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Muay Thai struggles to strike the right balance

Updated: 2022-11-02 09:27
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American fighter Natalie Morgan strikes her Thai opponent Petchnapha Sor. Kanitsorn during a Muay Thai bout in Bangkok on Sept 24. [Photo/Agencies]

Brutal combat sport's Olympic quest hampered by safety concerns

The ancient combat sport of Muay Thai has set its sights on Olympic glory, but a recent death has highlighted safety concerns that could slow its path to a Games debut.

Muay Thai allows some moves that are banned in other forms of kickboxing, such as elbow and knee strikes, and fighters wear little safety gear.

The sport secured Olympic recognition in 2021 — but whether the Games will ever host a Muay Thai event depends on efforts to make the fights safer and more inclusive.

Stephan Fox, secretary-general of the International Federation of Muay Thai Associations (IFMA), insists it is "a very safe sport" with rules in place to ensure fighters are fairly matched.

"In Muay Thai we have the same weight, same skills. At the end of the day, accidents happen in any sport," he said.

He acknowledged that bouts organized privately in rural areas of Thailand outside the supervision of the governing body are harder to police.

At one bout held in July in central Thailand's Pathum Thani, an elbow strike put former South East Asian Games silver medalist Panphet Phadungchai into a coma, and a week later the 25-year-old died.

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