เตะล่อ (Te Lor)
The question mark kick is an advanced deceptive technique in which the fighter initiates a roundhouse kick that appears to target the body, then redirects the trajectory of the kick upward to strike the head instead, tracing a path through the air that resembles the shape of a question mark. This technique is one of the most sophisticated weapons in modern Muay Thai and kickboxing, relying on deception and misdirection rather than raw power alone to find its target. The mechanics begin from a standard fighting stance, where the fighter lifts the kicking knee as though chambering for a mid-level roundhouse kick to the ribs or midsection. This initial motion causes the opponent to lower their guard or shift their arm to block the incoming body kick. At the moment the opponent commits to defending the body attack, the kicker changes the trajectory of the leg by lifting the knee higher and snapping the shin upward in an arc that travels over or around the opponent's lowered guard and connects with the temple, jaw, or side of the head. The hip plays a crucial role in redirecting the kick, as the fighter must rotate the hip upward and inward to change the path of the leg from a lateral body kick into an ascending arc toward the head. The technique requires exceptional hip flexibility, precise muscle control, and highly developed timing to execute correctly.
In a fight, the question mark kick is primarily a knockout weapon. The head is the target, and the deceptive trajectory means that the kick often lands on an opponent who has lowered their guard to defend the body, leaving the head completely exposed. The force of the kick is generated through the same hip rotation and shin contact as a standard roundhouse, but the changing angle makes it extremely difficult to read and defend against. Even experienced fighters can be caught by a well-timed question mark kick, because the initial body feint triggers a reflexive defensive movement that opens the head. The technique is particularly effective in the later rounds of a fight when the opponent has established a pattern of checking body kicks and may react to the feinted body attack without consciously evaluating whether the kick is actually going to the body or the head.
The question mark kick has risen to prominence in modern Muay Thai and kickboxing, gaining widespread recognition through its use by elite fighters in both stadium Muay Thai and international competition. While the technique does not have a single definitive Thai name because it emerged more prominently in the era of modern hybrid striking, it is now a recognized part of the Muay Thai arsenal taught in gyms worldwide. Fighters such as Saenchai, Superbon Banchamek, and numerous ONE Championship athletes have landed devastating question mark kicks in high-profile bouts, contributing to the technique's popularity and the perception that it is one of the most effective head-kick techniques available. The kick requires significant training to execute well because the body feint must be convincing enough to draw the opponent's defensive reaction, and the redirection of the kick must be smooth enough to maintain sufficient speed and power. Common setups include throwing genuine body kicks in the early rounds to establish the pattern, then introducing the question mark variation once the opponent has been conditioned to defend the body. Another setup involves mixing the question mark kick with a standard body roundhouse in the same combination, keeping the opponent uncertain about which kick is the feint and which is the real attack. Defensively, the question mark kick can be countered by maintaining a high guard rather than reaching down to block body kicks, by stepping back out of range to give more time to read the trajectory, or by throwing a teep to interrupt the kick before the direction change. Fighters who master the question mark kick add a dimension of unpredictability to their game that can make even a relatively straightforward kicking arsenal appear complex and multi-layered.