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Myanmar Lethwei boxer "Ali"

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Uploaded by on Dec 31, 2007

Myanmar has a tradition of kickboxing that's said to date back to the Bagan era,
although the oldest written references are found in chronicles of warfare between
Myanmar and Thailand during the 15th and 16th centuries. Myanmar kickboxing
(Myanma Let-hwei) is very similar in style to Siamese kickboxing or Muay Thai.

The martial art's status has raised perceptibly and nowadays occasional championship
matches are also occasionally held at Aung San Stadium and Thuwanna Indoor Stadium in Yangon.
Rules & Regulations
Anything goes in the ring. All surfaces of the body are considered fair targets
and any part of the body except the head may be used to strike an opponent.
Common blows include high kicks to the neck, elbow thrusts to the face and head,
knee hooks to the ribs and low crescent kicks to the calf. A contestant may even grasp
an opponent's head between his hands and pull it down to meet an upward knee thrust.
Punching is considered the weakest of all blows and kicking merely a way
to 'soften up' one's opponent; knee and elbow strikes are decisive in most matches.

The structure and limitations of each match varies with its context
and with the calibre of the participants. Unlike Thai boxing, which has borrowed
a great deal from the Queensbury rules in international or Western boxing,
Myanmar boxing represents a more traditional form once shared by the two countries.
Rules tend to follow situational norms; fighters, managers
and judges get together before each match and work out time limits and scoring criteria.

In the simplest rural matches, fought in a dirt circle, there's no time limit
and a fighter loses once he has wiped blood from his face or body three times.
In more organised amateur matches, boxers fight in square rings
(5.8 by 5.5 metres), for three to five rounds of three minutes each,
usually with two minutes rest between. Professional matches in larger towns
and cities begin with five rounds but may increase round by round to 12 rounds
when the scoring is tight - even longer if no clear winner emerges earlier in

The match When such extensions occur, boxers can request a five-minute rest period
for every seven rounds fought. At both amateur and pro matches, two referees
officiate in the ring, where there's only one. At ringside are three judges
who score the match by pooling their impressions of stamina, skill and bravery.

Fighters bandage their hands but do not wear gloves; they fight barefoot
except for nylon anklets worn to absorb perspiration. Simple,
dark-coloured shorts rather than baggy boxing trunks are usually worn;
if the shorts worn by the contestants appear too similar in colour,
the fighters may sew coloured bandanas over the front to make it easier
for spectators to differentiate the opponents.
In championship matches Myanmar fighters wear big, gaudy trunks.

Before the match begins each boxer performs a dance-like ritual
in the ring to pay homage to Buddha and to Khun Cho and Khun Tha,
the nats whose domain includes Myanmar kickboxing.
The winner repeats the ritual at the end of the match.
A small musical ensemble consisting of drums, hne, cymbals
and bamboo clappers performs during the rituals and throughout the match;
the volume and tempo of the music rise and fall along with events in the ring.

There are no weight divisions in Myanmar boxing. Instead boxers are ranked
by skill into first, second, and third class. The best boxers are said
to hail from the Ayeyarwady Division, Mandalay Division, Kayin State
and Mon State. At present Myanmar's most celebrated boxer is the National Champion
Shwe Du Won from Hpa-An, Kayin State.

Myanmar's most famous Myanma Let-hwei teacher is Saya Pan Thu,
founder of the Institute of Myanmar Traditional Advanced Boxing
and one of three trainers at Yangon University. He comes from a teaching lineage
that emphasises Myanmar's most traditional style of kickboxing,
but also incorporates a few grappling and wrestling techniques
from the judo-like Myanmar art of bando.
Due largely to Pan Thu's steady promotion of Myanmar martial arts,
the country is on the verge of establishing the Myanma Traditional Boxing Federation,
an organisation that will regulate boxing rules,
introduce new safety measures to the ring and develop overall professionalism.

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  • I find this totally unfair and weird .

    It is like , you put the heaviest wrestler versus the lighter wrestler .

    Stupid honestly. And wtf - dont bandange your hands , just bare-knuckle is enough.

    But i see many myanmmar people are not proud of their race and country once they come to CHINESE SPEAKING COUNTRIES or countries with many Chinese populations such as Shanghai , Hong Kong , Singapore.

  • The Blue Shorts definitely have a longer reach and he is taller and heavier .

    That is like - man , a 1.6 metres tall man fighting Kareem Abdul Jabbar in one of the Bruce Lee Movies.

    Watchaa !!!

  • @guidosp88 By the way, in my previous post I mentioned young Wan Chai in his 20's....if you remember. I told you how great he was and had a lot of the system down. Wan Chai beat every Thai boxer that they put in front of him to the point they were calling Wan Chai a Thai. Also, the fighter in this video is named Ali. Wan Chai beat Ali in roughly 30 seconds. So you see the difference in skills.

  • @guidosp88 In summary, not all the lethwei fights are good quality fights or fighters. Burmese are still learning their system. It took me 2 years to learn the lethwei executions and still I dont have them perfect. Even though this has existed thousand year's the techniques are told in stories, you see the problem....so this means that the storyteller doesnt show you yet you have to figure it out by what the story means.....Thai however has perfectly got their system down in a gym setting.

  • @kemp Lethwei techniques are very different from Thai. Not only is the punch technique different but there 12+ punches in the lethwei system where Thai has a bout 5. Things that do not exist in Thai that do exist in Lethwei, bullguard, bull rush, leading hand stance, elephant steps, god's shield are to name a few vast differenceds. To the untrained eye they dont look different. That's like saying wrestling and judo are the same they both have take downs is ridiculous.

  • @guidosp88 Nope. These are amateur fighters. Type in young Wan Chai, in his 20-30's Lethwei has fewer gyms and lesser understanding of their techniques due to the lack of systemetizing their techniques so they are taught in parts by instructors who know part of the system but not all. Recently the system has be taught better and the fighers are getting better. Some examples, Win Tun, Tway McShawn, Saw Shark are a few that have the system down well.

  • Sagat vs Addon

  • dude in blue shorts has a major reach advantage. I like the sound effects! haha

  • they don't look so different to me

  • i don't know much about muay thai but i don't think muay thai is better than myanmar lethwai(kickboxing). these burmese fighters are amateur. you better see top fighters such as lone chaw or Tway Ma Shaung .

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