Coach Jay and four students of various ages are running together as they hold up a giant Muay Thai glove.

EEJOON CHOI / NEXTGENRADIO

What does it mean to be

home?

In this project, we are highlighting the experiences of people in three of the U.S. Gulf States: Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi.
 

Aretha McKinney speaks with Jarret Spaulding, a Muay Thai coach at MT Athletics Gym in Uptown New Orleans. Home for Spaulding, better known as Coach Jay, and his students is right inside the ring he coaches them in.

New Orleans coach uses Muay Thai to reach youth 1 kick at a time

by | May 5, 2023

Listen to this audio story

by Aretha McKinney | Next Generation Radio, Gulf States| May 2023

Click here for audio transcript

(Soundbite of boxing gloves.)

(Soundbite of Jay Spaulding coaching: Let’s go. Pop. Oh way.)

JARRET SPAULDING: Hello, my name is Coach Jay Spaulding. I’m from New Orleans, Louisiana.

(Soundbite of boxing gloves hitting punching bag from inside the ring)

SPAULDING: I would consider my gym home, I would consider my ring home, to be more specific. We are in MT Athletics Gym, Uptown New Orleans, Louisiana. It’s when I step in between these four ropes, I feel completely in charge.

(Soundbite of Spaulding coaching: Let’s go. I need to hear some pops. I don’t hear my chains.)

SPAULDING: I feel at peace.

(Soundbite of Spaulding coaching: Strike. Oh. We’re in the library. We’re in the cotton candy factory.)

SPAULDING: I feel nostalgic.

(Soundbite of Spaulding coaching: One pop. One pop. One band. One sound. One band. One sound.)

SPAULDING: My program specifically NOLA, Muay Thai, I teach the art, language and the culture of Thailand. Having the opportunity to travel there multiple times and train there. Not only that, but to be immersed into the culture and begin to understand their daily ways of living.

I was grabbed by the love that they showed each other. I was particularly grabbed by the discipline that they had. It blew my mind. I wanted to bring it back here because I wanted to, I wanted to re-vision the way we did discipline here in New Orleans.

(Soundbite of hitting bags from inside the ring)

SPAULDING: It’s funny because my students just walked in. That’s them over there. They’re warming up. This is their home also. Like, when I step out of the ring, they take on the same sense of home. Before they leave, they make sure it’s clean. When they come in, they make sure everything’s situated. They make sure they treat it as if their parents told them it was home, like they do at home.

They’re out there working right now and I haven’t told them anything. They’re all warming up. They’re all preparing for class. They already know what to do because of what they were given. They walked into the door. They grabbed whatever equipment that they needed to grab, and they started to do whatever that they needed to do, as if this was their home. And it very much is.

(Soundbites from inside the ring)

(Soundbite of Spaulding coaching: Ready? This is your ball game. This is your home. Let’s go. Call it.
Student: One left kick. Strike.
Spaulding: Oh! What was that? Blame your leader. Let’s go again again again…)

SPAULDING: We consider this the house. We’ve literally had the roof blown off of this place. This whole half. And guess what happened? All of the members came in. Everybody. Didn’t ask for a dime. Everybody picked something up. Everybody cleaned something up. Everybody moved something around. I think that speaks a lot to what we’ve done. What we’ve grown. Homegrown. That’s what we are.

(Soundbite from inside the ring)

(Soundbite of Spaulding coaching: Again.
Student: Strike
Spaulding: Again.
Student: Strike.)

Faint breezes from industrial fans placed among the red-and-black painted walls of the MT Athletic Gym attempted to keep members cool as they worked out intensely one May afternoon. The sounds of controlled breathing, friendly encouragement and strikes against bags in a boxing ring echoed throughout the Uptown New Orleans gym as a young student took the lead and called out kicks to a Nola Muay Thai class.

“Ready? This is your ball game. This is your home. Let’s go. Call it,” Jarret Spaulding said to his class.

When defining the word home, Spaulding, a New Orleans native widely known as Coach Jay, has a unique answer. After living in Houston for three years and Atlanta for close to 10, he described it as “not a tangible place,” but instead the feeling he gets once he enters the ring in his gym.

“When I step in between these four ropes, I feel completely in charge,” he said. “I feel at peace. I feel nostalgic.”

Spaulding has been an athlete for most of his life, participating in basketball, football and track during his time at Joseph S. Clark High School, even spending some time in martial arts as a kid. After traveling over 9,000 miles across the globe for athletic opportunities, Spaulding was invited by a friend to visit Thailand to learn Muay Thai and do mission work. He described the month-and-a-half he spent there as mind-blowing. He admired the way locals expressed love for each other, but he was mainly impressed by the way they showed discipline in everyday life.

When Spaulding returned home to Uptown, he brought back a special gift from Thailand that keeps on giving. He now uses his Nola Muay Thai program to teach New Orleans youth about the same discipline, confidence and leadership he learned in his travels.

Coach Jay Spaulding holds a round kicking bag, standing inside a boxing ring.

Jarret “Coach Jay” Spaulding holds a kicking bag inside a boxing ring during a Nola Muay Thai class on Monday, May 1st, 2023, at MT Athletics Gym in Uptown New Orleans.

ARETHA MCKINNEY / NEXTGENRADIO

Red and blue ropes from inside a boxing ring in MT Athletics in Uptown New Orleans. The walls are red, the ceilings are black, the floor is green, there is a basketball hoop hanging up and there are people exercising.

A view of MT Athletics Gym in Uptown New Orleans from inside a boxing ring on Monday, May 1st.

ARETHA MCKINNEY / NEXTGENRADIO

A young teenage student wearing boxing gloves kicks a bag that Coach Jay Spaulding is holding inside a boxing ring. There is another student behind Coach Jay with boxing gloves kicking another bag.

“Coach Jay” Spaulding holds a kicking bag for a student on Monday, May 1st, during a Muay Thai practice.

ARETHA MCKINNEY / NEXTGENRADIO

When I step in between these four ropes, I feel completely in charge. I feel at peace. I feel nostalgic.

Jarret "Coach Jay" Spaulding

Muay Thai coach at MT Athletic Gym, New Orleans, Louisiana

“I haven’t told them anything. They’re all warming up. They’re all preparing for class. They already know what to do because of what they were given,” Spaulding proudly explains as his students take initiative when he’s not in the ring.

He points to this as a precise example of the discipline implemented in his program.

Spaulding started Nola Muay Thai in 2016 to reimagine discipline for New Orleans youth, extending his idea of home within the ring to others, hoping to impact them in any way possible. He also offers the love and sense of community he found in Thailand by ensuring that his students aren’t just a number for his gym enrollment.

“We never want you to walk through the doors [and] feel like a number,” he said. “We want you to feel like you have a purpose here. Everybody gets spoken to when they walk through the door.”

Even damage caused by Hurricane Ida in 2021 to the physical space could not stop it from serving as the home Spaulding has helped bring to this gym.

“We’ve literally had the roof blown off of this place,” Spaulding said. “And guess what happened? All of the members came in.

“Everybody didn’t ask for a dime. Everybody picked something up. Everybody cleaned something up. Everybody moved something. I think that speaks a lot to what we’ve done. What we’ve grown. Homegrown. That’s what we are.”

A mural of purple portraits is on the side of the red MT Athletics Building in Uptown New Orleans.

A mural painted on the outside of MT Athletics Gym in Uptown New Orleans.

ARETHA MCKINNEY / NEXTGENRADIO