baison easily so I doubt its a competition anymore
Waey wa-hey Hoey
Are the sound we make in sparring
Those sound show relaxing and playfulness in sparring
In muay thai, sparring is called Len Cherng
Len in thai mean play
Cherng is like skill
Len Cherng means that we play the techniques of MuayThai with partner
Len Cherng can be Cherng Koah (play with clinching and knees)
Cherng Tae (play with kicking)
And more
And you should be very serious careful when those sound disappear or change lol
Sometimes it means that you have to skip your dinner haha
No its just grunts
Search for muay thai grunts.
@@sonicartzldesignerclan5763 Sometimes it's just grunt.
Sometimes he just said what he's doing (Teep).
We Thai people use those sound to show playfulness in sparring and make opponent know that we're not being serious.
@@sonicartzldesignerclan5763 how are you gonna argue about with an actual Thai?
@@danielbodi4626 Im muay thai myself ufff
@@sonicartzldesignerclan5763 damn you are the embodiment of thai boxing, dope
With a humble heart, he joined his hands and bowed down as a sign of respect. Such a great humility. Very good video Jesse, thanks a lot for sharing this knowledge.
As a Thai person, I am currently learning karate. It's powerful martial art. Now I have accomplished Muay Thai, Taekwondo and karate🥰
You shoukd learn catch wrestling too
@@Lara-mo5oyor Brazilian jiu-jitsu
How long did it took you to finish all martial arts?
BJJ next and Wing Chun. You’ll be like Bruce Lee.
The end was so cool. I’ve never seen anyone do a technique for technique comparison like that. I think many times people are fighting, it’s harder to see the exact techniques unless you are training and experienced with that particular martial art. I am not very familiar with karate, so seeing the comparisons at a slower speed was cool
you'r talking about 11:23. Comparing Karate vs Muay Thai moves is interesting, esp the front kick (Kte uses the rear leg, MT uses the lead leg) and roundjhouse kicks (K: snapping; MT: complete follow thru)
@@Defender78 well, the MT chose the lead leg for the front kick but there is also a MT rear leg front kick (more powerful but slower) and there is also a MT side kick.... but yeh it was cool and interesting
I like how this guy plays a little more ignorant than he really is for the sake of his less experienced viewers. Cool video.
How do you mean?
@@flowingwind2199 For a start ,
I'd say anyone with this level of experience in martial arts would know what the wai khru /ram muay dance is. At least have seen it before etc etc
So the OP means he pretends to know less than what he actually knows for entertainment and for teaching those that don't know as much about the topic.
@@GUARDIANA01 but he's not teaching anything by acting ignorant.
@@bcriceroni6553 that's because he wants us to research about it
@@bcriceroni6553 It's like school
He's so slim yet so powerful. Pretty cool video and I'm glad you didn't let the pride of your karate expertise get in the way of you learning something from him.
Fun facts: The noises that he’s making mean something like: “damn” or “woah”. We usually use this when we encounter something cool or interesting
There are lots of OOFs in there as well, as in,
"damn...(that one's a tilter)"
its Huiii or Ouiii
We hold one's breath and send out with punch or kick. That's why the noise come.
When thai boxer know his attack can make a lot of damage, that satisfying sound will come.
Like moaning!
@@tanutlertpakakul9086 lmfao dude...
"What brings us together is far more important than what sets us apart."
Brilliant and wise, Sensei Jesse.
the champion is such a relaxed humble guy, I love it
Best martial arts UA-cam on the platform. This is just excellent in so many ways
This is some of the most entertaining, inspirational and touching content I found of UA-cam lately. Really glad I was able to find this channel. Keep up the great work, brother!
Thank you!
Such a humble person and such a legend. Lord pray for the person who tries to cross him when he unleashes his beast mode. It won't even be a fight!!!
That was the most respectful video on martial arts that I have ever seen.
Kudos to you both.
What a great guy. He's always smiling. Also gave a lot of valuable tips.