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whats the best kind of martial arts?

damn i gota get back into training. it's such an awesome feeling after you finish a session, the natural high.

just gota finish tapering off this subutex, it's killing my motivation to do anything.
 
Ninjitsu, Tai-Chi and Military Hand to Hand Combat Style.


A wonderful combination of strength, quickness, power and mystery.

overall though.

DRUNKEN BOXING


*pose*
 
NHBfighter said:
I agree with you 100% on this a lot of thai fighters dont have anywhere close to the footwork and combination skill as a boxer. I think training western boxing is a lot more practical for a beginner just looking to defend themselves.

BWAAA HAAA HAAAAR! you guys can not be serious!!!!!

a home grown 55kg muay thai fighter would eat any heavy weight alive!!!

a well executed Sok Klab to the temple will bring any beast to its knees!

boxing :p
 
A 55kg Muay Thai guy will not be beating a HW boxer. No way, no how. I understand low kicks and body kicks, but that's not going to matter with that kind of weight difference. I don't care what your art is because real fights don't look like Chuck Norris movies.. when someone who has that much weight on you starts connecting punches, you fall. Simple as that. Weight classes exist for that very reason. Standing up with someone similarly skilled and a giant weight advantage just doesn't work. Boxers have superb footwork, head movement and combinations. Muay Thai does have a larger arsenal with kicks, knees and elbows but he's going to get his head removed the second he drops a low kick. When you factor in a weight advantage like that, you know the reach is gonna be ridiculous.

Either boxing or muay thai is fine for feeling comfortable in a street fight.

About any martial art will be fine as long as you're training what you learn at a very hard pace. Doing punch-the-air kata bullshit or partners cooperating with your drills is just ignorant. I see so many McDojo traditional martial arts kids falling victim to those scams too often. Talk about a false sense of confidence.. if you're not training what you're learning, very very hard, then it's going to be practically useless when somebody's coming at you 100%.

Now considering most people on the street are terrible, terrible, terrible fighters you don't really need to know much anyway. A good sprawl, some circling and the proper way to throw a few punches is probably going to get you a win in any 1v1 without weapons. With weapons? You're probably fucked unless the guy is a clown.
 
if there are that lethal then why aren't the HW boxers proving it in events like UFC?

...nancy boy footwork, a few head nods and a "jab jab" combo ain't gonna do shit

:p

boxing is for old fat khunts....nuff said!
 
Christian Soldier said:
Muay Thai is hardcore training. I remember the first session it went to, after 30mins of skipping and dropping to the floor for pushups every couple mins i was like shit what have i gotten myself into. then we moved onto pads, training strikes, then kicking pads, heavy bags, then sparring. this went for 2 hrs straight. i was fucked. i couldn't walk properly for 3 days.

My BF trains for 2 hours a day when he has a fight. They stick him in a ring and basically he fights different guys. They also make him do push ups while they drop a ball on his stomach. This is just a couple of things he has mentioned to me. It's a lot of mental training too.

They also put you on a strict diet so you can fit into your fight class (if you have a fight that is).
 
x0x said:
A 55kg Muay Thai guy will not be beating a HW boxer. No way, no how. I understand low kicks and body kicks, but that's not going to matter with that kind of weight difference. I don't care what your art is because real fights don't look like Chuck Norris movies.. when someone who has that much weight on you starts connecting punches, you fall. Simple as that. Weight classes exist for that very reason. Standing up with someone similarly skilled and a giant weight advantage just doesn't work. Boxers have superb footwork, head movement and combinations. Muay Thai does have a larger arsenal with kicks, knees and elbows but he's going to get his head removed the second he drops a low kick. When you factor in a weight advantage like that, you know the reach is gonna be ridiculous.

Either boxing or muay thai is fine for feeling comfortable in a street fight.

About any martial art will be fine as long as you're training what you learn at a very hard pace. Doing punch-the-air kata bullshit or partners cooperating with your drills is just ignorant. I see so many McDojo traditional martial arts kids falling victim to those scams too often. Talk about a false sense of confidence.. if you're not training what you're learning, very very hard, then it's going to be practically useless when somebody's coming at you 100%.

What was that about weight advantages?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POJ2T023M4I
 
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filenet: do you fight? or train?

I've seen heaps of boxers fight in K1, and some of them fucking own. A 55kg kickboxer vs a 100kg boxer? hahahah. What the fuck are you smoking? First of all that would be illegal, because the kickboxer would get his little head caved in. That would be like putting a chihuahua against a pitbull.
 
Portillo said:
What was that about weight advantages?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POJ2T023M4I

Wow that is some amazing stuff. It just goes to show you that ground fighting and grappling arts have the complete advantage over striking disciplines. Aiki Ju Jutsu, Aikido, and similar arts emphasize the neutralization of the attacker. Boxing and Muy Thia are all about striking, where as the previously mentioned arts are all about complete control. If you are fighting and you don't have complete control then what are you doing? That is leaving yourself open to an attack. Doesn't that defeat the purpose of martial arts?
 
Christian Soldier said:
filenet: do you fight? or train?

hell yeah! I usually pick Ryu because I like his red headband! My favourite move is the super finish combo

up+up+up left+left+right lower punch+high kick+high kick

WHAMMMOOOO! You Win!
 
I'm 5'4'' (just stopped growing at ninth grade) Most of the people I fought through highschool were my height, and I've never taken on an opponent that I thought I couldn't beat. I'm looking for a program that will show me how to utilize my unusual height. I need to be able to hold my own in a fight with someone twice my size. Anyone have any suggestions for me?
 
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Live&Learn said:
I'm 5'4'' (just stopped growing at ninth grade) Most of the people I fought through highschool were my height, and I've never taken on an opponent that I thought I couldn't beat. I'm looking for a program that will show my how to utilize my unusual height. Anyone have any suggestions for me?

Judo or brazilian jiu-jitsu
 
Live&Learn said:
I'm 5'4'' (just stopped growing at ninth grade) Most of the people I fought through highschool were my height, and I've never taken on an opponent that I thought I couldn't beat. I'm looking for a program that will show my how to utilize my unusual height. Anyone have any suggestions for me?

Im a shorty too.

Jiujitsu, muay thai and MMA.
 
x0x said:
A 55kg Muay Thai guy will not be beating a HW boxer. No way, no how. I understand low kicks and body kicks, but that's not going to matter with that kind of weight difference. I don't care what your art is because real fights don't look like Chuck Norris movies.. when someone who has that much weight on you starts connecting punches, you fall. Simple as that. Weight classes exist for that very reason. Standing up with someone similarly skilled and a giant weight advantage just doesn't work. Boxers have superb footwork, head movement and combinations. Muay Thai does have a larger arsenal with kicks, knees and elbows but he's going to get his head removed the second he drops a low kick. When you factor in a weight advantage like that, you know the reach is gonna be ridiculous.
I think in a real fight weight doesn't matter as much as it does in a sport fight. It certainly does matter ALOT but a jab to the throat or a poke in the eye is all the same no matter what weight you are.

Either boxing or muay thai is fine for feeling comfortable in a street fight.
You would certainly feel comfortable with either skill set on the street. I think it's important to point out that neither one was ever designed for the street though.
 
we have a midget match

Live&Learn in the blue corner

Portillo in the red corner

ARE YOU READY TO MIDGET RUUUUUUMMMBBBBLLLLLEEEEEEEE!!!



midget fighting is way awesome =D
 
Live&Learn said:
I'm 5'4'' (just stopped growing at ninth grade) Most of the people I fought through highschool were my height, and I've never taken on an opponent that I thought I couldn't beat. I'm looking for a program that will show my how to utilize my unusual height. Anyone have any suggestions for me?
A short physics lesson:
Force = Mass x Acceleration

Massive guys can generate force at slower speeds. Smaller guys are built for acceleration. Bruce Lee wasn't a tall guy but he was very fast and accurate.

Wing-Chun, Aikido, Tai-Chi all of these would serve you well as well as many others.
 
filenet said:
we have a midget match

Live&Learn in the blue corner

Portillo in the red corner

ARE YOU READY TO MIDGET RUUUUUUMMMBBBBLLLLLEEEEEEEE!!!



midget fighting is way awesome =D

...I'm not a midget. 8)
 
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