Anyone that knows boxer Hai Lee, please encourage him to keep putting up content! Hai, if you ever want to interview or send me more footage, please contact me any time!
@@SirPlusOfCamelotI can't see why anybody would still 6:26 think that. Kungfu beat MMA in the video " Wingchun guys try MMA"- fight commentary breakdown. This channel is now giving a balanced account of traditional martial arts both winning and losing.People see that not all kungfu is clownfu. I'm hoping Jerry Liu continues to present video on this manner.
The biggest problem is the Kung Fu guy didn't use any side kicks. If he had an independent motion side kick to counter jabs and lead hand, this would have went differently. The head naturally goes back as you do a sidekick, take the ribs every time.
boxer's defense isn't good yet, no head movement or slipping at all. 5 months of training kinda explains that though. kung fu guy didn't drop his guard and never gave up and got pummeled so good for him.
Argue against head movement in KungFu or Muay Thai always mean risk of getting knee or head kick but the problem is not practicing enough. Even Tai chi is cool, you can cooperate it into boxing and Muay Thai if you actually put time to practice it.
@@hellohennessy3462 mostly on clinching, you can add arms manipulating on boxing clinching. Against aggressive fighters, use your hand to steer their head away, etc… Something close to Matador vs Bull in boxing. Some names in boxing you can look up who applied Move similar to Taichi to boxing like James Toney, Lomachenko and Keyshawn Davis.
Interesting how it's the boxer who has his right hand as his lead, usually the Kung Fu guys or jkd guys emphasize the southpaw stance more but to each his own
To the kung fu guy, you have more arsenals then that boxer. Use your elbows, knees, back kicks... keep attacking his outer thigh area with powerful round kicks. If boxer notices you using same tactics switch to other side confuse boxer. The boxer guy has stances that you could foot hook to trip him, leg sweep to bring him to the ground etc.. kung fu guy you need more training to your art, dont just trade punches for punches use your arsenals.
The boxer was eating the headshots all day but those open stance body kicks paid off for KF guy in the end, he couldn't take many more of those. Good amateur effort by both of them, hopefully they both work on their defense a bit haha
Kung Fu guy had nice roundhouse kicks and saw a short burst of success during those offline kicks to Boxer’s body. I also agree, Kung Fu guy never moved offline and constantly engaged Boxer guy head on. Kung Fu guy would have benefited greatly with front snap kicks and push kicks. Boxer Guy only moved in a straight line. So, maybe a few front snap kicks inside of Boxer guy’s gloves and upwards to his chin would have certainly gotten his attention.
Boxer only 5 months in training the Kung Fu his entire life..... We saw the boxers even gain punching power after 2 or 3 min. Kung Fu lost all his punching power, thats because he wasn t throwing punches at all.
Both are at beginner level. Boxing does have an advantage because they produce so much more traffic in the upper portion of the fighting space. It’s overwhelming for many styles that don’t have a counter, defense or evasion to deal with it. But high activity requires stamina so boxing guy had to take breaks.
Gung Fu practitioner has decent hands but a very lumbering cumbersome approach to footwork. He continues to go for that roundhouse kick, presumably he is most confident in it's power among his techniques. His delivery, however, does not include many feints. In addition he chambers his leg stiffly and his hands move before the strike begins which telegraphs the kick. He also doesn't deliver sidekicks, front kicks or attempt to parry and trap the boxers punches (which are almost all straight rights and jabs so he has time to do so). This the boxer has ample time to adjust for the addition of kicks. Also neither fighter has strong defense. The Gung Fu practitioner keeps his hands low and continues to go for the kick while not getting off the center line enough, as mentioned in the video and ends up eating many shots. The boxer may be excused for his mistakes in his defense, as well as his cocky attitude due to his inexperience relative to his opponent. Though he should be throwing more hooks as these would likely knock out his opponent if he fired just as he dropped his hands to deliver his roundhouse or as a follow up to the jab. Striking the body, by either fighter was quite rare. Those criticisms aside both fighters tried very hard and were largely respectful (aside from the strikes to the back of the head and the boxer kicking once in frustration). I applaud them both for agreeing to the fight and to allow it to be uploaded so that others might observe their efforts and improve. Thanks for posting! Great video.
A good amateur match. It's good for young men to test their skills in some controlled format. The Kung Fu dude put up a good fight and initially the hammerfists landed well but he was told not to use them. His kicks made a difference and if he had side and front kicks he would have been able to keep the boxer at a distance and stymie his punches which were very powerful. I don't know if knees and elbows were allowed that would have stacked the odds more, and I'm assuming no takedowns were allowed. If they were he would have taken less punishment on close range.
Even Holly Holm boxing world champion learned kick to fight MMA, If you are going to fight with different rules that's not Boxing you have to learn more than only Boxing.
Honestly the kung fuu guy has high endurance to be punched. His only problem was some footwork and boxing skills, but his kicks were there. Unfortunately if they could grap each other, and knee and elbow, maybe the fight could have been differently.
The boxer is connecting with is cross a lot because of the South paw vs. Orthodox stance difference. A south paw fighter with is foot placed to the outside of his orthodox opponent will be able to land that cross just like jab.
The lower half of the boxer was totally exposed more times that you can count. He was open to a lot of dirty lower body attacks in a real fight. Also the KF guy hit him on the back of the head a few times and held his head while punching his face. Those times were stopped by the ref and was warned. In real life there's not gonna be a ref to tell the other guy not to fight dirty.
Boxer was connecting more with his cross because it was a righty vs lefty match. Their lead hands pretty much negate each other, so the cross becomes the dominant punch. Step outside the other guy's lead foot and throw your "cross" straight down the pipe. Boxer would have been well-served to throw some lead straights to the body and to finish off his combos with a "3" - a lead hand hook - to either body or head. But you said he had only 5 months of training, so no big criticism there.
Why are you so surprised he connects a lot of crosses?! It's literally southpaw vs orthodox... of course you'll throw more lead lefts as the south paw, especially if your opponent is wide open and continually allows you to step on the outside of their lead foot...
I like how the kung fu guy is throwing jabs over the boxers left shoulder and using the cross arm block to stifle the boxers rear left and negate his lead right.
Kung fu guy had the spirit, but not much on technique and conditioning. Still, very valiant effort, the boxer did not instantly wreck him. Good on both of them.
From my novice observations, the human body can take round upon round of punishment, but in jiujitsu it is quite apparent who the victor is because the loser has a broken limb and can not continue, has tapped out to prevent a broken limb or has been choked out. It seems to be that when applied correctly, jiujitsu ends fights faster. Am I correct?
I thought ( due to all the other videos of kung fu guy vs ) he was going to eat the matt in seconds , he did good , but then hes young , fit, dressed like a normal person and not wearing pyjamas and not claiming to be a master
@@NTR-Impact you're right, Kung Fu conditioning is insane, almost out of this world, just watch videos of conditioning work from those shaolin monks and you can have an idea... Also search about Zhang Weili, shes not a monk but had background on Kung Fu, you'll have a surprise about who she is...
"kung fu guy" doesn`t look like he has any training at all, like those kicks? ZERO power, boxer seems to have more power in his kicks lol. Dude is basically a punching bag.. And the camera guy is USELESS.
Dude you need to know boxing and Muay Thai before kung fu. Kung Fu is the sights you place on your bow to gain advantage but if you can't even shoot an arrow properly and know the fundamentals...it will collapse
Man I think Kung fu needs to throw more power in his kicks and learn to kick with his shins instead of the instep. The boxer looks thicker like u say so the Kung fu guy needs more powerful than what I'm seeing. And for punching learn how to throw knock out hooks if his straights aren't phasing him.
whats the point titling these videos style vs style? all that matters is the format, and if the person trains seriously. If a kung fu players strikes dont phase a 145 pound man then he obviously is just a hobbiest
When boxers and kickboxers fight, they use the techniques they actually drill. When TMAs fight, they all look like drunken uncles having a brawl with a bush in a backyard. They rarely ever use all those fancy and pretty techniques from their katas, forms etc.
boxer guy is blocking those punches with his face. its obvious this "boxer" guy only practices on punching bag, and hasnt built any fundamentals on defense. needs to work more on defense and less on the punching bag. weaving, reacting, moving head, etc. this guy relys too much on peek-a-boo. hes not mike tyson. when this guy does peeka boo, seems more like "i have no clue what to do at the moment", like a o shit button, im getting punched, lets turtle up. as well as he could work with more angles to his punches. most of his punches were sloppy jabs and straights.