A Quote by Tony Jaa

My happiness is being able to present my talents for people to see, and I feel like I'm an ambassador of Thai history and Thai culture on film so that people can see Muay Thai.
100 Muay Thai, boxing, and kickboxing fights. Six times world Muay Thai champion, five times European Muay Thai champion, very dominant UFC champion for three years. I know my legacy. They can say whatever they want to, but I'm huge.
I love every type of martial arts, but with Muay Thai in general, I want to see it being brought to the public more. There is no movie that has Muay Thai incorporated into it, so I want to bring that to the public.
I like to train in my Muay Thai gym that I co-own.
Anderson knees people in the face from the clinch. That guy is a world class Muay Thai fighter.
I trained in kick-boxing and Muay Thai.
I love striking, but MMA and Muay Thai are different.
I've done some Muay Thai training just for fun.
I practiced everything, from my BJJ to wrestling, judo and Muay Thai.
When I was competing in Muay Thai I used to fight every month.
We already have our history with Joanna in Muay Thai and we can start our history in MMA.
The important thing for the survival of the Thai society is that the majority of those who work, both in the government and the private sector, still strive to work in the same direction; this is why the Thai nation still stands.
There's a restaurant I go to whenever I can called The Richmond Cafe. It's a little Thai restaurant owned by a group of Thai women - I think they're all a family, and they're just really, really nice, and they make amazing massaman curry.
I've really taken a lot of time to work on my Karate, worked on my kickboxing, and Muay Thai.
Who inside MMA that's a champion goes to fight Muay Thai? Nobody. But I love competing.
Thai food ain't about simplicity. It's about the juggling of disparate elements to create a harmonious finish. Like a complex musical chord it's got to have a smooth surface but it doesn't matter what's happening underneath. Simplicity isn't the dictum here, at all. Some westerners think it's a jumble of flavours, but to a Thai that's important, it's the complexity they delight in.
I have almost 100 Muay Thai fights, so I used to train and fight with really tough kickers.
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