Yes, training in Muay Thai can be very helpful in a fight however, so can training in any number of different martial systems. Something that tends to irk me a bit; how does one know by looking at a fighter kick that the fighter is using Muay Thai or another training system just by the kick? There are many systems which train a specific way to deliver their kick and the style is evident. There also are many systems utilizing a roundhouse type kick striking with the shin. Just because someone kicks with the shin and uses thai style kick pads to train with doesn't mean they are training Muay Thai. There is much more to a MuayThai system fighterÂ’s style than that. The stance, the placement of the feet, the weight distribution, the usage of the hip, shoulder, and ball of the foot. I was watching a pankration fight recently and the fighters were using kick techniques exactly like some tkd kicks I learned many years ago. Both fighters also use shin kicks and shin blocks very similar to Muay Thai leg blocks however what they were doing was pure pankration. The commentators even commented that they were doing thai kicks and blocks... Huh!!? Pankration is a Greek fight art from the time of antiquity long before Muay Thai came about.
My point is just because someone takes an opponent to the ground and mounts and submits him doesnÂ’t mean it is BJJ. Just because an opponent is kicked with the shin in a roundhouse kick doesnÂ’t mean it is Muay Thai, if two fighters throw jab type punches, or jab/cross punches does that mean they are boxers? I could have some of my students from our Pekiti-Tirsia Kali class do some roundhouse kicks from Pekiti and unless you knew they were not trained in Muay Thai you would be hard pressed to tell the difference. (There are a number to things which differentiate the two kicks but unless you know them you would not be able to tell them apart.)
What works is you getting on the training area and training realistically against an opponent who is realistically training against you in whatever environment you will be fighting in. It doesnÂ’t matter what training system you use or what you call it, the training needs to be as realistic as possible yet safe for all involved.
Danny T