Rambaa Somdet The IKF does this too. They don't want blood dripping or poring onto the ring canvas, I've seen referees pause fights to wipe blood off gloves and shoulders before. But in this instant it was weird, Joe was on a tear and he bought him a solid 17 seconds to recover
One of Joe's best performances. And Murat Direkci the Turkish fighter also fought very well imo. I love Muay Thai. I train Muay Thai myself at a local gym, have done so for many years. I love watching fighters like Bazooka Joe, Gabriel Varga, and similar fighters, because my own style(of fighting) is based on those guys, guys that use the high Dutch Guard primarily for defense, that rely on their boxing and on leg kicks(and lower body kicks), instead of fancy stuff, I like relying on the stuff I know works well. That's why Joe and Varga and these other guys with a similar style are what I watch and watch both for fun and for learning new things. Deflecting blows off your forearms allows you to still be stable and in position; and it doesnt take near as much energy as a parry takes; and you don't gotta bring your hand OR your head or entire upper body back to position before you can return fire while using a High Guard, just gotta reset slightly for some punches or not at all for others(like deflecting a 1-2 off your lead arm in a wing guard block, and immediately following it up with a extra powered up cross or right hook to their head(or body it depends) when they can't really see it coming fully, and they just got their strikes deflected off your forearm. I've found it quite useful, vs both straight punches and angled shots like hooks or roundhouse kicks. Reflexes don't last as you age, they are always the first to go, that's why I didn't base my defense on evasion from the very start; I still do evasion but its not meant to totally evade shots; just SLIGHTLY evade shots so I'm never hit completely on the mark if I DO get hit and it breaks past my guard, it takes a bunch of the sting out of their shots.
Direkci used to be my trainer, but honestly I think his conditioning was more of a problem, and he gave a lot in this 1st rounds, not all opponents would survive even that. Like against Sato too in Japan he started out good and should've been able to win that fight but it's like his conditioning just let him down in the later rounds..
ıf u dont know anythıng pls dont talk... murat ıs fuckıng legend. he has many tıtltes and he was retıred long tıme ago . but murat accept the match cause of ıstanbul.. ıf murat has a condıtıonıng and he could preaper thıs match u could see whats happenıng. murat ıs legend, valentın ıs a chıld ... btw ım not muslim or turk.
dude didn't even throw any kicks. i saw not one low kick. joe just tore him apart by chopping at him. even if he did land some solid punches in the first.that all goes away once your legs are gone. tsk...tsk. tsk...Muay thai and kickboxing 101. follow up and use punches and kicks to set up eachother.
You know it man, can't wait till you get in there - you'll be a champ in no time with all your insight. Do you have any fights on here that I can watch? I'd love to learn more from you....
@geert konings This is factually unsupported. As per a 2015 survey, Holland is 50% irreligious, 44% Christian and the remaining 6% is split across 4 other religions. Global economics are dominated by China, the United States, and western Europe, all of which are primarily irreligious or Christian. In reality, evidence strongly suggests that as countries become more educated, the less religious they become. Realistically every religion, including Islam and Christianity, will continue to be less prevalent as countries become more developed.