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Home » Muay Thai » Fighting and Training » The Reality of Fighting Without Shinguards

The Reality of Fighting Without Shinguards

Posted on May 10, 2026May 10, 2026 By Angela Chang

If you have spent your whole life stubbing your toes on coffee tables (or accidentally kicking elbows and knees during sparring only to be doubled over on the ground in pain), the idea of fighting without shin guards feels less like a sport and more like medieval torture.

For beginners, the fear is visceral. You remember the first time you kicked a heavy bag and how your legs instinctively held back for every kick afterwards. You look at the thin, unprotected shins of a seasoned fighter and think, “How do they NOT break their legs every time they throw a kick?“

Fighting without shinguards is a transition that every nak muay eventually faces. But moving past that fear requires understanding the intersection of psychology, the temporary “magic” of adrenaline, and the long-term biological reality of building “fighting bones.”

Contents:

  • Intention vs. Pain
  • Why You Most Likely Have Nothing to Worry About
  • The Morning After
  • Building Fighting Bones
  • The Scientific Approach to Durability

Intention vs. Pain

Before we even talk about the physical impact, we have to talk about where your head is. In Muay Thai, psychology is a massive part of the equation. Your mindset before stepping into the ring (and your focus during the rounds) dictates how you perceive every clash.

If your intention is entirely on the fight, the performance, and the tactical execution, your brain is primed to filter out “background noise.” In this state, pain becomes secondary data. However, if your main focus is on the possibility of pain, your attention will be trapped on just that.

When a fighter is preoccupied with their shins hurting, it’s often a sign: either haven’t been mentored by experienced fighters who can give insight into the process, or they simply aren’t ready to fight yet. Competitors who are ready have accepted the physical cost; their attention is on the performance, not the “ouch.”

Why You Most Likely Have Nothing To Worry About (During the Fight)

When I was panicking before my first fight without shin guards (my fourth amateur fight) I asked every veteran in the gym the same question: “Does it hurt?”

The answer was always the same: “You’ll have so much adrenaline that you won’t even feel it.”

It sounds like a cliché, but it is a biological fact. To your conscious self, fighting is something you voluntary signed up for, something related to your passion for the sport. And in a lot of ways, you find training and the experience to be… fun. But your body on a biological level does not. During a fight, your body enters an acute stress response. Your sympathetic nervous system triggers a massive release of adrenaline and endorphins. These chemicals act as a powerful override for your pain receptors.

It was in the warm-up room while I was getting my hands wrapped when it was decided that my opponent and I would fight without shin guards, if we both were open to it. My corner was incredibly calm. He was even excited to ditch the shin guards, as if they only acted as a burden and not protection. He showed zero signs of concern, and I fed off that confidence. Because he acted like it was a non-issue, I believed it was a non-issue.

In the ring, I found that all the problems I felt with my kicks during training disappeared. Without the bulky gear, my kicks were faster, and my defense was sharper. The bone-on-bone clashes felt like… nothing. She kicked, I checked. Nothing. I kicked, she checked. Nothing.

Adrenaline is a magnificent hormonal magic trick that allows you to perform under conditions that would be unbearable in a more predictable environment. But adrenaline is also a loan that you have to pay back with interest the next morning.

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The Morning After

Once the high wears off, the reality sets in. After my first few no-shinguard fights, my shins were “mush” for a week.

When I say mush, I don’t just mean a bit of swelling. It’s a specific sensation where the shin feels entirely useless. You can barely tolerate the pressure of a bedsheet touching your leg, let alone any kind of contact. It feels like the structural integrity of the limb has been compromised, even if the bone isn’t broken.

This happens because adrenaline didn’t prevent the damage; it just silenced the alarm system. Micro-tears in the skin, bruising in the soft tissue, and micro-fractures in the bone are all present. If you rely solely on adrenaline to get through your fights, you will spend your entire career limping.

Building “Fighting Bones”

In Thailand, they use the term kraduk muay, which translates to “fighting bones.” Fighting bones are built through regular competition over the course of years. The bones become harder and denser. I started to experience what was possible in my own development of kraduk muay after fighting every two weeks for several months in Thailand; I could fight five rounds and hit the heavy bag the next day with no issues. No mush, no limping. Just bruising and fatigue.

This wasn’t because I had “killed my nerves” but because my body had started to undergo changes due to the external factors that forced it to adapt.

Wolff’s Law and Remodeling

The foundation of shin conditioning is Wolff’s Law. It states that bone in a healthy human will adapt to the loads under which it is placed. When you kick a heavy bag, the mechanical stress triggers mechanotransduction. Your bone cells (osteocytes) sense the impact and signal your body to deposit minerals to reinforce the bone structure.

This is a slow process of bone remodeling by providing your body with a consistent, manageable stimulus so it has a reason to adapt.

Nerve Desensitization vs. Deadening

There is a common myth that nak muays “kill” their nerves. If you truly deadened your nerves, you would lose the ability to feel anything, including the warning signs of a catastrophic injury.

What actually happens is nerve desensitization. Your nervous system learns to recalibrate its response to a specific stimulus. It stops seeing the impact as a “threat” and starts seeing it as “normal.” The nerves are still there and functional, but the volume on the pain signal has been turned down by your brain.

The Scientific Approach to Durability

The internet is filled with “hardcore” methods: rolling glass bottles, hitting legs with sticks, or kicking trees. Stop doing this.

Rolling a hard object on your shins doesn’t provide the repetitive impact required to trigger Wolff’s Law. It causes inconsistent pressure, bruising, and soft tissue damage. As for kicking trees? Unless you are a conditioned pro, you are far more likely to cause a stress fracture than you are to build density. Real conditioning is unsexy; it’s consistent work, not a dramatic performance for a reel.

To move from fear to logic, you first need information as your foundation. After getting information, you need to give your body what it needs to so it can adapt accordingly. Durability is built through a “cover your bases” approach that every athlete should follow:

  1. The gold standard is kicking a heavy bag. Controlled, consistent impact.
  2. Repetitive impact from running is an essential (and often ignored) part of building bone mineral density in the lower legs.
  3. Strength training helps to stimulate systemic bone density.
  4. You cannot remodel bone if you don’t have the materials. You need adequate calcium for the structure and vitamin D3 for the absorption.

Fear of the “clash” is normal, but your body is capable of adapting. Adrenaline protects you during the fifteen minutes of your fight, but smart, patient conditioning protects your career.

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WHAT IS MUAY THAI?

มวยไทย
Thai boxing
The art of eight limbs

No matter what you call it, this sport has changed lives.

Driven by economical means in Thailand, children from poorer regions of the country start training and fighting to help support their families.

This sport with humble beginnings has grown exponentially all over the world. Although most non-Thais do not fight as an economical means, their passion for the sport has helped pave the way for Muay Thai to become profitable on the international scene.

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