Good video. Still remember the first time I trained this, it wasn't with attractive female though, it was with big strong hairy man who was a feet taller than me and double my weight :D
What I like to use for cleaning mouth guards are Polident Sports Gaurd Cleansing Tablets. You just put the mouth guard in a cup of hot water and add a tablet. let it sit for 15 minutes and you're good to go
Review was great about K-1, but Interms of kickboxing why has the Olympics been so slow to accept Kickboxing over Muay Thai. To train w/o knees, & elbows or head strikes. To see kickboxing then It would be that no take downs or trips, straight knock outs no knees or elbows, or flying knees nor flying kicks, or superman punch. It could also mean karate goes Best of the Best despite of karate style but we all know thats never been true..😆
First of all, I would like to express my gratitude and respect to you for sharing this wonderful video that contains your sincere and meticulous efforts. By the way, I would like to ask you to do your research and research on the contributions of Korean karate, Tangsoo-do (Mudeokgwan Taekwondo), and taekwondo in the formation of American kickboxing. Korea is the second country in the world where karate, born in Okinawa, was introduced, following Japan. It was introduced in the 1920s in Japan and in the early 1940s in Korea. Karate was a non-mainstream martial art that was unfamiliar to Japan until the 1940s. It was slowly becoming known in Japan around university clubs. In the movie Sugata Sanshiro by Akira Kurozawa, produced in the 1940s, karate was described as a villain's martial art. However, Koreans who came to Japan to study have practiced karate (mainly shotokan karate) as early as the 1930s. Introduced to Korea in the 1940s, karate has been combined with karate, martial art from Manchuria in China, and Korean traditional martial art (especially, a lively and diverse kicking technique represented by Taekkyeon) in the space of over a decade, and has acquired unique characteristics of Korea as various literary groups fiercely compete. It was the birth of the so-called Korean karate. At that time, karate in Japan and Okinawa was following the sundome-style rules (no-contact karate), but Korean karate competitively practiced the "direct contact rule" from the very beginning. In the process, the principle of kick method changed delicately, numerous revolutionary kicks were born, and various attack and defense techniques were formed. In addition, the position of the body's center has changed.
American kickboxing was generally based on American karate, which is believed to have come from Japanese karate. However, this is partly different from the truth. Karate was introduced to the United States during the 1950s to 1960s. This was the beginning of American karate history. However, a calm examination of the facts reveals that karate introduced to the United States came from Okinawa and Korea as well as Japan. In Korea, the fighting style was already differentiated by its dynamic movements, which were distinct from those of Japanese karate and Okinawa, and by its ingenious and unique kicking techniques. In other words, Korean karate had already acquired its own characteristics and had a differentiated personality before the 1950s. If you look at the early days of American karate, you can see names such as Japanese, Okinawa, and Koreans who learned Okinawa karate while stationed in Okinawa, as well as Koreans in Korea, Tangsoo-do (Mudeokgwan Taekwondo), an American who learned Taekwondo, and an American who learned Taekwondo in the early days in the United States.
Immediately after the Korean War, General Choi Hong-hee, the division commander of the 20th Division, attempted to integrate all Korean karate and Kwon-beop under the name Taekwondo, which takes its name from Taekkyeon(which provided unique characteristics in the kicking technique of Korean karate), a traditional Korean martial art. (This traditional Korean martial art gave Korean karate the distinctive changes from traditional karate in Japan and Okinawa. And Choi Hong-hee was then the first leader to recognize that these changes gave Korean karate its own uniqueness. This outstanding recognition gave Choi a basis for his willingness and motivation to integrate all bare-handed martial arts under the name of taekwondo.) However, many leaders of the Tangsoo-do at the time preferred the historical name Tangsoo-do and were opposed to Choi's political moves, which led to years of difficulties in integration. Korean martial artists who came to the U.S. from Korea during these times introduced their martial arts by naming them Korean karate, or Tangsoo-do(Korean karate), or Taekwondo(Korean karate), to match the American reality where karate was already introduced.
If you look at American karate's fighting skills and fighting styles during the full-contact karate and American kickboxing periods, you can see that it is taekwondo (standing, moving, and kicking). However, because the name taekwondo was unfamiliar to Americans at the time and was already familiar to the name karate, and because Korean taekwondo leaders in the U.S. jumped on the bandwagon, it created a misconception about American karate and American kickboxing history, and this misconception has been firmly established as the truth.
Taekwondo has also gained popularity in action dramas and action films due to its performance in Hong Kong martial arts films since the 1960s (especially in kick techniques). Taekwondo's unique kicks were utilized in key scenes, even though the martial arts featured in the drama or film were not Taekwondo. For example, 90 percent of the kicks he used in Bruce Lee's films are Taekwondo kicks. Most of the kicks used in the Karate Kid drama that gained huge popularity in the United States were Taekwondo kicks, and even Cobra Kai, who appeared as a villainous group, was Mudukgwan Taekwondo(Tangsoo-do).
Best comprehensive comparison of most Muay Thai gloves on the internet. This and your "Which Boxing Gloves are Right for You? (Top Brands Review)" are godsends man. I can see how all the different gloves look on-hand in one place, and you give a quick rundown on the company and model, I appreciate it greatly!
I have been doing Muay Thai for about 5 years now, and started coaching. I would say my style is definitely Muay Tee due to my Taekwondo background and maybe a Muay femur style as well due to my not overly aggressive personality
The fact you started at 27 is crazy to me, Im 25 but want to train up to become a pro fighter because im falling in love with the sport. Im also being realistic with it but if I can at least have a fighter career and have a good number of amateur fights thats enough for me, and Im willing to put the work in. Thank you for this video
so with all these im jsut trying to get a understanding does my stance stay the same? or does like it change with what style i use? i think personally im muay mat so do my feet stay the same spot as if i was a femur??? pls let me know!
Hey man, how do these compare as an allrounder training glove to thai brands e.g. Twins, Boon, Windy, top king? Would like to use them mainly as sparring gloves with occasional pad / bag work