Monday, August 30, 2010

Do not try this at home!

You never know who you’re messing with. So don’t mess!

Old Man Owns Five Dudes In Station - Watch more Funny Videos
The video raises a serious point for those of you who worry about being too small, too old, or too incarcerated to be able to defend yourself.
I'm making a lot of assumptions here, but this guy may not have had many options:
  • Run? Nope. Nowhere to go.
  • Talk his way out of it? May not be able to speak the same language. Or they may all be drunk. Or something.
  • Use an improvised weapon? Hmmm. Don’t they usually search for, and confiscate any weapons before they put you in the slammer? Not an option.
  • Give up? Not this guy. He may be our last, best hope. When the nuclear apocalypse happens, there will be cockroaches and this guy left. Somehow he will have to repopulate. Don’t want to think about it.
  • Fight back? That would imply waiting for the attackers to attack. Which leads to the inevitable defending against five guys. Which is probably just stupid! So…
  • He attacks! The unexpected here is what will work. Or has the best chance of working, however slim that chance may be. Go on the offensive, and have the tools to get the job done. In this case, those tools are some good boxing skills.
What did you take away from this one?

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Breaking Madness!

So dumb, it’s funny. As a recovering power breaker (ok, I’m recovered – it’s been at least 10 years since I’ve regularly hit the bricks, but here is a relatively recent, feeble example), I can appreciate the gimmicks I’ve seen during demonstrations. This video, at least, shows an honest gimmick, and doesn’t try to fool the audience.

After some, nearly bone-shattering misses, or breaks that went bad, I could only watch, in disgust, as some “master” on TV, or in a shopping center demonstration would break ten slabs with two-inch spacers. I have watched in amazement as a superhuman piledriver of a martial artist hit eight slabs with his head, and saw the spray-painted foam fly into the air. Did the audience know any better? Probably not. They ate it up. Whereas I have the dane bramage, scars, and knots on my parts which can attest to my honest power breaks.

Am I bitter? Nope. It’s all a part of the show in the modern martial arts business.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

When to fight? A great question from My Self Defense Blog

John Zimmer at My Self Defense Blog has a great question here:

When to Fight? Why is this a Question?

 I'll try to answer in a response post. Please comment over at John's blog.
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Now blogging from my phone

I have to admit I'm kind of excited about the ability to write posts from my phone. You should see increasing numbers of posts as a result. Sound good?
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Monday, August 16, 2010

How to perform the Clinch in Muay Thai

Our post, Defend the Thai Clinch, elicited a response in the comments of “They are actually doing it wrong,” with a link to this video:

Couple of points:

  1. There is a lot of merit to clinching high, on the head. This is a good habit, and I agree with, and recommend this video. There are many benefits to doing it.
  2. I always found it easier to escape a higher clinch like this. Not to say that it isn’t better. Learn it. Learn to defend it. Learn why it works and how to counter it.

Your Style is Perfect!

Grnd-Pound Esc-1

Most of us, who have any reasonable time in martial arts, will have spent much of our free time debating the perceived strengths and weaknesses of our own style of fighting, whatever it may be, as compared to our friends. Why Judo, Karate, Kung Fu, Muay Thai, Jeet Kune Do, or Brazilian Jujitsu is the ultimate art, with some maturity, turned into what are my art’s strengths and weaknesses, and how can I work around them or supplement my training. We’re seeing this all over the place: Grappling schools teach striking, almost everyone supplements their training with grappling and boxing, and almost all of watch MMA and learn something. But, wait a minute. What about what you already know? What if I told you that your style has some perfect responses for techniques and tactics that you need to know?

A previous post’s comments, on Aikido responses to the jab (or uncommitted attack) brought up the fact that most of the best responses to a given attack are within your own style – if you face that type of attack. For example:

Few Taekwondo-type kicking attacks are better handled than by a TKD stylist. I had a short exposure to competition TKD fighters, and have nothing but respect for them. Can they punch, grapple, or defend a knife like I could? In most cases, no, but I had so much trouble in their world with their techniques, that I had to take off my hat to them. I had to learn their responses, given the rules of their engagements, and just apply them

The comments in the post mentioned are related to boxing. When in close, there are few ways better to handle a hook than with a straight, or a jab with a hook or overhand. Uppercuts and body punches are a great source of joy to me, in particular. I’ve learned many responses to those techniques from outside of the sport of boxing, but most are no better, and in most cases, leave one more vulnerable to a boxer. I think we can all find those examples in our own styles.

Now, back to reality: The operative terms in my suppositions that all styles may have their own perfection only apply in those circumstances particular to the common practice of said style. I’ve railed against some of the sport techniques that are just ineffective, or worse, dangerous outside of the sport venue and away from the supervision of an officiating agent with a rulebook. My personal philosophy is to learn what will and will not work, and spend most of my time practicing what will really work against likely attacks. Many of you are the same. In order to get to the point where one can be effective, you need to learn from someone who can build the skills that you want, and in most cases that person will come from a coherent system. Learn it, love it, and own it before you dismiss it. My bet is that you never will.

Friday, August 13, 2010

When Does a Circular Technique Trump a Straight?

Check this out:

In this case a counter overhand worked because the lead-off fighter did not connect with his jab. It could also be argued that he overcommitted and walked into the counter overhand right. A more conservative approach, hindsight being 20/20, would be to pump the jab while circling away from James Thunder’s power hand (his right), and not commit until the opponent made a mistake. Thunder (the counter fighter) slipped the jab well, and threw the right over the committed jab.

In my experience in fighting and sparring, the easiest thing to handle is a committed lead technique. In striking, “committed” can be defined as a technique thrown with the distance and penetration to not only connect, but to drive through the target. You usually see this behavior from those with little training, or much. In other words, am untrained, aggressive fighter, or a highly trained fighter who is confident he has little to fear.

In most cases, I’d hazard that that type of commitment is a mistake, which can cost you dearly, as in the example of the KO above, but it can also lead to a quick knockout delivered by the committed lead-off fighter, as we’ve all seen many times.

My advice is to not be lulled into the idea that you can take anyone out with your first technique. A scientific fighter, one who uses high-percentage techniques, tactics, and strategies, will usually employ a true lead to:

  1. Gauge the reaction time and habits of one’s opponent,
  2. Close safely, cover the distance with a barrage of fire while moving close enough to make contact – that prevents a committed counter and puts the opponent back on his heels and unable to transfer his weight to attack or counter (rendering his nearly powerless) and
  3. Set up techniques based on the above.

A good example is the 1-2-3 tactic. It’s a lead jab (1), usually eliciting a step back or a parry by the counterfighter, then a straight right (2), which if the opponent moves straight back will set up the range perfectly, and, whether the opponent covers up or rolls the rear hand straight, his inside line will be occupied, and the outside open for the hook (3).

Have any other good examples? They are there is all styles, from boxing to Taekwondo, grappling,  to fencing, to the battlefield.

For more information:

TDA Tip: Always Use Combinations
Creating Combinations
High-Low combination: Jab-Side Kick
Taekwondo Fighting Strategy - Broken Rhythm
Nut Kicking and Ball Busting Girls?
Why Do We Get Hit?

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Apologies - comment moderation

I owe several readers an apology - I AM a jerk. I missed moderating comments, and yours did not get published. If you have a chance to work out with me, you get a free shot. My bad!

Saturday, August 07, 2010

Is he the best cop ever?

He’s got moves that I don’t know if I’d want to emulate.