“The Fight That Changed History” took place during a time period where Muay Thai was still relatively unknown to the west, getting its epic name due to its colossal impact on North American Kickboxing and Muay Thai.
At the time of this bout, American Kickboxing was at the height of its popularity, and it was essentially a mix of traditional karate and western boxing. Benny Urquidez, Peter Cunningham, Jean Yves-Theriault, Don Wilson, and Rick Roufus were all some very notable names under these rules, which included modified rules with no low-kicks, clinching, elbows, and knees.
Coming from a family rich of martial art roots, Rick Roufus had conquered the American Kickboxing world with an undefeated record.
Other American Kickboxing champions had ventured into stylistic fights with modified rules, with Benny Urquidez being the most notable – Japanese Kickboxing rules resembled Muay Thai much more and “The Jet” conquered it.
Despite Benny Urquidez’s legendary bouts in Thailand and Japanese Kickboxing, those weren’t bouts televised to a large American audience. Urquidez spoke of it in magazines and interviews, but the effectiveness of low-kicks wasn’t so well understood by most American fighters.
This point is best illustrated by how Benny “The Jet” Urquidez was a hero to Rick Roufus — it was during one of Urquidez’s bouts that Rick’s father gave him an identical fight name. Despite this, Rick came in unprepared for low-kicks and for good reason: the rules were announced last minute and to defend low-kicks is an art in itself.
Changpuek was born and raised in a small village some 30 km from the town of Prakhonchai, Buriram in northeastern Thailand, one of seven children. A young Changpuek became attracted to Muay Thai from watching local fighters and started training at home alongside his brothers under the tutelage of their father. He had his first fight at 14 and by 18 had left home to join the Kiatsongrit Gym in Bangkok, where he would remain for more than sixteen years. Changpuek fought at the lower weights in his early years spent on the Bangkok circuit, weighing as little as 49 kg (108 lbs) on his Rajadamnern Stadium debut.
After fighting for a number of years in Thailand, Changpuek found it increasingly difficult to get fights domestically as his weight (70 kg) was not typical for a Thai where competitive bouts tend to be at the lower weights. As a result, he started to fight abroad.
Changpuek Kiatsongrit, whose name translates to “Crazy Elephant,” had never fought above 150 lbs in Thailand. Yet, there he was, going overseas against an opponent who was over 200 lbs! Not only that, but he would have to completely abandon elbow and knee strikes, which he had trained in all his life.
The first round was dominated by Roufus. His size and superior punching shattered Changpuek’s jaw and knocked him down twice.
Changpuek recovered, and unleashed a barrage of kicks that battered Roufus’s legs to where he was limping around the ring in the fourth round. Kick after kick landed, and the referee stopped the fight in the fourth. Roufus couldn’t even get himself off the ground, giving Changpuek a shocking TKO victory.
Rick Roufus’ younger brother, Jeff “Duke” Roufus, dismissed Kiatsongrit in a post-fight interview. He said that it doesn’t take any talent to perform leg kicks, and the rules didn’t allow his brother to win.
Yet, most of the rules were in Rick Roufus’ favor. Changpuek couldn’t throw elbows, knees, or clinch without the referee separating them, which is devastating to a smaller fighter.
So how did a larger, stronger, faster fighter get dominated in this fashion? How did a Tae Kwon Do black belt get beaten by kicks to the point that he had to be carried out of the ring on a stretcher?
Most will point to the rule change, but this is only somewhat true. This logic doesn’t explain why Roufus was inexplicably unable to check Kiatsongrit’s leg kicks during the fight.
After all, Roufus was a black belt, and even wore his belt during the fight. How was he unable to defend against such a basic martial arts technique? The obvious but overlooked answer: he trained under Full Contact rules for most of his life. Under these rules, he wasn’t permitted to use leg kicks, so its unlikely that he and his trainer spent a lot of time drilling leg defense in practice.
training muay thai in thailand pad work
Why didn’t American kickboxing allow kicks to the leg? Some would say that it was attempt to limit injuries, but the truth is that they simply weren’t profitable.
During the 1970s and 1980s, boxing was still the king of fight sports and no one wanted to see punching exchanges ended by leg kicks or matches slowed down by clinch fighting. Elbow strikes were considered too violent.
Keep in mind that unlike boxing and wrestling, Eastern martial arts still hadn’t found a place in the American sports landscape. The only real exposure the average American had to Eastern martial arts were movies featuring Bruce Lee (Kung Fu), Steven Seagal (Aikido), Chuck Norris (Karate) and Jean-Claude Van Damme (Karate).
But their over-the-top violence didn’t translate well in competition. Headbutting, throat punches, or limb-breaking would never be accepted in a civilized society. This is probably why American Karate and Tae Kwon Do tournaments used point fighting, where one had to strike a designated area, fighters would be separated, and the ref would award a point.
However, these tournaments also had the problem of being slow, and the average American consumers wouldn’t pay to watch them. The Full Contact format, with its dazzling spinning kicks and combination punching gave young Americans who wanted to compete their chance to shine, while at the same time giving off a safe and marketable appearance to the American public which hadn’t seen much of western kickboxing and certainly hadn’t seen Muay Thai.
Fighters such as Benny “The Jet” Urquidez (Karate), Rick and Duke Roufus (Karate/Tae Kwon Do), Don Wilson (Karate), and Dale “Apollo” Cook (Karate/Tae Kwon Do) became the standard-bearers for American kickboxing during the 70s and 80s.
Kickboxing had found a small but devoted niche in the U.S. as young men eagerly signed up at their local gyms hoping to follow in the footsteps of their heroes. But the path taken by aspiring American kickboxers in their air-conditioned, well-lit dojos was a far cry from the open air, terribly hot and humid gyms of Thailand-gyms that, arguably, no westerner would actually pay to train in.
While Americans stopped using roundhouse kicks, clinch fighting, and elbow strikes—they were illegal in competitions—the Thais were sharpening all of these skills for their competitions.
Seeing how different the martial arts upbringing was between Changpuek Kiatsongrit and Duke Rufus, Rufus’s inability to stop Changpuek’s barrage of roundhouse kicks makes more sense. Both men trained for competition, but what sold as “kickboxing” was very different in their respective countries, and on that fateful night in Las Vegas, their differences became painfully clear for Rick Roufus.
Note: you can watch the Changpuek Kiatsongrit vs Rick Roufus fight in its entirety on Youtube. Lawrence Kenshin did an excellent study of this fight which you can also see below:
Pictures courtesy of:
http://www.muay-thai-guy.com
http://lawrencekenshin.com
wikipedia.com
Nice posts sir... I totally agree with you. Love it. Followed...
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So your saying that big bad black belt holding Rofus the goofus couldnt defend those leg kicks cause he was trained to be a harmless pussycat?
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@ldauch got you a $7.8 @minnowbooster upgoat, nice! (Image: pixabay.com)
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Good, vollow me @wannis
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Insightful! Muay Thai leg kicks are becoming more and more famous in MMA and other combat sports.
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