I know it's satire, but his foot work left much to be desired. He's falling over himself, he had no hop in his step. He didn't know what to do next....
@@potentdelirium He also had zero athleticism, but that's probably genetic. His parents probably started him in taekwondo because he was bad at sports in general and they wanted him to be able to participate.
@Joe Schmoe After checking the channel, I don't even think TKD is his primary martial art. He looks more adept at Karate, and unfortunately, that leaves much to be desired as well.
Not really... You lost already. Never show your opponent what you can. But you can talk about it to your opponent when he's having sweet dreams while being in horizontal position with 2 black eyes, broken nose and dislocated shoulder 😂
@@CorbinB-Rax so glad we have professor ego thinking he knows the entire world. I don't think you could exaggerate more. The skill he showed was basic at best.
@reaperx1202 The 10 year demo was not "basic" by any count. You're just a shameless liar. "Basic" is Front Kick, Roundhouse, Low Block, High Block, Outer Block, etc. Tornados are not taught to day one students, you liar. Jump spinning hook kicks are not taught, on day one, you liar. Super Kicks are not taught on day 1, you liar. Butterfly kicks, are not taught on day one, you liar. What other individual thing do I need to call you out for? Or should I start posting links to the official WT, ITA, ITF curricula, to prove, irrefutably, that you are a proud liar?
I mean, the world taekwondo federation has given out 9th degree black belts to people that haven't even taken one day of taekwondo, so it's realistic 🤣
@@DeltaOmaniacNot where i practise. It takes about 8 - 9 years of TKD to get your black belt at the dojo I attend. (Not saying that everywhere does it the same as mine, as i have had experiences in the past with TKD mcdojos) Edit: Also the time may vary as it may only take 5 - 6 years for someone who starts off training in the seniors class (15+) due to belt order and rankings. I wont go into detail because its a bit complex and i feel like ive yapped enough already.
@@arshaam It's don't find it a hard kick to learn either... but there's no way a complete beginner(most complete beginners) would have the flexibility or muscle memory to do it that well in 1 week lol unless they're just one of the better ones tbh
@@arshaam No offense taken- I’m not speaking for myself, but other people. I can do way more than that 10 years and I’ve been learning for almost 5 years at this point 😂
@@arshaam Some people pick up a martial art faster than others for whatever reasons be it any prior life experieces that are applicable in any large or small way or maybe some kind of genetic predisposition. The amount of effort someone puts in is also a huge factor.
As a takewondo player myself this was pretty accurate. Also those screw kicks on 10 years were awesome. I've been playing for 5 months or so now. I already do the 20 year one tho. I always get something to drink and just go onto the bike machine behind the taekwondo area and I sit there drinking it while waiting for my period to start
@@Luca-tw9fk this is just what i heard from my friend at school but he said when he joined ITF, it mostly train you to wipe the floor with someone/hit to kill. That's true?
@@Ryu_Akagi007 that's mostly exaggerating, ITF trains more power, compared to WTF which is more of hit for points, in the competitive context. If it's hit to kill as martial art I would think of kyokushin karate
@@ErtugrulKYK Aye because you have you have to do it for a certain amount of years until you qualify for the next one and i think your attempting to qualify for the 3rd Dan Black Belt so you’ll need to keep doing it for about 2 more years until you can go for it
i fight like someone how has been doing taekwondo for ten years but i practiced for four years and left at green belt, i’ve was doing it all the way from 6-10 years old and now i’m twelve and i have improved my skills
Bruh i reached that 10 year process in like 6 months. Good old days , i was actually very talented in this sport and i kept doing it for like 5 years. Shame i had to quit just to become a dentist who is also into music. My master had very high hopes for me to be qualified for the national team. Now that i think as a kid i never thought i'd end up here. Life is weird and amazing !
Me being a taekwondo kid I've been doing taekwondo for 6 years and then I'm advanced yellow belt competitions besides an actual Olympic competition except for national qualifiers that was in Utah my master uses me as an example and he appreciates my training he loves having me being an example to the class I am a great person he loves just having me there he is so proud of me for competing for so long and staying with the martial art for so long and caring that I started
@@unspeakable.shorts in no world would a mediocre boxer be able to block a kick from someone who does tkd for 10+ years. It's not only about blocking it, a single kick from someone who knows what they're doing and trains for 10+ years would absolutely smash your hands. That's provided if you're even fast enough
What if, hear me out, the TKD guy learns basic kickboxing fundamentals and boxing and transfers their insane speed, conditioning, flexibility, balance, and dexterity into a new hybrid kickboxing style similar to Wonderboy Thompson 👀
@@KizaruBorsalino Yeah, very effective. Yoh just wave your hands and legs around like kid throwing tantrum. If that's what you call effective, you better be physically strong and tall. Because if you do that in a real fight, you'll get your ass beaten within a second.
This guy won the ITF tkd world championship in his division. Trained under a guy named Hiltz who is very well respected in the TKD association. Not trying to make the case that TKD is practical in the real world of fighting but this guy is not the result of a "McDojo" and has earned his belt.