Te Tad / เตะตัด
The roundhouse kick, known as Te Tad in Thai, is widely regarded as the single most iconic and devastating weapon in the entire Muay Thai arsenal. Unlike roundhouse kicks found in other martial arts such as Taekwondo or Karate, the Muay Thai roundhouse is delivered with the shin rather than the foot, producing far greater impact force due to the dense bone surface and the rotational mechanics of the entire body. The technique begins from a balanced fighting stance, with the fighter initiating the motion by turning the lead foot outward approximately forty-five degrees to open the hips. The rear leg then swings in a wide, sweeping arc while the hips rotate fully through the target, generating tremendous torque. The kicking leg remains relatively straight or only slightly bent, functioning like a baseball bat rather than a snapping whip. The arms swing in opposition to maintain balance, with the same-side arm sweeping downward and back while the opposite arm guards the chin or posts against the opponent. Contact is made with the middle portion of the shin, roughly halfway between the knee and the ankle, which is the hardest and most conditioned part of the lower leg for trained Muay Thai fighters.
In a fight, the roundhouse kick is used at virtually every range and targeting level. Thrown to the legs, it becomes the devastating low kick that can cripple an opponent over the course of a fight. Directed at the body, it attacks the ribs, liver, and floating ribs with punishing force that can cause internal damage and rob an opponent of their will to continue. Aimed at the head, it becomes one of the most spectacular knockout techniques in all of combat sports. Thai stadium fighters at Rajadamnern and Lumpinee stadiums in Bangkok have perfected the art of timing the roundhouse kick off the jab, throwing it after catching an opponent leaning into a punch, or launching it as a counter after checking an incoming kick.
Historically, the roundhouse kick is the technique most associated with the golden age of Muay Thai. Legends like Dieselnoi Chor Thanasukarn, Samart Payakaroon, and Buakaw Banchamek all built their reputations around variations of this fundamental weapon. In the traditional scoring system used at the major Bangkok stadiums, clean roundhouse kicks to the body and head score extremely well because they demonstrate dominance, technique, and fighting spirit. Judges reward kicks that visibly affect the opponent or demonstrate clear technical superiority. Common setups for the roundhouse include the jab-cross combination to occupy the hands before kicking, the teep to push the opponent back and create space for a follow-up kick, and the feinted low kick to draw the guard down before switching to a high kick. Defensively, fighters must be aware that throwing the roundhouse leaves them momentarily on one leg and exposed to sweeps, catches, and counter-strikes, so proper recovery back to stance is essential for safe execution.