Wangjannoi sor palangchai was a big fighter, heavy hand, and a lion heart, he was one my favority fighter from golden era. Big fight with cartchai paiseethong and cherry sor vanish
Great fight, awesome performance by both, I think Karuhat won. I have a question unrelated to the fight : I read on Wikipedia that Changpuek Kiatsongrit had 178 wins by knock out, higher than any kickboxer or boxer for that matter, is it true?
The big fight numbers of many Thais are often either guesses because fights were largely unrecorded, and sometimes are greatly exaggerated. I don't know about his career, but that does sound extremely unlikely. Knockouts were uncommon in Thailand's Golden Age Muay Thai.
@@8limbsUs I thought the same, it would've been the highest in combat sports' history, even Kiatsongrit's mighty left hand couldn't have possibly achieved that. thanks for the reply, I admire your work.
Even though it’s kind of weird to score a caught kick in the kickers favor. It’s not like the catcher countered with any significant kicks of their own. So I think Karuhat won that one. He scored his kicks (many were caught) and framed really well in the clinch.
Yes, in Thailand catching a kick in no way nullifies the kick's score. You have to create your own score off the catch to even it out. If you just catch kicks you are losing all those exchanges.
Wangchannoi definietly is among one of those fighters I'd no way in hell would step into the ring against. The change in his eyes as soon as the bell rings is something I noticed the first times I watched him. I realize any and all training I had would be forgotten when meeting those eyes and I'd be crying for Mommie as I ran around for dear life. That is one scary dude. Him being a butcher (if I remember correctly) after retiring from boxing is like a "no shit, Sherlock" choice for a career.
Weight classes always trip me out. When I was 11% body fat I could still drift 3-5 lbs in my sleep. And sweet 10lbs ish in a 3 hour training session reliably.
Really interesting to hear your commentary, as always. Ive seen this fight many times and you surprised me though how you both commented from a favourable to Karuhat perspective. I thought he was chasing this fight throughout. Always enjoy your contributions btw 👍
Thanks for the mention!!! Happy to be sharing these cool old fights...
Wangjannoi sor palangchai was a big fighter, heavy hand, and a lion heart, he was one my favority fighter from golden era. Big fight with cartchai paiseethong and cherry sor vanish
"...and he fixed his shorts after, so it's like bonus points!" hahaha! Love it!
one of the best channels on tube.. tnk's guys..
Brian Pope joy is from my gym, love the shout out
Great fight, awesome performance by both, I think Karuhat won.
I have a question unrelated to the fight : I read on Wikipedia that Changpuek Kiatsongrit had 178 wins by knock out, higher than any kickboxer or boxer for that matter, is it true?
The big fight numbers of many Thais are often either guesses because fights were largely unrecorded, and sometimes are greatly exaggerated. I don't know about his career, but that does sound extremely unlikely. Knockouts were uncommon in Thailand's Golden Age Muay Thai.
@@8limbsUs I thought the same, it would've been the highest in combat sports' history, even Kiatsongrit's mighty left hand couldn't have possibly achieved that.
thanks for the reply, I admire your work.
Really awesome stuff guys...
Even though it’s kind of weird to score a caught kick in the kickers favor. It’s not like the catcher countered with any significant kicks of their own. So I think Karuhat won that one. He scored his kicks (many were caught) and framed really well in the clinch.
Yes, in Thailand catching a kick in no way nullifies the kick's score. You have to create your own score off the catch to even it out. If you just catch kicks you are losing all those exchanges.
Wangchannoi definietly is among one of those fighters I'd no way in hell would step into the ring against. The change in his eyes as soon as the bell rings is something I noticed the first times I watched him. I realize any and all training I had would be forgotten when meeting those eyes and I'd be crying for Mommie as I ran around for dear life. That is one scary dude. Him being a butcher (if I remember correctly) after retiring from boxing is like a "no shit, Sherlock" choice for a career.
Awesome!!👌🏽🤩👑👏🏽
Thank you🙏🏽
Weight classes always trip me out. When I was 11% body fat I could still drift 3-5 lbs in my sleep. And sweet 10lbs ish in a 3 hour training session reliably.
Very good
Really interesting to hear your commentary, as always. Ive seen this fight many times and you surprised me though how you both commented from a favourable to Karuhat perspective. I thought he was chasing this fight throughout. Always enjoy your contributions btw 👍
Chasing and landing.
Finally we get to see Kevin
You get to see Kevin a lot in our epic Muay Thai Bones podcast, here's the whole playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLFIbj6VvBW00iV0e09OlpZ3DVCs0zOmYu
1 of my favourite fights
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
2:11 fenomenal shit...!!!
I had that hat...but I forgot it in Hat Yai...:(........😭
the guy in the video hated wangchannoi for some reason lol
Kevin is a big fan of Wangchannoi, but an even bigger fan of Karuhat.
??????????????
Karuhat won that fight. It looks like the gamblers were against him. Thanks for sharing. 🙏🏿
Karuhat definitely won that fight...
When men were men & boys were lassies....