2 big reasons the opponent can simply drive your bend head to floor do to the weakened structure of the neck second is opponent can easily knee you in the head. Use the legs for faster down movement and more power to drive back up to take the back.
Hey buddy hope you are doing well. Man you do produce a lot of content, that is awesome, btw if you don't mind,I was wondering how many students you feel comfortable teaching at the same time? Im guessing that you have a class?
The real question would be what level the students are if they're beginning or intermediate or advanced the more experience someone has the easier it is to explain things because of their time spent training where as beginners may need more direct correction in smaller groups. Best thing I did is find the least experienced person in the group and help them directly as much as possible while floating through a larger group giving as much information that no matter what level your at everyone is learning or experiences the activities.
In real life that doesn’t work people don’t know how to actually fight. So they’re not throwing punches at you like a pro. You mostly bum rush and grapple if anything
@@Goodfellowsmma bullshit. No way you just connect your arm to their shoulder in a real fight. Have you ever actually fought a real street fight? It’s completely messy and falls apart almost instantly. That’s just retarded trainer bullshit
@@Goodfellowsmma Right, understood. Yet all these demonstrations are with willing participants in slow motion. Because I saw you left yourself primed for a left uppercut. And if you fight someone that's a MUCH better boxer than me ,you might really have problems.
@@TRIIGGAVELLIit would work with an unskilled average joe type person tho. But u are right anyone with fighting experience is throwing a straight one two feint and hook, and it’s lights out But about 99% of the population can’t fight and will be throwing a punch like the one demonstrated
@@Goodfellowsmma facts. Another move I practice a lot is, on the ground, on your back, or standing as someone is pushing against u. I place my 🖐 on the face or forehead, and push. Then I let my hand slip and turn my elbow into their head. Using their Momentum to add power. It's like a cutting-edge.
It looks a marshal arts studio. The man is shadow boxing, and in boxing ring boxing. Maybe his boxers are on backwards. Those are the 2 obvious mistakes I can see. I'm sure that boxers can and do use marshal arts studios for shadow boxing, but not without some sort of mock up of a boxing ring.
I did notice this one was a different maki from the one to his left side, definitely a inspiration to create something new but I don’t really see the purpose of having a makiwara that moves away from you and stays in that position instead of springing back to its original position. I made one of my own a while ago and definitely can say it’s way easier to use it traditionally that to use it the way he has it set up in this video 🤣🤣
My biggest problem with where to put my guard is keeping visibility on the opponents legs and upper body. The traditional boxing guard always hides kicks so I end up being caught off guard a lot
Alot of time must spend on changing how you visually respond to kicks so you don't leave your guard too open or closed blocking your vision. Get a great kicking partner to work his/her kicks on you at a slower pace and see what is working for you and slowly correct what isn't working