When you think about it, the whole idea of a fair fight seems a bit odd, doesn't it? I recently started MMA to try to get back in shape and learn some stuff, and I just realize how artificial it is to bout with anyone. You're under this rule set or that, in an environment completely clear of environmental hassles, wearing the same gear, no weapons, and of course you're governed by the rules of whatever code you're using. The whole conception of a fair fight in reality doesn't come up too much, does it? Even in a combat sport, with rules, weight classes, etc, you still have some people who are just good, or bad. What's fair about fighting someone who's had more training, or younger, or stronger, or faster, or whatever? It's only fair in that you've agreed to it, and you trust your opponent to also have agreed to it, and follow the rules. That's about it. In HS, I was in the "unlimited" weight class wrestling. I was pretty strong but I hadn't got my full adult growth yet, and it was hard to wrestle a lot of those guys. But somehow, Wayne or Damon at 20-30 lbs lighter than me could take me every time. By gassing me out and having good technique. When I started trying to do to the big monsters what those guys did with me, I did a little bit better... Seems kind of overused, but (if I'm remembering right) Sun Tzu put it the best: know your terrain, know your enemy, but most of all know yourself. These days, pretty rare for me to spar with someone taller than I am, and NOBODY there is heavier than I am. Pluses and minuses, but a lot of techniques useful for someone smaller and lighter are less useful for me.
He claims he wasn't hurting his opponent with punches but while that may or not be true , there's a high chance the opponent was PRETENDING those hits did nothing. Think about it, one of the easiest and fastest tricks to learn when you are a "tough guy" is pretending your opponent cant hurt you ever ,even when the opposite is whats happening. This way the tough guy can win by decision because jury thinks he's way above his opponent, and also forces the opponent mid match to use more power ,waste his stamina and making more mistakes.
If you struggle fighting a "Brute", train to fight a "Brute". Fights are won during your training sessions and not in the ring. "If you train extreme, you'll fight extreme" - WetGoo
Tbh no matter how much of a brute you are no person should be able to take mutible hooks and overhands to the chin without being efected unless your punches are just weak
I think there's another elephant in the room. This guys opponent had a significant reach advantage AND strength advantage over him, even though they were in the same weight class. Having a smaller frame means you can have significantly more muscle than your opponent, since less of your weight comes from your skeleton and organs. I guess its possible that OP has unusual body geometry but I'm willing to bet his body composition wasn't optimized the way his opponent's was. As I see it, managing weight, strength training, conditioning, and diet are all skills that are just as much part of fighting as punches and kicks.
5:33 "A lot of first time fighter are overwelmed by how ineffective their punches seem to be against their opponents. And how effective the opponents punches seem to be against them."
If he is a better technician and the opponent is bigger and stronger, why on earth would he want to get into an exchange with this opponent? Seems like he was fighting the fight his opponent wanted him to fight.
"Cut your angles" Even as a Muay Thai fighter I train to this constantly until it becomes instinct. Sure, I can stand and bang but it is not a wise move. Along with striking and defense, I try to employ footwork to my regimen as much as possible.
This is all true.... I'm one of those one and done "fighters" although I am trying to mount a comeback fight next year. I've only fought amateur mma 2 fights. One my first by ko in 37 secs lost my second by armbar in 32 secs. Man that loss wrecked me... wish I had kept with it...oh well can't change the past. Only the present.
Reading Dempsey right now made me realise that power gets you respect in the ring and lets you work your magic without having to feel like you're constantly at a disadvantage. It's a great equalizer.
I’ve had a couple fights now and I look back at all of them and say I was not as good as I thought I was xD My first fight I was like wow I really gotta change my approach I never want to feel like any second I could just be unconscious lol
The title is so true. I like to pin people in positions where they can't defend themselves and attack pressure points. I learned that in ninpo... the style you love to hate. Not that I'm a good martial artist, but it improves my chances of success.
In Wing Chun the inner gate is between your shouders. The outer gate is between where your elbows can go. Don't enter their gate's. Jump the small fence where they have no guard, best right behind the guard unless you can enter from behind.
The turtle beats the rabbit by changing his strategy. Out box the guy. Be more elusive and fight with skill. That's how I fight people I perceive as stronger than me.
Hey coach! This reminds me of two things my kajukenbo teacher told me back when I was taking classes. First, the only unfair fight is the one you lose. In the sense that giving yourself every advantage you can is exactly what you want to do. It’s not ‘dishonorable’ or anything like that. Second, he told me that no matter what you get hit by, don’t show your opponent that it hurt. Anyways, there’s my comment. Thanks! P.S. since you read your comments, I kinda want to tell you I received my mission call a few days ago. I’m going to Columbus Ohio.
great video! side bar: I don't know if you still do videos about martial arts in anime, but you want to check out a new one called "dance, dance danseur." it's about a kid who transitions from an initial interest in dance into martial arts because he wanted to act Machi, but then gets back into dance as a teenager. Since you have a foot in both martial arts and dance, you might have an interesting perspective.
I think we all have one of those guys in our training at some point. Mine was called, Tim, a monster of a man at 17. My response to his overwhelming reach and power was not an intelligent one, but by trying to blitz the b'stard i gradually discovered a few things that worked! Footwork and footsweeps. Plus, by then he thought i was unhinged so that helped as well! lol
The answer was " Get out there and train " ..... your answer is like becoming a very good chess player .... You can purchase a chess set , for a few bucks but it takes years or lifetime to become good / great at it !!!! Reminds of your story - BJJ guys are wimps which atleast somehow motivates to get out there and train !!! How do you beat the stronger guy ... By becoming as strong as possible !!
So here in the U.K. we have a charity organisation which gives opportunity to the people which have never competed or never even had any training to compete in an amateur MMA/Boxing events. It’s called Ultra MMA if you’re interested in researching. The charity gives people free training for two months (twice a week) as long as we raise at least £300 for Cancer research U.K. So I signed up but I took it seriously and went the extra mile by joining the MMA gym and started to train hard 5/6 a week. I dedicated my life to MMA , I made university and studies secondary and only focused on the fight. The gym was an hour away from my house (30 mins on train and 30 mins walk) so I started to run to the gym to get extra conditioning. I was so dedicated I stopped smoking , drinking , went on a diet but it didn’t stop there when I came home or when I woke up I would watch fighter breakdowns , learned new techniques and listened to fight tips (That’s how I came across your channel). But guess what I lost the fight but what hurt more than the loss was the fact that my opponent only trained once a week and he was working the rest of the time. He didn’t have any MMA experience like my self and you could say he was training at another gym but I know for a fact he wasn’t because we were friends during training , I only found out he was my opponent 3 days before the fight ( the organisation does this to prevent any tension) . My opponent was 6ft1 and 63 kg whilst I’m 5ft6 and only 58kg and according to the coach and my friends I was robbed and I won the first 2 rounds and the only reason why I lost the last round was because I was on my back but wasn’t in a threatening position. But that’s besides the point because I was training so hard and made MMA my life it shouldn’t of even been close and I should’ve dominated even if it did go to a decision. I haven’t given up all hope and I signed up to the next boxing event in July but the loss still hurts because I gave training and the fight my all and it didn’t pay off. There were days I didn’t want to go to training , I even skipped class to go training and I said it will be worth it when I win but guess what I still lost. So my question is how can I be victorious at the next boxing event if hard work , drive , dedication and commitment is not the formula for victory ?
Ramsey, just letting you know love watching your videos. Question I want to know if had appropriate recation. I recently had got into a fist fight. Every person is annoying telling, "well why didn't you just do something else". As they tell me this I say"do you think I am really thinking when someone is punching me in a corner, all I want to do is punch me opponent as hard as I can to create distance,so that hopefully I can think a little clearly",and say the would approach the situation differently eventhough none of them have ever been in a real fight.
Everyone wants to be a backseat driver in a fight! When I meet people like this, I usually quote Shaka Zulu: “A man putting on his armor for war should not speak as one returning from the battlefield.” Nobody understands it till they do it.
Interesting, but yes a "fight" is not a fair situation, as well as one learns martial arts so that they do not have to "fight". Even when in an altercation, just naturally react, not struggle against them. That sort of thing, a "fight" implies struggle or challenge, and the goal is to make the situation at hand not a struggle or any challenge.
Hey sir Ramsey Dewey my name is Chris I followed for quite a while now and I love your videos and content.I am training in boxing, self learning at home with videos,tips and my punching bag :) . I always notice when your children are in your videos smiling and having fun and I love it :) . Recently I have my own little family and I am putting less hours in training, like 3 days per week max 4 . I wanted to ask you how did you co op with training, life and family and how did you manage your time :) , thanks a lot for reading , stay safe you and your family.
Every body is a triangle. There is always one leg that is shorter then the other though. If you can find the leg the other guy is short on hopefully it is one you are good at. If you apply pressure to that weakness you will win. It's why a guy using low kicks was able to beat a champion.
But now competition is for the most part designed and intended to be "fair" as much as possible but that's also why I make the distinction between"fighting" and say competing or using martial arts and why martial arts is not intended for competition.
The only time I want a fair fight is in sparring to challenge and test myself. In a street fight or in a full contact competition then yeah I want all the unfair advantages I can get.
I think the rule set of boxing gives a huge advantage to the brute type of fighter, it kinda forces to be slippery instead of counter striking, a guy that basically spams punches in your face like a maniac would get his guts twisted after a few front kicks and you can't trip people in boxing, I think that's really lame.
Nice to hear the proper mechanical description of a cross rather than the modern erroneous one and the other curiosity: rabbit? A cross is not a punch that "crosses the body" because that is a rear straight no matter what. A true cross is one that would hook up and over a hook punch. Some Asian martial arts call it, unofficially, a lunge punch. Do a rear straight with more elbow bend and make sure the elbow is higher than the fist so it goes up and then arcs down as defence to a hook (the description is roughly what Jack Dempsey said in his book)
Or, as W.C. Fields always said, inspired by his experience shooting pool, never give a sucker an even break. In case you don’t understand this old saying, when you play pool against someone, you can ask to be given an advantage such as your opponent has to finish by making all 9 balls (in 9 ball anyway) but they let you win when you just make the 7 ball for example. You give your opponent a “even break” when you don’t get them to agree to give you some advantage and vice versa. Same idea. Same advice as you give, Ramsey.
In this situation you close the distance and stay inside looking for liver shots.. Clinch Clinch Clinch Stick and move double up on the jab coverup going inside looking for that left hook to the liver Clinch Clinch Clinch and repeat..
I understand you cater to a specific audience but I subscribed for the in depth knowledge and if it takes x2.5 longer to get it from you, I'll likely forget about it
How do you cultivate yourself in a manner to live alone? I am currently in a situation where most around me are strangers and I am not fairing very well. Any insights are greatly appreciated
Hello coach i got a question when i watch old ufc videos i notice there were more straight punsh rushing while now it's more a hit ko or sniping if you can say is straight full power punishing effective? And what it's counter or how to defend it ?
And not that martial arts cannot be used to compete, obviously lol, it can be used In everything from painting a house to planting a garden, but that was never their intended purpose.
Punching is inconsistent. Sometimes a man can punch another man and knock him out in a single punch other times a man can punch a woman and it doesn't knock them out.
Personally I would rather fight someone who is a match for me. You can only be great if your enemy is great. Not everyone sees it this way. I do but I've been fighting since i was a kid & ive nearly been killed which is way worse than just losing. Lol
I feel like this fight didn't go the way this person thinks it did. If he was landing shots and his opponent wasn't, he would probably still win the decision. If the other guy won the decision, he was probably landing a good portion of his shots.
Do whatever it takes to break the will to fight in your attacker,anything else is a cheap gimmick of what fighting actually means,I'm tall and short guys give me more trouble than giants,even 6 foot 7 Norwegians don't sweat me as much as a 5 foot 2 Irishman,know the strengths and weakness of all body types
A common thing that thugs do in my city is to throw chilli powder in someone's eyes and then stab and keel them, slit their throats, etc. No matter what level of a martial artist you are, you're gonna get keeled if that happens. But how does one even defend oneself if caught in that situation?
Could you eventually inform your viewers about the living conditions in Shanghai? There's this newly imposed "strict" lockdown and there are really shocking pictures in the news! Could you perhaps give a general view on what's happening? Hope you bother to answer my stupid question.
@@mrtoxicwasteland this is literally how most podcasts sound, it’s fine. You can just sit down and relax to these types of videos. He’s also actually thinking before he speaks, something a lot of people should do.
“You don’t want a fair fight, you want an ADVANTAGE” - Ramsey Dewey 💯
When you think about it, the whole idea of a fair fight seems a bit odd, doesn't it?
I recently started MMA to try to get back in shape and learn some stuff, and I just realize how artificial it is to bout with anyone. You're under this rule set or that, in an environment completely clear of environmental hassles, wearing the same gear, no weapons, and of course you're governed by the rules of whatever code you're using.
The whole conception of a fair fight in reality doesn't come up too much, does it? Even in a combat sport, with rules, weight classes, etc, you still have some people who are just good, or bad. What's fair about fighting someone who's had more training, or younger, or stronger, or faster, or whatever? It's only fair in that you've agreed to it, and you trust your opponent to also have agreed to it, and follow the rules.
That's about it. In HS, I was in the "unlimited" weight class wrestling. I was pretty strong but I hadn't got my full adult growth yet, and it was hard to wrestle a lot of those guys. But somehow, Wayne or Damon at 20-30 lbs lighter than me could take me every time. By gassing me out and having good technique. When I started trying to do to the big monsters what those guys did with me, I did a little bit better...
Seems kind of overused, but (if I'm remembering right) Sun Tzu put it the best: know your terrain, know your enemy, but most of all know yourself. These days, pretty rare for me to spar with someone taller than I am, and NOBODY there is heavier than I am. Pluses and minuses, but a lot of techniques useful for someone smaller and lighter are less useful for me.
He claims he wasn't hurting his opponent with punches but while that may or not be true , there's a high chance the opponent was PRETENDING those hits did nothing.
Think about it, one of the easiest and fastest tricks to learn when you are a "tough guy" is pretending your opponent cant hurt you ever ,even when the opposite is whats happening. This way the tough guy can win by decision because jury thinks he's way above his opponent, and also forces the opponent mid match to use more power ,waste his stamina and making more mistakes.
Great thumbnail Ramsey. Dog fighting hands. "Here I was at 5000 feet and Jerry turned in at 2 o'clock"
I actually had only 1 fight that I won, but injuries and headaches after the fight made me give up fighting haha
Nothing wrong with that, at least you tired and won!
If you struggle fighting a "Brute", train to fight a "Brute". Fights are won during your training sessions and not in the ring. "If you train extreme, you'll fight extreme" - WetGoo
Tbh no matter how much of a brute you are no person should be able to take mutible hooks and overhands to the chin without being efected unless your punches are just weak
Wise words by a sage called... "Wet Goo".
Great input from Sammy the student.
People think blocking is like a video game and just nullifies all attacks lol.
Best is defense is dont be there... ~Miagi
I think there's another elephant in the room. This guys opponent had a significant reach advantage AND strength advantage over him, even though they were in the same weight class. Having a smaller frame means you can have significantly more muscle than your opponent, since less of your weight comes from your skeleton and organs. I guess its possible that OP has unusual body geometry but I'm willing to bet his body composition wasn't optimized the way his opponent's was. As I see it, managing weight, strength training, conditioning, and diet are all skills that are just as much part of fighting as punches and kicks.
yeah, I was struggling with 'shorter, but weaker' aspect of this. Tyson was shorter, and he hit like a truck.
5:33 "A lot of first time fighter are overwelmed by how ineffective their punches seem to be against their opponents. And how effective the opponents punches seem to be against them."
How can a video be that humbling and motivating at the same time
As they say, "If you find yourself in a fair fight, both you and your opponent messed up".
As someone who probably enjoys getting into firefights too much, I think I needed to hear this.
If he is a better technician and the opponent is bigger and stronger, why on earth would he want to get into an exchange with this opponent? Seems like he was fighting the fight his opponent wanted him to fight.
"Cut your angles"
Even as a Muay Thai fighter I train to this constantly until it becomes instinct. Sure, I can stand and bang but it is not a wise move. Along with striking and defense, I try to employ footwork to my regimen as much as possible.
this is a breath of fresh air. Gives someone who is listening something to think about. I needed to hear this
Just getting back into sparring after a few years out, and this is real helpful advice.
You , sir , have my respect .
100% agree. Everyone moves different.
This is all true.... I'm one of those one and done "fighters" although I am trying to mount a comeback fight next year. I've only fought amateur mma 2 fights. One my first by ko in 37 secs lost my second by armbar in 32 secs. Man that loss wrecked me... wish I had kept with it...oh well can't change the past. Only the present.
Thanks again for the pep talk, coach.
Reading Dempsey right now made me realise that power gets you respect in the ring and lets you work your magic without having to feel like you're constantly at a disadvantage. It's a great equalizer.
I’ve had a couple fights now and I look back at all of them and say I was not as good as I thought I was xD My first fight I was like wow I really gotta change my approach I never want to feel like any second I could just be unconscious lol
The title is so true. I like to pin people in positions where they can't defend themselves and attack pressure points. I learned that in ninpo... the style you love to hate. Not that I'm a good martial artist, but it improves my chances of success.
Most people don't want the fight, or any type, that they think they do.
Wow... Great insightful question, great answer
In Wing Chun the inner gate is between your shouders. The outer gate is between where your elbows can go. Don't enter their gate's. Jump the small fence where they have no guard, best right behind the guard unless you can enter from behind.
The turtle beats the rabbit by changing his strategy. Out box the guy. Be more elusive and fight with skill. That's how I fight people I perceive as stronger than me.
With the quality of videos you are putting out I hope your lockdown goes on a long while ... ONLY KIDDING - great advice and hope all is good.
Idk who said it first but it's one of my favorite quotes, if you find yourself in a fair fight your tactics suck.
Good advice you giving are!😊
Hey coach!
This reminds me of two things my kajukenbo teacher told me back when I was taking classes.
First, the only unfair fight is the one you lose. In the sense that giving yourself every advantage you can is exactly what you want to do. It’s not ‘dishonorable’ or anything like that.
Second, he told me that no matter what you get hit by, don’t show your opponent that it hurt.
Anyways, there’s my comment. Thanks!
P.S. since you read your comments, I kinda want to tell you I received my mission call a few days ago. I’m going to Columbus Ohio.
great video!
side bar: I don't know if you still do videos about martial arts in anime, but you want to check out a new one called "dance, dance danseur." it's about a kid who transitions from an initial interest in dance into martial arts because he wanted to act Machi, but then gets back into dance as a teenager. Since you have a foot in both martial arts and dance, you might have an interesting perspective.
Excellent Analysis 😎
Just going the distance in your first fight is good. Lots of people gas out their first time.
Hope you're safe in Shanghai dude!!! Thanks for the videos!
I think we all have one of those guys in our training at some point. Mine was called, Tim, a monster of a man at 17. My response to his overwhelming reach and power was not an intelligent one, but by trying to blitz the b'stard i gradually discovered a few things that worked! Footwork and footsweeps. Plus, by then he thought i was unhinged so that helped as well! lol
Well Mr. Ramsey. In practice such a thing as a fair fight is not actually ever a thing. All things never are truly equal.
The answer was " Get out there and train " .....
your answer is like becoming a very good chess player .... You can purchase a chess set , for a few bucks but it takes years or lifetime to become good / great at it !!!!
Reminds of your story - BJJ guys are wimps which atleast somehow motivates to get out there and train !!!
How do you beat the stronger guy ... By becoming as strong as possible !!
Footwork. I don't know why it didn't hit me (pun intended) until now but I need to improve my footwork.
Thank you for the inspiration sir.
Where's the hello it's Ramsey Dewey over here in Shanghai china with another video of q and a with the couch .😂😂
So here in the U.K. we have a charity organisation which gives opportunity to the people which have never competed or never even had any training to compete in an amateur MMA/Boxing events. It’s called Ultra MMA if you’re interested in researching. The charity gives people free training for two months (twice a week) as long as we raise at least £300 for Cancer research U.K. So I signed up but I took it seriously and went the extra mile by joining the MMA gym and started to train hard 5/6 a week. I dedicated my life to MMA , I made university and studies secondary and only focused on the fight. The gym was an hour away from my house (30 mins on train and 30 mins walk) so I started to run to the gym to get extra conditioning. I was so dedicated I stopped smoking , drinking , went on a diet but it didn’t stop there when I came home or when I woke up I would watch fighter breakdowns , learned new techniques and listened to fight tips (That’s how I came across your channel). But guess what I lost the fight but what hurt more than the loss was the fact that my opponent only trained once a week and he was working the rest of the time. He didn’t have any MMA experience like my self and you could say he was training at another gym but I know for a fact he wasn’t because we were friends during training , I only found out he was my opponent 3 days before the fight ( the organisation does this to prevent any tension) . My opponent was 6ft1 and 63 kg whilst I’m 5ft6 and only 58kg and according to the coach and my friends I was robbed and I won the first 2 rounds and the only reason why I lost the last round was because I was on my back but wasn’t in a threatening position. But that’s besides the point because I was training so hard and made MMA my life it shouldn’t of even been close and I should’ve dominated even if it did go to a decision. I haven’t given up all hope and I signed up to the next boxing event in July but the loss still hurts because I gave training and the fight my all and it didn’t pay off. There were days I didn’t want to go to training , I even skipped class to go training and I said it will be worth it when I win but guess what I still lost. So my question is how can I be victorious at the next boxing event if hard work , drive , dedication and commitment is not the formula for victory ?
Your channel is gold
Ramsey, just letting you know love watching your videos. Question I want to know if had appropriate recation. I recently had got into a fist fight. Every person is annoying telling, "well why didn't you just do something else". As they tell me this I say"do you think I am really thinking when someone is punching me in a corner, all I want to do is punch me opponent as hard as I can to create distance,so that hopefully I can think a little clearly",and say the would approach the situation differently eventhough none of them have ever been in a real fight.
Everyone wants to be a backseat driver in a fight! When I meet people like this, I usually quote Shaka Zulu: “A man putting on his armor for war should not speak as one returning from the battlefield.” Nobody understands it till they do it.
Interesting, but yes a "fight" is not a fair situation, as well as one learns martial arts so that they do not have to "fight". Even when in an altercation, just naturally react, not struggle against them. That sort of thing, a "fight" implies struggle or challenge, and the goal is to make the situation at hand not a struggle or any challenge.
Hey sir Ramsey Dewey my name is Chris I followed for quite a while now and I love your videos and content.I am training in boxing, self learning at home with videos,tips and my punching bag :) . I always notice when your children are in your videos smiling and having fun and I love it :) . Recently I have my own little family and I am putting less hours in training, like 3 days per week max 4 . I wanted to ask you how did you co op with training, life and family and how did you manage your time :) , thanks a lot for reading , stay safe you and your family.
Every body is a triangle. There is always one leg that is shorter then the other though. If you can find the leg the other guy is short on hopefully it is one you are good at. If you apply pressure to that weakness you will win. It's why a guy using low kicks was able to beat a champion.
But now competition is for the most part designed and intended to be "fair" as much as possible but that's also why I make the distinction between"fighting" and say competing or using martial arts and why martial arts is not intended for competition.
The only time I want a fair fight is in sparring to challenge and test myself. In a street fight or in a full contact competition then yeah I want all the unfair advantages I can get.
Ramsey Dewey trained with Batman and asked how to beat Superman to which Batman said, " you need an advantage to beat a man like that".
If competitions were 100% fair we would get draws all the time as a result
the literal first thing i learned in kali
" there is no such thing as a fair fight...that honer bullshit will get you killed"-cris kaban
You definitely don’t want a fair fight. You want to skew the odds in your favor as much as possible.
I think the rule set of boxing gives a huge advantage to the brute type of fighter, it kinda forces to be slippery instead of counter striking, a guy that basically spams punches in your face like a maniac would get his guts twisted after a few front kicks and you can't trip people in boxing, I think that's really lame.
@@edstringer1138 Tyson said that he would've done terribly in MMA because he has incredibly weak feet so you stomp him and he would have just tapped
Nice to hear the proper mechanical description of a cross rather than the modern erroneous one and the other curiosity: rabbit? A cross is not a punch that "crosses the body" because that is a rear straight no matter what. A true cross is one that would hook up and over a hook punch. Some Asian martial arts call it, unofficially, a lunge punch. Do a rear straight with more elbow bend and make sure the elbow is higher than the fist so it goes up and then arcs down as defence to a hook (the description is roughly what Jack Dempsey said in his book)
Have no fear fellas Mr Wong will help u
Ramsey If you fought an evil clone of your current self, how would you go about about beating you?
Or, as W.C. Fields always said, inspired by his experience shooting pool, never give a sucker an even break. In case you don’t understand this old saying, when you play pool against someone, you can ask to be given an advantage such as your opponent has to finish by making all 9 balls (in 9 ball anyway) but they let you win when you just make the 7 ball for example. You give your opponent a “even break” when you don’t get them to agree to give you some advantage and vice versa. Same idea. Same advice as you give, Ramsey.
This was cool! Do you have any videos footwork for flanking?
I have a whole playlist on the topic:
th-cam.com/play/PLx78ZkEKSXzAjwQ58UwAavHsa-gDMPFWL.html
@@RamseyDewey Thank you!
Thanks from me too!
In this situation you close the distance and stay inside looking for liver shots.. Clinch Clinch Clinch Stick and move double up on the jab coverup going inside looking for that left hook to the liver Clinch Clinch Clinch and repeat..
The advantage is having a better gameplan
Your welcome.. From the Frist True Fighting Bloodline of the Planet.
I understand you cater to a specific audience but I subscribed for the in depth knowledge and if it takes x2.5 longer to get it from you, I'll likely forget about it
How do you cultivate yourself in a manner to live alone? I am currently in a situation where most around me are strangers and I am not fairing very well. Any insights are greatly appreciated
Please give more details.
@@mikuspalmis it's like y productivity goes lower so does my self efficacy and the negative voices go louder
@@thATguy-rq7dj Who do you spend your time around throughout the day and night?
@@mikuspalmis alone working
@@thATguy-rq7dj Maybe there is someone like you in your environment who is also alone that you might be able to connect with?
This is an interesting video title today Mr dewey lol
Hello coach i got a question when i watch old ufc videos i notice there were more straight punsh rushing while now it's more a hit ko or sniping if you can say is straight full power punishing effective? And what it's counter or how to defend it ?
The best weapon in a fair fight is the ability to avoid it.
Not everyone needs to be a combat sports athlete.
And not that martial arts cannot be used to compete, obviously lol, it can be used In everything from painting a house to planting a garden, but that was never their intended purpose.
this is also why i prefer the "epic fighting championship" in russia over the boring technical UFC stuff.
Sounds like he went in with a sparring mentality and not a fight mentality.
If you are the smartest one in the room, you are in the wrong room, if you are the strongest one in spar, you are not training.
Punching is inconsistent. Sometimes a man can punch another man and knock him out in a single punch other times a man can punch a woman and it doesn't knock them out.
can you make a video of conditioning for fighter in lockdown !
I think he did some videos on training in such a situation. Not exactly on conditioning, though, if I understand correctly what you mean.
Personally I would rather fight someone who is a match for me. You can only be great if your enemy is great. Not everyone sees it this way. I do but I've been fighting since i was a kid & ive nearly been killed which is way worse than just losing. Lol
I feel like this fight didn't go the way this person thinks it did. If he was landing shots and his opponent wasn't, he would probably still win the decision. If the other guy won the decision, he was probably landing a good portion of his shots.
Do you want bare hand fighting?
if your in a martial arts school and your the biggest badedst top dog and cant be beat.....your in the wrong school...unless your the instructor
Do whatever it takes to break the will to fight in your attacker,anything else is a cheap gimmick of what fighting actually means,I'm tall and short guys give me more trouble than giants,even 6 foot 7 Norwegians don't sweat me as much as a 5 foot 2 Irishman,know the strengths and weakness of all body types
A common thing that thugs do in my city is to throw chilli powder in someone's eyes and then stab and keel them, slit their throats, etc.
No matter what level of a martial artist you are, you're gonna get keeled if that happens.
But how does one even defend oneself if caught in that situation?
Nice
Could you eventually inform your viewers about the living conditions in Shanghai? There's this newly imposed "strict" lockdown and there are really shocking pictures in the news! Could you perhaps give a general view on what's happening? Hope you bother to answer my stupid question.
Could you perhaps watch any of the videos I’ve published on that topic?
@@RamseyDewey Sorry, somehow I missed your last videos! So I searched for - and viola I found the vids. So once more "I'm Sorry"!
First !
(Interesting topic)
Fair fight is a result of bad plan.
If you find yourself in a fair fight your tactics suck
Please talk faster, remember you're speaking english bro
Increase the playback speed to 1.25
@@ynghuch it doesnt solve the cadence, he sounds like an 80s kung fu flick dub
Shush he’s like our dad telling bed time stories when he isn’t drunk
@@EgretCMusic57737 lmaoo I feel that ok, first and last time I'll bring it up
@@mrtoxicwasteland this is literally how most podcasts sound, it’s fine. You can just sit down and relax to these types of videos. He’s also actually thinking before he speaks, something a lot of people should do.