Friday, November 18, 2011

I find difficulty fighting with some street fighters??

When people fight with their own style,they move around and i find it hard to attack them.Is there any ways i can attack them in a easier way??

I find difficulty fighting with some street fighters??
Per,





Street fighters generally have a few things in common, one of which is they do not train as hard as those of us who learn to fight in the gym. They run out of gas fairly quickly and become stationary targets. Easy pickins!





Here is what you do: (for right-hander's) At the beginning of a fight with a street type fighter, keep your distance. Give them a lot of fakes and not a lot of punches or kicks. Let them expend their energy first, then you attack. Believe me the fakes will, by themselves wear them out. Don't kick at all, and when you do punch, just throw left jabs and nothing else to set them up for the straight right later. An inexperienced street fighter will always fall for this most basic tactic. Jab, jab, jab, jab.....that's all you do for the first couple of minutes or even the first two rounds, until you sense that the opponent is wearing down, then throw a couple of leg kicks immediately followed by a jab and then the hardest jab/straight right punch combo you can deliver. It is the most basic set-up there is, but It works every time on an inexperienced fighter like you are talking about.





Have fun!
Reply:I once asked My Sensei a similar question. His response was "If you want to become a better fighter then get in more fights." But really why would you want to fight like that? If on the other had you are refering to fighting in martial arts tournaments where things are controlled %26amp; there are rules %26amp; refs etc well then I suggest you train hard, practice often, %26amp; spar with as many different fighters as you can. Try a few different martial arts as well to get different perspectives on fighting.
Reply:Let out a big fart! Make it a stinker. Your opponent will either stare in disbelief or start laughing. Then let another one rip, and go attack him.
Reply:Sounds like you're just not used to fighting people that fight with different strategies to you... Try and expand your training to spar with as many people as you can from as many differnt systems as you can, you can learn something from everyone.
Reply:Keep fighting in the street to prove yourself like you do and sooner or later, someone is a) going to pull a weapon on you b) have four - five friends waiting to jump in you're not aware of or c) turn out to be much better than you and beat you to an inch of your life.


You could find yourself in a hospital bed with stuff broken beyond repair, or worse.


Street fighting is not a game. I for one would not teach anything to anyone who wants to use it that way.
Reply:Yeah, try to learn a new style yourself, they improvise a lot, with training, you rely on it, rather than to "go with the flow" If you want to throw them off guard, try faking a few before actually contacting with a strike, also, do you know how to grapple? if not, that is one very important one to learn, it will teach you how to improvise, and adapt to different, and changing situations, tried and true vs hard and new, make the choice, tried and true can be thwarted by new and changing styles, eventually you will find one style will render you obsolete, adaptation is the key.
Reply:Yes. Make them come to you.


Master Troy Messer
Reply:learn to street fight yourself they usually have more experience since all there training is "hands on" they cut all the crap you dont need to know like learning another language or breaking boards, wearing pyjamas or theory.


They get into it full on
Reply:the first thing is most ma techniques dont work in street fighting.





but if you must then i suggest using small linear movements and shorter harder(more force) and faster techs.





hope this helps
Reply:That's the whole point, not getting hit. Finding your own way of fighting, as I have professed, is the only and best way to become a better fighter. Don't expect to fight with a fighter when you can only play tag, do kata or know pre-arranged one step. There is a "Grand Canyon" of distance between a fighter and a martial artist. As long as you keep the blinders of "tradition" on you will not see. As long as the yoke of kata rests upon your shoulders you will not win. Expand and learn. a real fighter will over come any traditional martial artist. In the end that is all. You can profess your spiritual highness or your tradition all you want but in the end, if that gets my *ss kicked I'll forgo such stuff and be the one that walks away, rather than the one in the hospital and a knowledge of history or a sense of tradition. In the end you must decide do I want to truly know how to protect myself or do I want to be lying in the hospital wondering why my kata or one step failed me?
Reply:Try another style. Maybe you learned martial arts for a day or two, thats not enough. Years my friend, years.


Geraldo.


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