@@ZholGoliath my wife loves me like that. And David - I'm rooting for you to find a new love bud. There's billions of people out there. Your chances are good bro 👍🏼
@@hard2hurt - Oh you are right I have never seen a video of it either. Actually I totally forgot about that kick since you don't see it used much. Its just one of those "back in the day" type of techniques that are out there but not used much. Keep up the great work, awesome channel!
I saw this few monts ago from my bjj trainer when we were all messing around. I thought ot was some old school leg kick that people forgot but i was wrong
This brought me back to my old karate days. We used a front kick or teep in this spot to drive the hips back & set up a straight left or right cross. Getting kicked there in training always sucked. 😂
Great video as usual! As a physiotherapist, I'd add that one of the primary roles of the tensor fascia lata is to provide tension in the iliotibial band (hence the stabilizing effect for the hip). Disrupting that with a few well placed strikes can impair the opponent's mobility, motor control and power generation with the leg that's targeted
If I remember my sports anatomy class, I think injury to that spot is commonly known as a "Corked Thigh" (Intramuscular Contusion). It's really common for tackled football/rugby players to get this injury when the tackler's knee runs into a player's leg and since the muscle on top of the thigh is a bit thinner than the lower quad, it makes it easier to pinch/crush the muscle fibers inside the muscle sheath against their own femur.
That kick from Chito hit the back of the knee right on the peroneal nerve, not the calf that. Watch Demetrius Johnson vs Henry Cejudo the first time, and you see DJ hitting Cejudo there, and his foot goes numb and he starts to roll on his foot just like Sean did, difference is Cejudo regained control of his foot rather quickly, but Sean did not.
Cliff's face when he realized he'd been hit there before and how much it sucks. I think I made the same face when I pushed around on the spot. Awful feeling and fatigues the hell out of you in sparring, the only saving grace may be, as said it's close to the hip so as a technique the risk /reward quickly gets involved if overused. As always great info!!! Love the channel
Anatomy wise, the tfl is in line with the groin, so imagine your trying to aim for the groin through the outside of the leg, people tend tear this muscle alot by accident
In TKD, I always taught my students to target this area with push kicks more as a psychological attack than anything else. It can easily push your opponent to the ground reducing his confidence.
We used to target that spot with elbows (forearms actually) after catching someone's middle-high round kick. Hold the leg with one hand then step in and drive the forearm in. Because it is a hip flexor they tend to buckle and go down (drop to their butt). I'm not sure its exactly the same spot but its very close.
Great tips! When I was a kid, me and my friends used to try to get eachother by kneeing the side of the leg. It causes a form of light paralysis of the upper leg. We call it the "ice bone" or "to give an ice bone". Later, my trainer made a point of always harassing your opponent in such a way, whenever an opportunity presents itself. There are similar spots on the front of the thigh and the calf, which you can hit with your heel when clinching. You don't see it used much anymore, but just this week I was watching an old Rob Kaman fight and there both fighters were actually constantly doing this type of harassing attacks.
@@hard2hurt Kick him in the calf hard, he'll probably punch you in the face, calf kicks are so much more damaging even one will do major damage plus the calf is a bigger target than that little
My favorite videos are the ones with Cliff in them. I do my best attempt to impersonate Cliff's stoicism when people are messing with me. It helps. Thanks dude you're a boss!
ABSOLUTELY AGREE WITH THIS! Dealing with hip and lower back issues that focus on the nerves in that area! Results of a car accident but if someone were to hit that spot you'll drop. I'd suggest being a bit offline and hitting the pocket where the ball joint and butt cheek meet.
All in the region is some really vulnerable stuff, like, for one, the femoral nerve, and two, the femoral artery, some major lymph nodes, etc. really vulnerable spot. Great video.
My Shifu taught me about that spot before he hit me there. My leg was numb for the next hour. Also, I'm pretty sure we use this spot in some of our throws.
I love this, I also think you could follow up if you land the kick and damage that spot you can go for a single and if you grab the injured leg, dig your shoulder into that spot, if you grab the opposite leg then their base is already compromised. I'll practice this a lot. Thank you.
If I remember, the fascia lata tensor muscle connects to the upper portion of iliotibial band, keeping It tensioned and stabilized. Also acts as secondary hip and knee flexor. It's a small but efective target! My favorite one is the the lateral tendon of femoral biceps.
I learned about this one a few years back in krav maga, and its actually the only pressure point i can remember and use efficiently in training, good stuff !!
We target the low triangle above the knee . The IT band attachment. I like your concept. We teach this modern self defense like you and Hoover ect. It’s like MMA Krav Maga but more we sprinkle in Pannantucan for our advanced guys ! Love what we do but this is a tough path ! Respect
oh wow, Hips pads in high school football had a secondary purpose. I always wondered why it had that weird tab that came down across the outside of thigh. It was awkward and cumbersome, and slowed me down as I ran.
I like to kick the knee cap with the instep of my foot as hard as I can so I can't properly walk for a few weeks. Shinguards with sock like instep so I can feel the bone structure of their knee better.
I remember on an old show called Human Weapon two fighters went to france where they were taught the basics of Savate, and during one of their training sessions a teacher showed them to target that same area with a push kick.
I was taught this but from an Arnis dude but as a front kick or ghost kick to counter front charging tackles. Very effective, especially since they’ll usually bend forward and right into a knee
Yeah, that point is ridiculously vulnerable. It's my favorite place to kick. I've seen legs buckle from a kick there, and it's close enough to the hip axis that it usually twists their posture substantially.
I was toughy to pronounce it similar to 'latte'. It translates to lateral fascia tensioner because it tensions the IT band which is a band of fascia on your lateral leg. The movement it activated is leg adduction. But of course it helps stabilize both leg flexion and extension which would be a common function of adductors and abductors
Just call it the TFL 😂 I think its main function is to put tension on the lateral fascia & the it band (iliotibial) The muscle does that from the front with a counterbalance from the glute max from the back, so the it band is kind of "balanced". Thank u for another very interesting vid🤙
I love the strike. My coach had us work on elbow strikes & knife work going there in close quarter fighting . For self defense purposes . ‘Silat ‘ I love your content.
I started doing that in sparring and my coach took me aside and told me if I’m going to do that I need to do it softer because It can inflict serious damage. But I had no idea that was the case I would just aim for that spot instead of throwing a round house to the ribs.
I might be remembering this wrong, but even my Goju Ryu Sensei advised aiming here with the heel of the front kick. He never used the term for it, but it throws off the stances. So it's useful.
Latin pronunciation: The ae in classical Latin is pronounced like the word "eye". The sound evolved in modern Latin to the "-ay" sound in "tray". So you choose, but realise that you should really just keep it consistent when you pronounce it at the end of both of the words "Fasciae Latae".
Front kick combos, dig the heel into it. Also how effective is a police baton when applied in a takedown and control situation for apprehension. Maybe a punching strike when ducking a punch, to fold them over and come up with the upper cut and overhand
Like the medial hip flexor. Nobody hits it with an oblique kick in competition because it gets called as a nut shot, even when it isn't - but it works just fine for fighting.
Awesome find! I love how practical your videos are. Side kicks work well without the worry of hitting the hip! would seem perfect except one would have to side step or circle around to get the angle right. Also, side kicks take much more practice and flexibility to do well. I wonder if a low hook kick could be effective if it hit that 'sweet spot' or not....
If you're being dirty in boxing you can also target this area to not throw a real "low blow" so to speak but even repeated punches to the hip flexor/ hip area can weaken legs over time
I've had a broken hip for years and had titanium screws in the area you discussed. 1 that ng was certain that it Hurts like shjit when I woke up in the morning, let stand alone a full out sidekick to that area some people might need to go to the hospital after word.
As a massage therapist and runner the TFL (Ten-sor Fa-sha La-ta) flexes thigh at the hip (knee lift), abducts thigh at hip and assists medial rotation of the thigh. It’s important for knee drive of runners (sprinting in particular), squatting and general stabilization as originates at the hip and inserts into the IT band (illio-tibial band) which runs from the hip and crosses the knee. A huge stabilizer for the leg and tough as hell.
Anatomically, the insertion point of the Tensor Fasciae Latae is the IT band(which is cartilage, therefore not innervated and is avascular), so I'm assuming that the reason people say to target the IT band instead of the TFL is because it's easier to say and they are basically in the same spot, one directly inferior to the other.
When sparring kick boxing/Thai boxing my older brother would heel kick me right in that exact area almost every spar. It takes a long time to build a tolerance to take the pain to be able to take that hit back to back. It sets your leg on fire and feels like you have strain it after. Definitely one of the fastest way to immobilize your opponent no matter how tough.
That's really cool. I always focused on kicking downward at that front knobbly muscle just above the knee cap with round kicks. I loved to use push kicks in that same spot and it always knocked people off balance. I'm 6'5" so I would push kick downward I to that region and I actually sat people right on their butts doing it a few times.
I remember Anantask's Thigh Teep hitting roughly that spot in his matches, I think it's more relevant for some kind of front kick or knee than a roundhouse.
The TFL is sandwiched into the Iliotibial tract..inserts into and is covered by the fascial pocket (All around) originating from the ilium to about 5-6 inches down. One of the few muscles that completely inserts into fascia versus bone or partially on both like Gluteus Maximus.
@@hard2hurt I think it probably has more to do with the density of the soft tissues (The fibrous fascia is thickest at that particular point) in the area and the underlying bony prominence of the greater trochanter. Kicking it just smashes it and the overlying tissue against everything deeper as it also levers the hip joint. Since the origin of Sartorious juxtaposes TFL in the same area at an opposite angle any kick would likely influence that long strappy muscle as well further destabilizing the joint.
Ae does make the “I” sound in Latin... you are correct however Tensor Fasciae latae would sound like Fask-eee-(eye) Lat(eye) - the diphthong is pronounced the same in both words with no soft ‘c’ sound in fasciae.... sorry you asked lol... as far as location, are you aiming for right about the pocket type area?
After you showed us that, i started thinking, what if im using hands instead (like hitting). Or front heel kick\cross heel kick to that target after feinting
its also just the tensor facial ligament. And yes it works. Its really good to knee, kicking is a little harder. Also the reason why the inside of the shin hurts is because that is the fossa where all the soft tissue attaches so the bone has little bumps on it. There are quite a few spots on the body that are like the TFL, like liver, inguinal, solar plexus etc. But those shots usually take some set up on moving targets. Its like trying to get someone to raise their guard to land a left hook into their liver. Or catching the head of a floating rib. Its just super hard to just "hit" on a moving target. But with a little set up it can have some very rewarding pay offs.
This would definitely hurt but the 2x quicker option IMO is the upper Hamstring, just below the Glutes! Attacking the Hamstring while under load will cause immediate cramping!
@@aequitasification oh i dont mean deployable taser, sorry I should have been more specific. I mean hand tazer or prod style taser. With how many designs there are nowadays, it's like a buffet haha. But I wonder about a taser application.
As a college Bio student, you're absolutely onto something. It's that muscle that starts cramping after your abs are done but you're still doing leg raises. Happens to overweight people a lot (speaking from experience) and the pain is quite a lot, you can't get a single rep in once it starts cramping. And it's pronounced Tensor (you got that part right) Fasha Latte (like the drink). Sorry I don't know how to do accents.
When I used to spar my uncle growing up (He trains various Japanese systems striking and grappling) he would plant thrust pushing type of kicks on me right there, and it would make me fold over and completely thow my balance off, then he would take me down.
One thing I think i understand about fighting is a great way to beat someone or break them down is to bring them into unfamiliar territory, kick a boxer in the legs, shoot and takedown a kickboxing etc...hitting someone in a thing that destabilizses their hips?!?! Sounds pretty effective to me. Is punching there viable as well?
I'm not an anatomy guy but as TKD (and Muay Thai) practitioner I definitely love to aim there when people start charging me down in the street. Never knew the name of the nerve, but the more you know lol.
I remember my karate teacher (from the years when you actually had to be good at it) he would use this spot to stop you from getting closer and at the same time back fist you in the face (uraken uchi). It wasn't really a kick though, but I now realize it's potential. He was good (still is for sure), old school, the kind of guy that would hit the makiwara and break 18 red tiles with the tip of his fingers (nukite, spear hand, I saw it with my own eyes). Awesome video, definetely using this for my muay thai. THANKS!
A lowkick - originally - should always be targetted at the tensor fasciae latea. Its a sweet spot in between the hamstring and the quadriceps. The tensor fasciae latea is a tendon that goes from the outside of the knee to the glutes. In the middle is a nerv knot. And if you kick there, even after one kick, it knocks people out (watch Rob kaman using it).
You ever heard of dead leg? A friend of mine was running in practice and for some odd reason I let my body go and hit this spot and he his leg gave out and he feel. This area on top of the leg has nerves that can shut down the leg if you can kick the front top of the leg you can shut nerves down with a quick second knock down.
That spot is very common for us with an outstep heel kick. Driving force just below the front of the hip. It is also a kick check in kung fu. If a round house is coming and you have time, send the stomp kick in to that spot you point out.
We are taught to target this point in Kyoshukin because hit it 2 to 3 times, no more kicks to my head. Oh and if you watch kyoshukin bouts you see a lot of these and inside leg kicks
you should try the knee into the side of the leg the shin does hit the nerve that is there i have been dropped and have dropped others the knee should be thrown at an angle but when you hit it it works
My thoughts are if you can consistently hit that spot in sparing then you're already a gun fighter that probably doesn't need to learn such a risky move. The easier magic spot is the inside of their leading knee (with your leading foot). No wind up or switch, just shoot straight from your fighting position. Three hard ones well placed always has the guy reeling or sparing with their weight on their back leg. That pretty much eliminates their counters so you can get busy.
Yeah it was called something else but this was the second target I was taught in the leg area. Only we were mainly taught to drive are knees through it and the floating pelvic bone over the bladder
as a skateboarder who wrecked his body. that weird tendony thing helps keep the leg in the hip. when walking ill feel a sharp pain there then all of a sudden my leg aint attached anymore
I strained that muscle hiking through the mountains and had to get stretchered out cause I literally couldn't walk, like right leg could not be moved without waves of pain.
wouldn't it be better to target the TFL with quick knees rather than shins? I find I can do it more precise and quicker with my knee. Also, for me, I feel more balanced on one leg with my knee strikes rather than the rotational torque of a shin strike. Not sure if it's because of my limited training or if it's some general human bio dynamic
I see where you’re coming from. Having a feel on my TFL I can tell it would hurt to be kicked there. Might experiment with it in light sparring once my dojo reopens.
I watched this whole video and I’m probably never going to use this.. Lol but good to know, and you cracked me up the whole time. Great energy and great teacher 👌 10/10 - playful and informative. A true teacher!
I do not want to sound like I am throwing some Asian Mumbo Jumbo, but I think we do train to hit that spot in some applications related to pressure points at my dojo (karate), though not with our feet but by sinking our fist, at very close quarters. I could be wrong, because it seems you are aiming more on the side than us (we aim more to the front) but I am 80% positive it is that spot, right below the hip bone.
Again you pick the biggest, meanest looking cat in town to demonstrate your techniques on!!! Love your channel, but you sir, are a madman.... Keep it up!
@@hard2hurt I agree, in most gyms it's taught to simply "kick the thigh". Perfection is in the details and I love your trickery stuff! Greetings from Italy
We discuss targeting for the front kick in the Front Kick Focus course at hard2hurt.teachable.com
hard2hurt sup
@Hunter Hall ssshhhh
@@driver3899 ssshhh
@BabyBack BETA what?
@@paulbadman8509 Look up Ananstask's Thigh Teep on TH-cam, I prefer it to Oblique Side Kicks.
This is the definition of precision striking. Don't just hit, hit with purpose.
Really great tip.
The guy in purple reminds me of my first best friend from 37 years ago. Alfons I mis you.
Damn Alfons come back to this guy.
I need a woman in my life that loves me the way Santiago loves Alfons 🥰
@@ZholGoliath my wife loves me like that. And David - I'm rooting for you to find a new love bud. There's billions of people out there. Your chances are good bro 👍🏼
We need a campaing yo find Alfons
This is the most wholesome comment thread on youtube
I learned about that spot in the early/mid 90's from a Thai boxer, it SUCKS to be kicked there.
I know other people have worked on it i just couldn't find any videos on it
@@hard2hurt - Oh you are right I have never seen a video of it either. Actually I totally forgot about that kick since you don't see it used much. Its just one of those "back in the day" type of techniques that are out there but not used much. Keep up the great work, awesome channel!
Yea, I learned to teep and oblique kick that spot in Muay Thai. It's not high %, but if you miss you can still get a decent body shot in.
I saw this few monts ago from my bjj trainer when we were all messing around. I thought ot was some old school leg kick that people forgot but i was wrong
This brought me back to my old karate days. We used a front kick or teep in this spot to drive the hips back & set up a straight left or right cross. Getting kicked there in training always sucked. 😂
”I swear to God ref, I was only trying to knee him in the Tensor Fasciae Latae!”
underrated comment
Lmao
Mikes getting into pressure points 👀😂
Yeah duh
Bring on the no-touch knockouts.
Dim Mak foot edition
@@fauxbravo If you have done BJJ you know that stinky GI guy is more than capable of no touch knockouts.
he slowly becomes, the very thing he oathed to destroy !!!
"Let em think yer kickin wrong. Yeah. Let em think that." Lol, pearls of wisdom from Icy Mike.
I also like to tap during drills when the other white belts don't have the sub in right so that they don't get better.
@@hard2hurt See! So much to learn from this channel. 😂
@@hard2hurt Ah shit now that's a genius idea!
Great video as usual! As a physiotherapist, I'd add that one of the primary roles of the tensor fascia lata is to provide tension in the iliotibial band (hence the stabilizing effect for the hip). Disrupting that with a few well placed strikes can impair the opponent's mobility, motor control and power generation with the leg that's targeted
"Death Star of a human"
I'm gonna incorporate that expression into my vocabulary... somehow.
He's not wrong either. One should not teach monsters to kick people. It's horrifying enough knowing that some of them know how to punch. 😬
If I remember my sports anatomy class, I think injury to that spot is commonly known as a "Corked Thigh" (Intramuscular Contusion).
It's really common for tackled football/rugby players to get this injury when the tackler's knee runs into a player's leg and since the muscle on top of the thigh is a bit thinner than the lower quad, it makes it easier to pinch/crush the muscle fibers inside the muscle sheath against their own femur.
Corked shoulders are pretty bad too lol
The wife hates it when her wine is corked. Wait, what channel am I on?
Recent UFC shows that Calf kicks can damage the brain, just ask Sean O'Malley.
That’s cold 😂
That kick from Chito hit the back of the knee right on the peroneal nerve, not the calf that. Watch Demetrius Johnson vs Henry Cejudo the first time, and you see DJ hitting Cejudo there, and his foot goes numb and he starts to roll on his foot just like Sean did, difference is Cejudo regained control of his foot rather quickly, but Sean did not.
@@Tobi1Kanobi93 Re-watched it, great eye for detail man you are right.
Ouch
@@Tobi1Kanobi93 on the nose, anatomy can be a bitch
“Want to feel mine? Feel yours, keep your hands to yourself” 😭😭😭😂😂😂
Cliff's face when he realized he'd been hit there before and how much it sucks. I think I made the same face when I pushed around on the spot. Awful feeling and fatigues the hell out of you in sparring, the only saving grace may be, as said it's close to the hip so as a technique the risk /reward quickly gets involved if overused. As always great info!!! Love the channel
Anatomy wise, the tfl is in line with the groin, so imagine your trying to aim for the groin through the outside of the leg, people tend tear this muscle alot by accident
I actually kinda like that explanation for targeting... will also help people chop through.
@@hard2hurt keep up the awesome job keeping people safe, wishing I could spar with you, all the way from toronto, ont
In TKD, I always taught my students to target this area with push kicks more as a psychological attack than anything else. It can easily push your opponent to the ground reducing his confidence.
The return of the LEG MOSSCLE
LAEYGHGH MOWZULL
LMAOO Nobody says it better than Mike.
I aim my leg kicks at the ground for the pocket sand effect
Up your power levels so you can create earthquakes.
We used to target that spot with elbows (forearms actually) after catching someone's middle-high round kick. Hold the leg with one hand then step in and drive the forearm in. Because it is a hip flexor they tend to buckle and go down (drop to their butt). I'm not sure its exactly the same spot but its very close.
ouch
Great tips!
When I was a kid, me and my friends used to try to get eachother by kneeing the side of the leg.
It causes a form of light paralysis of the upper leg. We call it the "ice bone" or "to give an ice bone".
Later, my trainer made a point of always harassing your opponent in such a way, whenever an opportunity presents itself.
There are similar spots on the front of the thigh and the calf, which you can hit with your heel when clinching.
You don't see it used much anymore, but just this week I was watching an old Rob Kaman fight and there both fighters were actually constantly doing this type of harassing attacks.
Could be a good target for the oblique kick as well
Sssshhhh
oldschool savate did that, one of their signature mooves! looks super cool if it lands correctly
That reminds me of Lorenz Larkin vs Neil Magny where Larkin used oblique kicks very effectively right around that area high up on the leg.
@@norgnt just watched it! dude landed right on his ass with that wtf just happened face
Dude interesting! When I feel the spot on my leg I cringed at the though of getting kicked there. Ouch!
It sucks. Notice Cliff is a very tough dude and look how he flinched when he thought I was going to kick him there again.
@@hard2hurt Kick him in the calf hard, he'll probably punch you in the face, calf kicks are so much more damaging even one will do major damage plus the calf is a bigger target than that little
hard2hurt lol I legit made a face when he got kicked there
My favorite videos are the ones with Cliff in them. I do my best attempt to impersonate Cliff's stoicism when people are messing with me. It helps. Thanks dude you're a boss!
ABSOLUTELY AGREE WITH THIS! Dealing with hip and lower back issues that focus on the nerves in that area! Results of a car accident but if someone were to hit that spot you'll drop. I'd suggest being a bit offline and hitting the pocket where the ball joint and butt cheek meet.
All in the region is some really vulnerable stuff, like, for one, the femoral nerve, and two, the femoral artery, some major lymph nodes, etc. really vulnerable spot. Great video.
Heh. My first Silat teacher called it the "Fold Up Like a Taco Point"
Star wars reference lmao. Exhaust port to his death star he says 🤣
I thought it was a good one.
*lol😀*
My Shifu taught me about that spot before he hit me there. My leg was numb for the next hour. Also, I'm pretty sure we use this spot in some of our throws.
I love this, I also think you could follow up if you land the kick and damage that spot you can go for a single and if you grab the injured leg, dig your shoulder into that spot, if you grab the opposite leg then their base is already compromised. I'll practice this a lot. Thank you.
I like this channel. They study the game looking for any possible arrows to put in your quiver. Well done and shown
Great vídeo bro
Thanks man
CAVEIRA!!!!!!
If I remember, the fascia lata tensor muscle connects to the upper portion of iliotibial band, keeping It tensioned and stabilized. Also acts as secondary hip and knee flexor.
It's a small but efective target!
My favorite one is the the lateral tendon of femoral biceps.
I learned about this one a few years back in krav maga, and its actually the only pressure point i can remember and use efficiently in training, good stuff !!
5:30 "...Then my life ends!" 🤣🤣
We target the low triangle above the knee . The IT band attachment. I like your concept. We teach this modern self defense like you and Hoover ect. It’s like MMA Krav Maga but more we sprinkle in Pannantucan for our advanced guys ! Love what we do but this is a tough path ! Respect
oh wow, Hips pads in high school football had a secondary purpose. I always wondered why it had that weird tab that came down across the outside of thigh. It was awkward and cumbersome, and slowed me down as I ran.
cliff's face its the best thing that has happened to this channel
Just wondering what kind of strength training routine does cliff follow and does he have his own channel? He is a beast.
I have used it before in training because I am short and it just seems to have worked in my 45 years but thanks for explaining more than others
I like to kick the knee cap with the instep of my foot as hard as I can so I can't properly walk for a few weeks. Shinguards with sock like instep so I can feel the bone structure of their knee better.
I remember on an old show called Human Weapon two fighters went to france where they were taught the basics of Savate, and during one of their training sessions a teacher showed them to target that same area with a push kick.
I was taught this but from an Arnis dude but as a front kick or ghost kick to counter front charging tackles. Very effective, especially since they’ll usually bend forward and right into a knee
Nice advice. Thank you for introducing this pressure point to me. It is (unlikely others) nice to find and not easy to protect.
I didn't know Ricky Williams got into fighting. Ya boi look high AF!
Yeah, that point is ridiculously vulnerable. It's my favorite place to kick. I've seen legs buckle from a kick there, and it's close enough to the hip axis that it usually twists their posture substantially.
I was toughy to pronounce it similar to 'latte'.
It translates to lateral fascia tensioner because it tensions the IT band which is a band of fascia on your lateral leg.
The movement it activated is leg adduction. But of course it helps stabilize both leg flexion and extension which would be a common function of adductors and abductors
Just call it the TFL 😂
I think its main function is to put tension on the lateral fascia & the it band (iliotibial)
The muscle does that from the front with a counterbalance from the glute max from the back, so the it band is kind of "balanced".
Thank u for another very interesting vid🤙
I love the strike. My coach had us work on elbow strikes & knife work going there in close quarter fighting . For self defense purposes . ‘Silat ‘ I love your content.
I’ve got a hip screw and full plate that runs 6 inches down the outside of my femur. It’ll hurt me, but it’ll hurt you more 🤣
I started doing that in sparring and my coach took me aside and told me if I’m going to do that I need to do it softer because It can inflict serious damage. But I had no idea that was the case I would just aim for that spot instead of throwing a round house to the ribs.
I might be remembering this wrong, but even my Goju Ryu Sensei advised aiming here with the heel of the front kick. He never used the term for it, but it throws off the stances. So it's useful.
The point on the hip you are focusing on is the trochanteric bursa sac location. Much pain with a light hit.
Latin pronunciation: The ae in classical Latin is pronounced like the word "eye". The sound evolved in modern Latin to the "-ay" sound in "tray". So you choose, but realise that you should really just keep it consistent when you pronounce it at the end of both of the words "Fasciae Latae".
Just say it like "eye"
Front kick combos, dig the heel into it. Also how effective is a police baton when applied in a takedown and control situation for apprehension. Maybe a punching strike when ducking a punch, to fold them over and come up with the upper cut and overhand
Shut up mate
Like the medial hip flexor. Nobody hits it with an oblique kick in competition because it gets called as a nut shot, even when it isn't - but it works just fine for fighting.
Awesome find! I love how practical your videos are. Side kicks work well without the worry of hitting the hip! would seem perfect except one would have to side step or circle around to get the angle right. Also, side kicks take much more practice and flexibility to do well. I wonder if a low hook kick could be effective if it hit that 'sweet spot' or not....
If you're being dirty in boxing you can also target this area to not throw a real "low blow" so to speak but even repeated punches to the hip flexor/ hip area can weaken legs over time
I've had a broken hip for years and had titanium screws in the area you discussed. 1 that ng was certain that it Hurts like shjit when I woke up in the morning, let stand alone a full out sidekick to that area some people might need to go to the hospital after word.
As a massage therapist and runner the TFL (Ten-sor Fa-sha La-ta) flexes thigh at the hip (knee lift), abducts thigh at hip and assists medial rotation of the thigh.
It’s important for knee drive of runners (sprinting in particular), squatting and general stabilization as originates at the hip and inserts into the IT band (illio-tibial band) which runs from the hip and crosses the knee. A huge stabilizer for the leg and tough as hell.
Anatomically, the insertion point of the Tensor Fasciae Latae is the IT band(which is cartilage, therefore not innervated and is avascular), so I'm assuming that the reason people say to target the IT band instead of the TFL is because it's easier to say and they are basically in the same spot, one directly inferior to the other.
The eye roll as 3:30 is the best thing I've seen today
When sparring kick boxing/Thai boxing my older brother would heel kick me right in that exact area almost every spar. It takes a long time to build a tolerance to take the pain to be able to take that hit back to back. It sets your leg on fire and feels like you have strain it after. Definitely one of the fastest way to immobilize your opponent no matter how tough.
That's really cool. I always focused on kicking downward at that front knobbly muscle just above the knee cap with round kicks. I loved to use push kicks in that same spot and it always knocked people off balance. I'm 6'5" so I would push kick downward I to that region and I actually sat people right on their butts doing it a few times.
I remember Anantask's Thigh Teep hitting roughly that spot in his matches, I think it's more relevant for some kind of front kick or knee than a roundhouse.
My coach always told me to aim leg kicks at the head. This video has been helpful.
The TFL is sandwiched into the Iliotibial tract..inserts into and is covered by the fascial pocket (All around) originating from the ilium to about 5-6 inches down. One of the few muscles that completely inserts into fascia versus bone or partially on both like Gluteus Maximus.
I wonder if the fact that it inserts into fascia and not bone is what makes it so susceptible to striking?
@@hard2hurt I think it probably has more to do with the density of the soft tissues (The fibrous fascia is thickest at that particular point) in the area and the underlying bony prominence of the greater trochanter. Kicking it just smashes it and the overlying tissue against everything deeper as it also levers the hip joint. Since the origin of Sartorious juxtaposes TFL in the same area at an opposite angle any kick would likely influence that long strappy muscle as well further destabilizing the joint.
Learned that takedown in bjj. Mind blown. I KNOW that spot. Wow. Ty.
Ae does make the “I” sound in Latin... you are correct however Tensor Fasciae latae would sound like Fask-eee-(eye) Lat(eye) - the diphthong is pronounced the same in both words with no soft ‘c’ sound in fasciae.... sorry you asked lol... as far as location, are you aiming for right about the pocket type area?
After you showed us that, i started thinking, what if im using hands instead (like hitting). Or front heel kick\cross heel kick to that target after feinting
its also just the tensor facial ligament. And yes it works. Its really good to knee, kicking is a little harder. Also the reason why the inside of the shin hurts is because that is the fossa where all the soft tissue attaches so the bone has little bumps on it. There are quite a few spots on the body that are like the TFL, like liver, inguinal, solar plexus etc. But those shots usually take some set up on moving targets. Its like trying to get someone to raise their guard to land a left hook into their liver. Or catching the head of a floating rib. Its just super hard to just "hit" on a moving target. But with a little set up it can have some very rewarding pay offs.
This would definitely hurt but the 2x quicker option IMO is the upper Hamstring, just below the Glutes!
Attacking the Hamstring while under load will cause immediate cramping!
Is a tazer more effective when applied there?? Test tazers on that spot, especially in people who tazers dont seem to work on as well.
Good luck with aiming, it's right by the hip blade and it's a very small muscle. But if you hit it, they'll fall like a ton of bricks.
@@aequitasification oh i dont mean deployable taser, sorry I should have been more specific. I mean hand tazer or prod style taser. With how many designs there are nowadays, it's like a buffet haha. But I wonder about a taser application.
As a college Bio student, you're absolutely onto something. It's that muscle that starts cramping after your abs are done but you're still doing leg raises. Happens to overweight people a lot (speaking from experience) and the pain is quite a lot, you can't get a single rep in once it starts cramping.
And it's pronounced Tensor (you got that part right) Fasha Latte (like the drink).
Sorry I don't know how to do accents.
When I used to spar my uncle growing up (He trains various Japanese systems striking and grappling) he would plant thrust pushing type of kicks on me right there, and it would make me fold over and completely thow my balance off, then he would take me down.
Impregnated with a pain baby.
This is a prime target for southpaws on the rear leg. Its even more open due to the angles of the legs from the mirrored stances in SP v Ortho
One thing I think i understand about fighting is a great way to beat someone or break them down is to bring them into unfamiliar territory, kick a boxer in the legs, shoot and takedown a kickboxing etc...hitting someone in a thing that destabilizses their hips?!?! Sounds pretty effective to me. Is punching there viable as well?
Looks like targeting the TFL could have all sorts of uses, esp. in grappling. It's not limited to striking.
Please make a video on how to jab, practice of jab and how to add power in your jab
Another great video with effective explanations that make the technique useful.
I'm not an anatomy guy but as TKD (and Muay Thai) practitioner I definitely love to aim there when people start charging me down in the street. Never knew the name of the nerve, but the more you know lol.
I remember my karate teacher (from the years when you actually had to be good at it) he would use this spot to stop you from getting closer and at the same time back fist you in the face (uraken uchi). It wasn't really a kick though, but I now realize it's potential. He was good (still is for sure), old school, the kind of guy that would hit the makiwara and break 18 red tiles with the tip of his fingers (nukite, spear hand, I saw it with my own eyes). Awesome video, definetely using this for my muay thai. THANKS!
A lowkick - originally - should always be targetted at the tensor fasciae latea. Its a sweet spot in between the hamstring and the quadriceps. The tensor fasciae latea is a tendon that goes from the outside of the knee to the glutes. In the middle is a nerv knot. And if you kick there, even after one kick, it knocks people out (watch Rob kaman using it).
You're very wrong about almost everything You've said lol... you could have googled any of that in 30 seconds.
You ever heard of dead leg? A friend of mine was running in practice and for some odd reason I let my body go and hit this spot and he his leg gave out and he feel. This area on top of the leg has nerves that can shut down the leg if you can kick the front top of the leg you can shut nerves down with a quick second knock down.
That spot is very common for us with an outstep heel kick. Driving force just below the front of the hip. It is also a kick check in kung fu. If a round house is coming and you have time, send the stomp kick in to that spot you point out.
Tensor fasciae latae (sounds like latte coffee, or lot-ta like lotta).
We are taught to target this point in Kyoshukin because hit it 2 to 3 times, no more kicks to my head. Oh and if you watch kyoshukin bouts you see a lot of these and inside leg kicks
I'm just commenting because I haven't watched the full video yet and I know how much you appreciate those well thought out points of view
Oh good thing!
you should try the knee into the side of the leg the shin does hit the nerve that is there i have been dropped and have dropped others the knee should be thrown at an angle but when you hit it it works
My thoughts are if you can consistently hit that spot in sparing then you're already a gun fighter that probably doesn't need to learn such a risky move.
The easier magic spot is the inside of their leading knee (with your leading foot). No wind up or switch, just shoot straight from your fighting position. Three hard ones well placed always has the guy reeling or sparing with their weight on their back leg. That pretty much eliminates their counters so you can get busy.
This is totally a woo-woo pressure point, which damages the "Chi Flow" of your leg! 😮
Beliefs may change, but the body doesn't.
There liver shot is a pressure point attack because it shocks the nervous system, aka what a pressure point affects.
Yeah it was called something else but this was the second target I was taught in the leg area. Only we were mainly taught to drive are knees through it and the floating pelvic bone over the bladder
as a skateboarder who wrecked his body.
that weird tendony thing helps keep the leg in the hip.
when walking ill feel a sharp pain there then all of a sudden my leg aint attached anymore
I strained that muscle hiking through the mountains and had to get stretchered out cause I literally couldn't walk, like right leg could not be moved without waves of pain.
wouldn't it be better to target the TFL with quick knees rather than shins? I find I can do it more precise and quicker with my knee. Also, for me, I feel more balanced on one leg with my knee strikes rather than the rotational torque of a shin strike. Not sure if it's because of my limited training or if it's some general human bio dynamic
Finally you learn how to kick that good and showing people 👏
I see where you’re coming from. Having a feel on my TFL I can tell it would hurt to be kicked there. Might experiment with it in light sparring once my dojo reopens.
I watched this whole video and I’m probably never going to use this.. Lol but good to know, and you cracked me up the whole time. Great energy and great teacher 👌 10/10 - playful and informative. A true teacher!
I do not want to sound like I am throwing some Asian Mumbo Jumbo, but I think we do train to hit that spot in some applications related to pressure points at my dojo (karate), though not with our feet but by sinking our fist, at very close quarters. I could be wrong, because it seems you are aiming more on the side than us (we aim more to the front) but I am 80% positive it is that spot, right below the hip bone.
Again you pick the biggest, meanest looking cat in town to demonstrate your techniques on!!!
Love your channel, but you sir, are a madman....
Keep it up!
They taught me to kick that exact spot in my first week of muay thai. Great content Mike! That thing hurts...
I just stumbled into it... I've never been taught it and i couldn't find a video... the striking instruction in a lot of places is a little formulaic.
@@hard2hurt I agree, in most gyms it's taught to simply "kick the thigh". Perfection is in the details and I love your trickery stuff! Greetings from Italy
You don't need kicks , just grab your dragon-slayer and cut him in half .
@@Noone-es5is imagine me headkicking Griffith... Lol
@@federicocoppoli6402 lol
My dad learned this tip in the army. It was 50 years ago. It really works.