I've studied with him. He was supposed to fight in the UFC and he asked me to train with him back when UFC started in the early 90's . I basically had a chance, but it didn't happen.
Steve Nasty Anderson was the best point fighter ever but when l fought him l beat him later he changed his system a bit but we became good friends and Later he moved to Canada and got married open a school (karate) and he had a lot of Students.
I fought Steve'Nasty'Anderson ,Gest what l beat.hem but he did do that legg.kick on me and.l did go down but got back up and finished the fight , me and hem where friends he showed me his BLACK Belt Hall.of.Fame.Plack , thenl asked hem if Leda Dantly was he's Girl' friend he said no that they where just friends .
To me this all looks so meaningless by today's competitive martial arts standards, whether you're talking about kickboxing or MMA . I know there are traditionalists who hate MMA, don't consider it representative of "true martial arts", but this stuff proves next to nothing about either "fighters" actual fighting ability and/or ability to give or take significant punishment.
This was 1985. MMA didn't exist. Also was an evening exhibition event after one of the largest tournaments in Canada designed for entertainment for everyone in the evening. Being exhibition it didn't impact rankings.
@@ErikTaylorRemax Doesnt matter this sport karate still exists today. I wasted too many years doing this garbage. Why do you think no one knows about it ? Because its garbage. Its a game of tag nothing else. Trust me I know all about it. MMA, kickboxing, and BJJ shits on all of this ten fold.
Check out Michael "Venom" Page and Raymond Daniels for examples of fighters who have adapted point-fighting into kickboxing/MMA. I agree that this isn't representative of a real fight, but it exercises two aspects of fighting (distance managment and rhythm manipulation) to an extreme degree.
Shows your lack of what point sparring is. Sparring son. All rule sets are to extract certain skills. Skills you know little knowledge on how they are developed. Look again kid.
I held the pad and took some of Nasty's kicks and I will never forget the force/power. He weight trained at Thorbecke's with me and I got to spend a lot of time around him. A champion in many ways, and always glad to help motivate people around him to achieve their best. He said "A champion can win on his worst day" and I have kept that mentality ever since. o7 to all the champions out there
Where's Anderson's gi? They let him compete in a damn T-shirt? And they let him get away with not bowing? Good grief. I came up in the early 70s, so I'm old-school. You had to bow. You had to show respect for the judges as well as your opponent.
Damn, Nasty scored a lot of points that didn't get called. That's the frustrating part of this sport. It's hard to judge well. Discouraging for the fighters. It's like, "I'd love to hit him again like a I just did, but that was a no-point. So what's the use!"
Two of my favorite fighters of that era. The leg sweep of insane but was legal back then. Insurance companies slwly tied our hands behind our backs and dictated how tournment karate fighters were allowed to fight. Miss those ol days.
I've studied with him. He was supposed to fight in the UFC and he asked me to train with him back when UFC started in the early 90's . I basically had a chance, but it didn't happen.
Steve Nasty Anderson was the best point fighter ever but when l fought him l beat him later he changed his system a bit but we became good friends and Later he moved to Canada and got married open a school (karate) and he had a lot of Students.
Hated it then,hate it now. but decent vid and reminder Thx 11-13-2024
Is Terry is a really nice guy and truly my homie but he did not get that last point nasty's reverse punch was 1st
I fought Steve'Nasty'Anderson ,Gest what l beat.hem but he did do that legg.kick on me and.l did go down but got back up and finished the fight , me and hem where friends he showed me his BLACK Belt Hall.of.Fame.Plack , thenl asked hem if Leda Dantly was he's Girl' friend he said no that they where just friends .
godzilla had a stroke tying to read this
Mr Plowden respected Nasty too much to really FIGHT him.
One guy who I’d like to have seen fight nasty in his was mafia Holloway . Are there any videos of that ? I could guess that they fought at some point
To me this all looks so meaningless by today's competitive martial arts standards, whether you're talking about kickboxing or MMA . I know there are traditionalists who hate MMA, don't consider it representative of "true martial arts", but this stuff proves next to nothing about either "fighters" actual fighting ability and/or ability to give or take significant punishment.
This was 1985. MMA didn't exist. Also was an evening exhibition event after one of the largest tournaments in Canada designed for entertainment for everyone in the evening. Being exhibition it didn't impact rankings.
@@ErikTaylorRemax Doesnt matter this sport karate still exists today. I wasted too many years doing this garbage. Why do you think no one knows about it ? Because its garbage. Its a game of tag nothing else. Trust me I know all about it. MMA, kickboxing, and BJJ shits on all of this ten fold.
Check out Michael "Venom" Page and Raymond Daniels for examples of fighters who have adapted point-fighting into kickboxing/MMA. I agree that this isn't representative of a real fight, but it exercises two aspects of fighting (distance managment and rhythm manipulation) to an extreme degree.
BRUCEJJ66 Where do you think today’s fighters came from? Do you think they woke up and invented fighting? Perspective is lost on some.
Shows your lack of what point sparring is. Sparring son. All rule sets are to extract certain skills. Skills you know little knowledge on how they are developed. Look again kid.
Nasty 3 steps ahead. Class.
OK I know that my sis
OK good and mr tony young
I held the pad and took some of Nasty's kicks and I will never forget the force/power. He weight trained at Thorbecke's with me and I got to spend a lot of time around him. A champion in many ways, and always glad to help motivate people around him to achieve their best. He said "A champion can win on his worst day" and I have kept that mentality ever since. o7 to all the champions out there
Where's Anderson's gi? They let him compete in a damn T-shirt? And they let him get away with not bowing? Good grief. I came up in the early 70s, so I'm old-school. You had to bow. You had to show respect for the judges as well as your opponent.
Regarding the last point, I think Nasty's reverse punch still beat the backfist. Close call though.
Good seminar after.
How lame. Jesus do they ever even break a sweat? What a fucking joke.
I have had the pleasure of meeting Nasty Anderson this year and he is a really nice guy some funny stories and a very interesting man
The politics were also sweet back then. I admire Nasty but the last point definatley should have went to Cremer.
Nasty in his prime...Plowden smart and a gentleman
Damn, Nasty scored a lot of points that didn't get called. That's the frustrating part of this sport. It's hard to judge well. Discouraging for the fighters. It's like, "I'd love to hit him again like a I just did, but that was a no-point. So what's the use!"
haha, nice - keep them coming
Nice, keep them coming :)!
Two of my favorite fighters of that era. The leg sweep of insane but was legal back then. Insurance companies slwly tied our hands behind our backs and dictated how tournment karate fighters were allowed to fight. Miss those ol days.
I loved the drop down evasion..I rocked it myself to much success..those were the best days of Pointfighting in my opinion.