"In his movies, he does lots of elbow and knee strikes, and muay thai boxing does not have that." wathaneeketh
I couldn't disagree more. As any student of muay thai will tell you, muay thai is the fighting art of eight weapons - (2x arms, 2x elbows, 2x knees, 2x legs). The original fighting art used some incredible elbow and knee strikes, but they're a bit slow for modern competition. Knees and elbows are as much a weapon in muay thai as punches and shin strikes. In fact, elbow strikes are so effective they're not usually seen in modern fights - especially not international fights. Genuine thai fights have a type of 'gentleman's agreement' not to use them. If one fighter used elbow strikes, the other fighter would also - but it is in neither of the fighters interests. Muay thai fighters compete in a huge amount of bouts during their careers - some fight several times a week. Obviously elbow strikes would put a large number of fighters out of competition for long periods, so they're not generally seen.
Perhaps you've seen K1 competitions. But I can assure you, muay thai uses both knees and elbows devestatingly. Perhaps, the next time you want to appear the authority on a subject, you should talk about something you know, maybe even practice.
For the record, I personally think Tony blends muay thai with his incredible gymnastics to make a martial art which leaps at you from the screen. Akin to wushu. Muay thai and JKD/gung fu are both stripped down and effective, whereas for the big screen the directors want big leaps, flying kicks and lots of somersaults.
"People generally quarrel because they cannot argue." Gilbert K. Chesterton
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