I’ve been watching videos of a guy by the name of Alan Baker that uses and teaches KFM. He seems to be very knowledgeable and skilled in this method. Also seems to be a very good teacher.
Cool but i disagree with the whole lack of repeating moves. Doing that is the key to success in a real fight. Imho a good dojo would teach 10 grappling moves & 10 striking moves & thats it. You dont need to know a hundred different moves your never gonna use. Even bjj black belts in the ring resort to the same 4 or 5 moves in every fight. They key is to keep it simple & train those 20 move every day over & over till it locks into muscle memory. To quote a great warrior "I fear not the man who has practiced 10k kicks once, but i fear the man who has practiced one kick 10k times."
@@jayaguilar2031yes Absorb what is useful and reject what is not not everything you train is going to be used in a fight because the things you should learn are the things that actually work
It was cool for Batman in a fantasy world. But using a Headbutt as a job or cross or active strike or constant strike is extremely dangerous and foolish. A headbutt should only ever be used as a last ditch effort. Taking the body’s operating system and using it as a battering ram is going to injure you by adding trauma to your head and neck. It only worked for Batman because he wears an armored cowl to protect his head and forehead from damage.
@@up4education there used to be one in Milton keynes and when I enquired about classes to the instructor he said the then kfm system is no longer supported. However, he did say they teach the system partially in krav maga classes. I don't wish to learn krav maga so I guess I'm back to square one. I'm curious - how would I go about becoming an instructor in this system? I would be prepared to travel.