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SPINNING ELBOW

Sok Klap / ศอกกลับหลัง

The spinning elbow, called Sok Klap or Sok Glap Lang in Thai, is one of the most spectacular and devastating techniques in the entire Muay Thai arsenal. The name translates to "rear return elbow" or "spinning back elbow," describing the full rotational spin the fighter executes before delivering the elbow strike. This technique involves turning the body a full 180 degrees or more, using the rotational momentum to deliver an elbow strike with tremendous force to the opponent's head. When landed cleanly, the spinning elbow is one of the most highlight-reel worthy knockouts in combat sports, and it has produced some of the most memorable finishes in Muay Thai history.

The mechanics of the spinning elbow are among the most complex of any technique in Muay Thai. The fighter begins facing the opponent in a standard stance. The execution starts with a pivot on the lead foot, turning the lead shoulder away from the opponent and initiating a rotation of the entire body. The rear foot steps across as the body continues to spin. Throughout the rotation, the striking arm is kept tight with the elbow bent at approximately ninety degrees. As the fighter completes the 180-degree turn and faces the opponent again, the elbow is extended and whipped across in a horizontal or slightly diagonal arc. The point of the elbow strikes the opponent's temple, jaw, or orbital area with the combined force of the entire body's rotational momentum.

The power of the spinning elbow is extraordinary because it harnesses the full rotational inertia of the fighter's body mass. Unlike a standard elbow where power comes from hip rotation and weight transfer, the spinning elbow converts the momentum of the entire body spinning through space into impact force at the elbow tip. This is why spinning elbows frequently result in dramatic knockouts even when fighters are exhausted in the later rounds; the rotational mechanics generate force that transcends what arm and hip strength alone could produce. However, this same spinning motion is also the technique's greatest weakness, as the fighter must turn their back to the opponent during the rotation, sacrificing vision and defensive positioning.

In Thai fighting tradition, the spinning elbow occupies a unique cultural position. It is simultaneously revered and controversial. In the golden age of stadium Muay Thai in the 1980s and 1990s, the spinning elbow was relatively rare and considered a high-risk gamble. Fighters who attempted it and missed were seen as reckless, but those who landed it were celebrated as bold and skilled. In modern Muay Thai, the technique has become more common, partly due to the influence of international competition and the rise of highlight culture where spectacular knockouts gain enormous visibility.

Setting up the spinning elbow effectively is crucial because throwing it without setup is a recipe for being countered. The most common setup involves throwing a rear body kick or rear cross to establish a pattern, then using the same initial rotation to disguise the spinning elbow. The opponent reads the beginning of the spin as a body kick and adjusts their defense accordingly, only to find an elbow arriving at head height instead. Another effective setup is to throw a switch kick, using the switching motion to load the spin. Feinting a rear straight punch and then spinning off the feint also works, especially against opponents who rely on parrying the cross.

Defense against the spinning elbow centers on recognizing the spin early and either stepping back out of range, stepping in to smother the technique before it can fully extend, or timing a straight punch through the center to intercept the spinning fighter during the blind phase of the rotation. Experienced fighters learn to read the initial pivot as a danger signal and react accordingly.

KEY POINTS

  • 01Pivot on the lead foot and rotate the entire body 180 degrees, keeping the striking elbow chambered tight at ninety degrees throughout the spin
  • 02Maintain visual contact with the opponent as long as possible before the spin and reacquire the target immediately as you come around
  • 03Extend the elbow and whip it across at the completion of the rotation, timing the strike to connect just as you face the opponent again
  • 04Disguise the spinning elbow by setting it up with techniques that share the same initial rotational movement, such as rear kicks or crosses
  • 05Drive through the target with the full rotational momentum of the body rather than decelerating before contact
  • 06Recover your stance immediately after the technique, whether it lands or misses, to avoid being caught off-balance facing the wrong direction
  • 07Commit fully once you initiate the spin, as hesitation during the rotation results in a slow, weak, and easily countered attempt

COMMON MISTAKES

  • ✕Spinning too slowly or hesitantly, giving the opponent ample time to step back, counter with a straight punch, or clinch during the rotation
  • ✕Losing the target during the blind phase of the spin and throwing the elbow into empty space or at the wrong height
  • ✕Over-rotating past the target so the elbow has already passed the striking zone by the time it reaches the opponent's position
  • ✕Throwing the spinning elbow without any setup, making it predictable and easy to time a counter against
  • ✕Failing to keep the elbow tight during the rotation, letting the arm swing wide which reduces speed and creates a sloppy, looping trajectory

TRAINING DRILLS

  • →Spin and target drill: place a mark on the heavy bag at head height, practice spinning and landing the elbow precisely on the mark for accuracy development
  • →Kick-to-spin-elbow combination: throw a rear round kick to the bag, reset, then throw the spinning elbow from the same initial rotation to build the disguise pattern
  • →Partner mirror drill: face a partner with pads and practice the full spinning elbow at controlled speed, with the partner providing a target and feedback on timing
  • →Balance recovery drill: throw the spinning elbow on the bag and immediately return to fighting stance to throw a follow-up jab-cross, developing recovery speed
  • →Live sparring integration: in light sparring rounds, attempt the spinning elbow only when genuine opportunities arise to develop fight timing rather than just mechanical repetition

VISUAL GUIDE

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On This Page

  • Key Points
  • Common Mistakes
  • Training Drills

Related Techniques

  • Reverse Horizontal Elbow
    Sok Glap / ศอกกลับ
  • Horizontal Elbow
    Sok Tad / ศอกตัด
  • Elbow Slash
    Sok Tad Na / ศอกตัดหน้า
  • Diagonal Elbow Down
    Sok Sab / ศอกสับ
Six Muay Thai Elbow StrikesGrid diagram showing the six primary elbow strikes in Muay Thai: Sok Tad (horizontal), Sok Chieng Up (diagonal up), Sok Sab (diagonal down), Sok Ngad (uppercut), Sok Klap (spinning), and Sok Glap (reverse). Each shows the strike trajectory in red.Horizontal ElbowSok TadDiagonal Up ElbowSok Chieng UpDiagonal Down ElbowSok SabUppercut ElbowSok NgadSpinning ElbowSok KlapReverse ElbowSok GlapElbows are the most devastating close-range weapon — they cut, they KO, they end fights.