A Change of Guard

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Tuesday 9 September 2014

Cambodian fighters take ancient skills into the MMA cage

Cambodian fighters take ancient skills into the MMA cage
AFPCambodian fighters take ancient skills into the MMA cage
Phnom Penh (AFP) - He is schooled in ancient Cambodian martial arts, but Tok Sophon hopes to turn his pugilism skills into wealth and international glory in the modern cage-fighting arena -- a transition some fighters fear will wipe out their craft.
Heavy thuds fill the room as Sophon aims ferocious kicks into pads held by his coach, one of a growing number of Cambodians learning mixed martial arts (MMA) -- a combat sport where competitors use anything from kickboxing to wrestling to take down their opponent.
"I can make more money fighting in the cage (where MMA is often fought) than through traditional martial arts," according to the 21-year-old, who joined the lucrative global circuit last year.
In his first bout in Malaysia he earned $1,000, nearly 30 times more than an average contest in Kun Khmer -- Cambodian kickboxing, which is similar to Muay Thai in neighbouring Thailand.
The MMA boom stems from a recent revival in the Cambodian martial arts of Kun Khmer and Bokator after centuries of neglect and near extinction under the Khmer Rouge regime of the late 1970s, which outlawed both disciplines and murdered their masters.
Bokator is the older of the fighting styles, believed to go back more than 1,000 years to the armies of the Khmer empire who based elements of the style on animal movements.
It barely survived the hardline communist Khmer Rouge, who tried to wipe out Cambodian history in a bid to establish an agrarian utopia, but has since won new followers among Cambodians keen to learn the art and preserve a unique strand of their culture.
With its elbow and shin strikes, locks and grapples the sport deploys techniques which can cross over into MMA and Cambodian fighters have found it relatively easy to adapt their moves to the cage.
- Out with the old? -

In the three years since Bokator practitioners first competed in a MMA tournament in Malaysia -- formally marking Cambodia's entry into the sport -- it has skyrocketed in popularity.
The country's inaugural MMA association was launched last year with local television channels airing weekly fights.
According to the association, there are around 100 Cambodians who can now compete professionally in the sport.
On Friday nine of them are on the card to take on challengers from across the world when the ONE Fighting Championship, Asia's largest MMA organisation, holds its first global competition in the capital Phnom Penh.
While their training in traditional martial arts provides a solid foundation, fighters still need to learn new techniques and MMA rules to contest internationally.
Spotting a gap in this nascent market, Cambodian-American Chan Reach traded his job as a paramedic in New York in 2011 to train fighters in Phnom Penh on how to compete in the cage.
"I was watching a match on YouTube with Cambodian fighters being thrashed by foreigners, and knew I had to come to help train them," said Reach, who is Tok Sophon's trainer and himself a practitioner with 13 professional fights under his belt.
A few months ago the coach-turned-entrepreneur set up one of a growing number of gyms in the capital specialising in MMA.
"It is a new twist in an old sport... and offers an exciting opportunity for Bokator and Kun Khmer fighters," he said during a training break at the centre.
But an older generation of fighters are concerned the thriving MMA industry poses a threat to their centuries-old practice, long-hailed as a symbol of Cambodia's past military might.
"We are struggling to preserve our ancient martial arts. If the young generations and government officials do not support them, they will disappear," said 63-year-old Chan Bunthoeun, a Khmer martial arts coach who learned the trade as a teenager from his father.
But with his own son now preparing to compete in the upcoming Phnom Penh contest he recognises the lure of an industry offering far greater financial rewards and a shot at global fame.
The Cambodian MMA Association, however, is confident the sport's international reach can also redouble interest in traditional martial arts.
"We are integrating our ancient martial arts with MMA... The world will know our martial arts through MMA," said Vath Chamroeun, president of the association.

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