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DALE KVALHEIM, THE FIRST

AMERICAN MUAY THAI CHAMPION


...sees a great future for Muay Thai in the USA...
By Robert Horn
As Dale Kvalheim climbed into the Provincial Boxing Stadium ring in Chiang Mai,
Thailand, the murmur of the crowd told him he was not welcome. The local fans
had never seen a fighting Farang (white foreigner) before. Surely, they thought,
he would be cocky. Surely, he would lack discipline and respect for Muay Thai
which differs from the more widely seen kick-boxing in that the blows can be
struck with elbows and knees as well as feet and fists. Surely, this farang was
about to be taught a lesson. The bettors in the crowd set the odds as high as 20I
against him.
Kvalheim, a U.S. Army
Specialist E-5, had
almost pulled out of this
match. It was not that he
was afraid. Not with 21
Muay Thai bouts to his
credit. His concern was
the anti-American feeling
rife in Chiang Mai in the
mid 1973. Only about a
week before the fight, a
visit to Chiang Mai by
William Kintner, the U.S.
Ambassador to Thailand,
had ignited a riot.
Kvalheim didn't want to
fight in Chiang Mai at this
moment, but a bout in
Thailand's second largest

city would be a mile stone


in his Muay Thai career.
The promoters still
wanted him and so they
gave assurances as to
his safety outside the
ring. His safety inside the
ring was another matter.

His opponent was a devastating kicker, who fought under the ring name Apidet
Noi, meaning Little Apidet. The original Apidet was an old-time Thai boxer who,
according to legend, broke men's bones with his kick. The crowd grew raucous
as the new Apidet strode through it toward the ring.
Kvalheim stayed cool. He turned towards his corner and, as is the custom,
began the Wai Khru an obeisance to one's teacher, training camp and fighting
ancestors, and then the Ram Muay, the ritual dance of respect for the spirits of
Muay Thai, While the haunting music of the Java pipe, drums and cymbals
echoed through the otherwise silent stadium, Kvalheim moved about the ring,
dipping, spinning and whirling his arms in a ceremony so graceful and dignified
the Thais were at first astonished, then appreciative. He knew how crucial this
pre-fight performance was. "it showed that I was not there as military personnel,"
he says, "I was there as a Thai boxer.' Then, his eyes met those of a ringside fan
who shouted at him in Thai. "I didn't understand what he said," says Kvalheim
"but the crowd broke up." Kvalheim smiled at the laughing ringsiders. and the
tension throughout the arena was broken.
Once he was back in his corner, Kvalheim's second Khun Kayan wrapped his
arms around his man's head as they chanted the blessing given to them by a
Buddhist Monk. Kayan removed Kvalheim's Monkon (sacred headpiece), blew
into his hair to drive away any evil spirits and as Muay Thai music began to play,
sent his fighter out for the first round.
Apidet Noi came out kicking furiously. Kvalheim pressed forward, realizing that
his only chance was to get inside the deadly arc of his opponent's legs. But
Apidet was blasting him back with brutal kicks, Hardy Stockman, at ringside for
Black Belt, an English language magazine, was amazed at Kvalheim's "untiring
drive and complete disregard for pain.
Kvalheim however gained confidence after the first round. If he wasn't in control
of the fight, he was at least in control of himself. In round 2 he continued his
pursuit of Apidet even though the Thai was exacting a terrible price for entering
the inside zone. Apidet was scoring more points, but during the third round,
Kvalheim began to sense doubt. "He didn't think he was winning, " recalls
Kvalheim. "I could see that each time he kicked and I Just kept coming, it was
bothering him. He had a look, like Wait a minute!, I'm Apidet Noi. I break bones
Don't you know who I am?" In the fourth round Kvalheim seized the inside. There
he could use his stronger, faster hands and elbows He bulled and mauled his
man for the final two rounds. It was a strong finish, but Kvalheim wasn't sure it
would be enough.
After checking the judges' cards, the referee walked towards Kvalhefin's corner.
While the farang stood at center ring, glove raised in triumph, the Thai fans stood
with him, their ovation pouring down from every corner of the Chiang Mai
stadium. "To gain fans whom I always considered friends that's what it's all
about," says Kvalheim. It wasn't until the American reached his dressing room
that Kayan told him he had gained much more; Kvalheim had won the lightweight
championship of Northeastern Thailand. Kayan had chosen not to risk burdening
his boxer with this information.
Growing up in Wenatchee, Washington, Kvalheim wanted to box, but the town
of 16,700 had no gym where he could learn the sport. Then as a platoon leader in
Vietnam, he had no time. And when he was stationed in Udom Thani, 'Thailand,
not far from the Laotian border, for his second hitch in the Army, there was no

boxing program. But a buddy mentioned that one of the drivers on the base had
been a famous Muay Thai fighter and perhaps he might teach him.
The driver, Khun Kayan, wanted nothing to do with teaching Muay 'Mai to this
slight sandy haired farang. Others like him had tried the sport, but all had quit
after suffering injuries. One American had been so unspeakably rude that he had
challenged his teacher, who had literally kicked him out of the sport. Kvalheim
kept after Kayan. He spent weeks drinking Mekong whiskey with him and losing
all his baht at cards to the ex fighter. At last, he relented. "After all the gambling
losses," Kvalheim says, "I think he felt sorry for me." Kayan also thought the
farang would not last very long. They set up training at Kayan's house. Kvalheim
spent hours kicking a heavy canvas bag.
Like most foreigners, he had soft shins, and so at first the pain was
excruciating. " I could hardly walk due to the deep calluses with fluid beneath
them." Kvalheim recalls. Kayan taught him a few simple basic combinations and
then encouraged the student to invent his own. That wasn't what Kvalheim
expected at all. He thought there would be Kata strict movements, as in Karate.
Nonetheless he enjoyed the freedom to improvise. Kvalheim had no sparring
partner, so he relied on Kayan's 13-year-old nephew to kick at him until he
learned to pick up his shins and block, and to spot a kick about to sent his way.
Initially, Kvalheim had wanted to learn Muay Thai only for the conditioning. But
the more he learned, the more he needed to test his knowledge. He asked Kayan
to get him a fight. Kayan resisted. Again Kvalheim persisted and, eventually wore
down the Thai's reluctance. Kvalheim shocked everyone, himself included, by
knocking out his first opponent, in a bout in 1972, I became a Thai boxer at that
moment and never looked back!' he says. Other Thai boxers, however, soon
found weaknesses in the American's defense. His third opponent floored him with
a crushing knee-and-elbow combination, prompting Kayan to throw in the towel.
In his sixth fight Kvalheim was knocked out cold by a knee to the jaw. He ended
up with a line of stitches in his nose and chin. The next day, on the base at Udom
Thani, Kayan confronted him. "Well," said the Thai " you've gotten beat up now."
Then, in a voice that was more statement than question, he said, "You want to
quit?" "Why?" asked Kvalheim. "I still have a lot more to learn." Kayan laughed.
A few days later, Kayan took Kvalheim to a Wat, or temple, near the base.
Kneeling before an alter of golden Buddha's adorned with lotus blossoms and
burning joss sticks, Kvalheim took the oath of loyalty to his teacher, training camp
and the spirits. A saffron-robed monk blessed him and taught him a prayer to
chant during battle, He presented Kvalheim with a Kruang rang, a piece of cloth
engraved with a secret Sanskrit text, to be rolled into a ring and worn around the
biceps.
As far as known, Kvalheim was the first farang to have taken part in this
ceremony, called Kheun Kru, a rite of passage for a proven Thai fighter. Kayan
explained that the monk's blessing would cause blows to miss Kvalheim's head.
As further protection, he soon received a mongkon, a headpiece made of twine
and tape that had been blessed by seven monks in seven temples, Kvalheim
claims he never there after was knocked unconscious. He admits, however, that
renewed training with Kayan a significant factor in this change of fortune.
Specifically, they worked long and hard on his defenses against knees and

elbows.
Word was spreading that the farang could fight. Despite Kvalheim's growing
reputation, most opponents still assumed they could defeat him by attacking his
legs. The Thais had always enjoyed success against foreigners, including foreign
Karate and Kung Fu masters, by relying on this tactic. "They all came prepared to
fight me one way," says Kvalheim, "and then I blew their strategy." His legs had
be come adept at using them to block and counter.
Winning the Northeastern championship in Chiang Mai earned Kvalheim a Top
10 ranking in the sport. There was speculation about a national title shot.
Eventually the lightweight champion sent him a challenge to fight at Rajadanmem
Stadium in Bangkok. Kayan, however, ruled it out. "Wait," he told Kvalheirn.
"You're not ready yet." Seven fights later Kayan entered him in the challenger
elimination tournament. In a bout in Lampang, just Southeast of Chiang Mai
Kvalheim lost a close decision. " I was in it all the way," he says, "but I was too
tentative. I just didn't do enough. " Certain to this day that he was the better
fighter, he remains bewildered by his performance, not sure if he overstrained or
if he psyched himself out.
He still had his skills and reputation; he had the desire to fight his way to the
top. But another cross-cultural event soon changed everything. Kvalheim got
married in 1975. His wife, a Thai, raised no objections to his fighting. According to
Kvalheim, it was the trainers and promoters "who lost interest ... believing that a
fighter, particular a farang, is never as strong once he takes up with a women."
Kvalheim kept fighting and winning, but it was clear that his career was winding
down.
The fights weren't big fights, and he sensed there were no more big breaks
coming his way. At the end of the year, Kvalheim retired with a 25-10 record. At
almost the same time, his tour of duty in the Army also came to an end. Kvalheim
settled in Seattle but immediately felt uncomfortable. He had become "more
introspective, more internal than people in America like." while working at a
variety of jobs, he began attending Seattle University, eventually graduating
magna cum laude, earning B.A. degrees in history and education.
It took 12 years of working, saving and studying, but finally he made it back to
Thailand in 1987. Now 42, he teaches U.S. history and world geography at the
International School in Bangkok, a career that "fits nicely into the respect "for
learning" that Kayan gave him. When Kvalheim isn't teaching, he's a missionary
for Muay Thai, serving on the executive board and U.S. publicity committee of the
International Muay Thai Association, the sports first worldwide regulatory
organization. He also did consulting work the Jean Claude Van Damme movie
Kickboxer, but it was work that has given him regrets.
Kickboxer hasn't been shown in Thailand. For most part, the film reduces the
Thais to Hollywood- stereotyped Asian villains. The Thai champion, played by
Van Damme's long time training partner in Asian makeup, is depicted as a
psychopath who deliberately fouls and paralyzes his American opponent. "To go
out and kiII and maim "says Kvalheim, " is not the philosophy of Thai boxing."
Now dedicated to promoting a more positive image of Muay Thai, Kvalheim had
joined with some fellow enthusiasts to produce Muay Thai magazine and a

television series of Kickboxing bouts.


He hopes that through an expanding corps of disciples yet another of his
dreams will be fulfilled: to see Muay Thai become an Olympic sport. "Muay
Thai is the most effective ring sport in martial arts," he says. "I don't see how they
can stop it." Kvalheim has learned his lessons well enough to realize that this
latest dream might bring the severest test of his persistence and dedication Since
Dale Kvalheim, became a true American Muay Thai champion over two decades
ago.

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