Nate

by Hozaku 22. June 2009 09:54

Muay Thai Teep(reposted from from my journal, February 1, 2008)

Having quite a bit of elbow pain recently, including numbness in my left hand. I've had that for a while, but it seems to be getting worse. I've been wearing one of those carpal tunnel wrist things when I sleep for a few years now and it doesn't seem to be working as well. The research I've done on the Internet suggests it's more likely an elbow problem, not a a wrist one - compression of the ulnar nerve. I don't think it's a result of the Muay Thai, although that might be aggravating it, but rather 20+ years of lifting weights. I'm probably going to have to get that checked out.

Did some more sparring in the ring, this time against a young fellow named Nate. Nate is 18 (less than half my age), whipcord thin, and fast as a snake. He only comes in around 120 pounds though, so he's giving up a good 70 to me. We went 5 rounds. He was so quick with his strikes, especially his front push kick (called a teep), that I finally gave up trying to block and starting walking through most of them. There wasn't much he could do about it since I was so much heavier. I was able to get some good shots in, including several body blows that knocked him backand sucked his wind out. At the end of 5 rounds, however, I was pretty tired of getting kicked in the stomach....

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Live Sparring

by Hozaku 18. June 2009 07:46

Muay Thai Live Sparring(reposted from from my journal, January 25, 2008)

Been doing the Muay Thai almost 6 months now, 2x a week, and have made great progress - I actually look as though I know what I'm doing! The thought of actually competing in an amateur bout doesn't seem as ridiculous as much as it once did. The class has gotten larger too, more 'older' people showing up. When I first started there was around 7 - 10 in a class, now Ray is averaging about 15 - 20.

I live sparred for the first time yesterday and ended up with some guy about half my age and 7 amateur fights under his belt kicking me around the ring like I was a soccer ball. I did manage to clinch a few times, and once I got hold of him, I was able to control, as I had about 15 pounds on him. I managed to plant a few knees and show him the old lion still had a few fangs left.

So I'm all done with training, I wander (limp) out to my car, pop the trunk, put in my gear, close the trunk... DOH! After popping it, I'd put my keys back in my gear bag. Why? Because I'm old and stupid and tired and beat up.

I've locked my keys in before and can get it open with a coat hangar. Fortunately, I was able to find one. Twenty minutes later, with the help of a fellow Muay Thai-er holding his cell phone as a light, I got the door open by sliding the coat hangar in snagging the power door lock switch.

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Dolph Lundgren's Son

by Hozaku 15. June 2009 07:06

Kicking Muay Thai Pads(reposted from from my journal, August 7, 2007)

Muay Thai continues. I've had 6 lessons now and am starting to feel that I understand the how of the basic movements, even though I'm still not able to execute with consistency.

I've developed a routine; I join the class sessions Ray holds at his school on Tuesdays. On Thursday, I have a private lesson with Brian, or, if his class is scheduled to start at 5:30, I participate in that. The classes at Ray's school are particular taxing. Still no a/c, still summer in Tampa, still mostly with a group where the next oldest individual is more than a decade my junior.


The other night I end up paired with who could have been Dolph Lundgren's son. The guy stands about 6'3', 200+ pounds and looks like an anatomy chart. I guess his age at around 22. He looked as though he just finished shooting a Nike commercial. I learn he's been in Tampa for two months (assigned at Macdill AFB), trains Muay Thai for striking and Brazilian Ju Jitsu for his grappling and ground work. His goal is to get into MMA competition. He is not someone I would want to be in a cage with.

We're already warmed up from jumping rope, so we find a spot. I've got the pads on, long forearm pads that run from the hand to the elbow. They're about 5 inches thick, made of leather, and actually pretty hard. They strap on to your arm and have a handle at the top to hold on to. He helps me strap on the left one after I get the right on.

The instructor gives us our combo - jab, cross, knee, push, leg kick. We repeat the combo for a round (3 minutes) and are then given another to practice. After 3 rounds, we switch; he holds and I strike. The guy starts off at half speed to get the rhythm down. Third time is the charm. Left jab, right cross, right knee, a shove to my left shoulder, and a right leg kick.

I don't know if he was going full out this time, but when this guy kicked the pads this time, the force knocked me back a couple of steps and actually drove the edge of the left pad into the side of my face. I feel my bottom lip start to swell. I suppose the pads kept my arms from being shattered like glass sticks, but that's about all they did. This guy's leg kick felt like being hit with a telephone pole.

The pads get especially tough to hold when you're sweaty, and working out in a non-air conditioned building in Tampa in the summer tends to make you sweaty. They kept twisting in my hands, which meant they didn't absorb as much of the blow as they were supposed to, and didn't lay flat on my forearms. By the end of the might, my arms ached. I'd actually gotten a headache, some from the heat I'm sure, but mostly from setting the pads and getting knocked back time and time again by this guys leg kick.

The workout finished with an especially brutal kicking exercise. One right leg kick, one left leg kick, two right legs kicks, two left leg kicks, three right leg kicks, three left leg kicks.... all the way up to ten. That's 55 kicks with each leg, done as fast and as hard as you can do them, which, by the time I got up to around four, was neither fast nor hard. I started getting that pukey feeling, and lemme tell you it's been a long time since I puked from working out too hard. Son-of-Lundgren cranked out his 110 kicks in less than three minutes; it took me a good 5, and the only reason I finished was because Son-of-Lundgren wouldn't let me stop.

I thought I'd made great gains in my conditioning, but when I (barely) walked out of there that evening, I wasn't so sure. Maybe I am too old for this after all.

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