Got any any good beginner tips for someone trying to to on a diet for the first time in their life? Specifically, what are some myths to watch out for and what's good to eat in order to try and regain a lost physique for training?
@@leonardovegaolmedo5483 He might not know that - but I can tell you that, properly used, most hand forms are both safe (you won't get your fingers grabbed and/or broken) and much more effective than a simple fist/knifehand/grab. Eagle claw and tiger claw are both veeery nasty. But I will also say that improperly used, it's as silly as it looks in kung-fu movies.
@@leonardovegaolmedo5483 well, I spent a lot of time learning that stuff back in the day, and zero time using it in fights. I’ve heard some interesting interpretations of “tiger claw” and “crane beak” hand positions in the forms, ranging from the literal (scratch and poke) to the symbolic (eg: tiger claws = attack with fierceness and raw physical power like a tiger, not literally try to scratch the guy with your fingernails) and quite a few other ideas on those movements. I don’t know where the truth lies with those specific techniques.
I learned the open and closed hand thing from my Sabumnim. He showed us a lot of locks that were apparently in Taekwondo, but other schools don't teach it for the sake of being Olympic focused. I didn't expect to be learning how to do an armbar in a TKD class, but here I am.
There are a number of standing armbars in the Taekwondo forms. The old shotokan/tou te do/tang soo do/Taekwondo forms are about 60% grappling techniques. It’s amazing that so many schools that follow that tradition teach the forms religiously, but never ever use any of the techniques from the forms.
@@RamseyDewey That's one of the problems with almost all TMA, they have practical things hidden, and almost no one knows. The "masters" simply have no idea of their own art.
After a while I realized that in Karate, many techniques and also "stances" are rather transitional than static. You train them more static to build your strenght to perform them, but later they represent options. Like a strike could become a grab, a defense could become an attack, a shock technique could transition to a lever or a throw. A stance could be just a momentary transition to another technique or stance, or a transition from defense to attack or vice versa. Everything has to hold another option, since we fight a moving target that fights back. Just like in boxing, a cross or a hook or a jab could become a parry followed by another strike with the other hand etc.
I love these episodes where you show contemporary utility out of traditional practices. Transitioning from traditional martial arts to combat sports was rough, and I disparaged my former practices as useless for a long time. Now, looking at my old practices is more like reading a once-favorite book and getting something new out of it.
That karate grip breaking break down is sick. As a child i was doing karate for 2 years and I practiced that form to the death. It never clicked durring rolling. After i watched the first video where you mentioned it i immediately turned from somebody who just dragging the hand for 2 minutes without result to a beast who couldn't be touched more than few seconds. Since then i just got better. As I see now the best defense is to shot down every attempt to get or hold a good grip on you
The sweaty factor is a whole series. I have used dumog against people twice my size and weight non-sweaty. This only used the elbow to wrist. With sweat even shoulder to elbow would be hard.
Seriously, everything you have said about open-handed strikes being "for grabs" fills in some important gaps left in my experience of aikido's syllabus. That difference in driving them back through the grab or not, that alone makes the teppo/shomen uchi motion make sense. Big feels. Much thanks. Me am words feel unlike Bizzaro about it.
The Danger! Thank you for these set ups and helpful remarks. Your instruction is quite inspiring. Thank you for the Lesson(s). Pure Love & Respect. P.S. Happy [Belated] Birthday! On 4 September 1978, was born an up-and-coming Champion Fighter to be known as The Danger. Two Tigers
I’m not the one who changed the context of the forms. How many karate/Taekwondo/tang soo do school practice their forms religiously, but have no clue on how to use any of those movements in a fight? How many of those schools never actually use the techniques taught in their forms and instead just do punches and kicks that aren’t even part of the forms of their so called style? That’s taking the forms out of context.
Great video, but now i have a QUESTION for you... So, the armlock one reminded me of the sumo fisherman throw... Wich is basically an armdrag with an armlock into a throw... But they throw ACROSS, with the intention of geting the oponent out of the ring... So my question is, sumo throws that throw across instead of down, like kotenage(sumo whizer throw) amiuchi(fisherman throw) tottari(armlock throw) shitate dashi nage(underarm swing arround belt throw) and uwate dashi nage (over arm swing aeround belt throw) or similar throws from other martial arts like aikido, ninjutsu, whatever... What use could they have in mma to throw an oponent across instead of down?
Also, they always try to stay standing if possible... I can se some potential uses for self defense and sports with ring out... But i wanna know if they would be usefull for mma and if they are worth learning for someone who wants to be an mma fighter
Well, I had to look up “fisherman’s throw”. I haven’t used that one before. I’ll have to play around with it a bit in the gym and get back to about it’s utility for MMA.
The distance of throwing across would make it harder for the thrower to get on top/mount? But if you want to make space, that distance allows you to re-establish striking range (or kick them when they're down if the rules allow?). In self-defense you could run while the thrown person is busy picking his face off the sidewalk?
Great video, loved the detail you went into each one. Would be interesting to see how the TKD / Karate forms are with the stripping and grappling. Seemed like homage to Tony Fergusons ankle pick threat to Werdum
@@RamseyDewey he doesnt really ankle pick very often. But he threatens to a lot, at least a few years back. Like in an interview he had where it was the interviewer, him and Fabricio Werdum. Werdum said something and Ferguson made the threat. Just funny to see a lightweight threaten a heavyweight with an ankle pick.
Ever since I first heard you say that Tai Chi forms are grappling forms, my first thought when trying to make sense of traditional forms is "what would this look like if I was grabbing my opponent" and the second is "what would this look like if my opponent was grabbing me". Gotta say, though, the angle of attack of the traditional karate chop still baffled me, until you hooked it into the elbow.
Once you understand the application, if you do a shuto uke at any other angle, it doesn’t make sense- you would be to far away from your opponent to have any level of control.
Do you have any go-to jab to takedown combos that work against mild resistance? I have one go-to (jab to the shoulder transition to rear-naked choke) I was taught a while ago but I'd love to see yours.
Yep. The takedown I show at 4:10 is one I set up a lot from a jab from a Philly shell. Jab, close the distance while retracting the jab, trap your opponent’s lead arm between your shoulder and his own body, then arm drag and ankle pick.
@@RamseyDewey sorry to impose, but a video of the setups would be very appreciated if you are looking for content. I'm having problems seeing which targets are used for the jab and visualising the transition. If you don't get around to it, that's understandable too.
Since I can't find any wrestling camps or MMA camps near me I think I might go take a karate or TKD camp and use the things I learned here to make it my clinch fighting camp. I prefer takedowns from the clinch anyway so it might work. Any opinions on this plan would be appreciated.
Q: this seems a bit of a silly question to me, since more strength and size is an advantage almost everywhere. What are the main techniques you first think of that aren't as difficult against a larger, stronger opponent, as in being more leverage based? I am pretty athletic in my opinion at 145 lbs, 5' 10", and 16 years old, but since I chose to go to the adults class instead of being the largest in a kids class, I'm rolling with other men who are 40+ lbs above me. We actually did one of these during a class a couple of days ago at a place I just started going to.
The main thing is to be proactive. You should always win the race to the next position because you have less inertia, so you can always change direction a little sooner with a little less energy. Assert yourself and push your speed advantage. More important than specific techniques is knowing how to get from position to position fast/clean and attacking as soon as you're in position. Any small difference in speed/maneuverability is lost if you're clumsy. Heavier weight class fighters will generally fatigue faster, so the longer you can go, the better chance you have to see the difference become exaggerated.
@@AdobadoFantastico true, yes. I was rolling yesterday, and out of like 10 matches I got one submission by rear naked choke when I basically jumped over a larger guy when he was waiting for me to try to pass guard. I went against a 250 lb white belt and held my own for a good amount of time,almost getting a submission, and after he submitted me, a keyword I think, he was panting and red in the face, while I was already relatively ready for another round.
@@andymax1 An athletic smaller dude can do like a handful of transition while a bigger dude is still trying to stand up or move to one position or something. If the big dude is that athletic though - like Ramsey - then uh oh lol
wait, last lesson yesterday my coach in the grappling class just taught us takedowns from the armdrag. i concede, they were different takedowns, but still!
Hi Ramsey, could you do a video about wich sweeps from open guard against a standing opponent could be set up from standing without guard pulling? Like I always do that arm drag to ankle pick on the ground simmularly how you showed. I also do single legs and double legs. Because our gym only allows the person who is passing to stand up. And i try to practice as much sweeps that would count as a takedown if you were transitioning from standing as possible. So im not a complete fish out of water if i have to wrestle .
A worthy topic! Yes, I have many solutions for you! Some you might not think of as “sweeps” from the guard is a standing fighter vs downed fighter scenario: kata guruma/fireman’s carry, double leg takedown, X-guard into a single leg takedown. I’ll have to show you in a video.
@@RamseyDewey thank youuu so much!!! I really looking for esspecially that x guard single leg transition. Thoose are my highest % "sweeps" To me and thankfully to my coach if you set up your grips on the ground it technically counts as a sweep according to ibjjf rules even if you stand up. Or at least he tolerates it when I'm doing it bc he knows that i know what I'm doing and i'm one of the safest person to roll with in the gym. Personally i find the division of sweeps and gravitational takedowns super arbitrary and I just stick with the conventional names. If somebody calls the same thing single leg sweep from turtle in bjj but single leg takedown if you got there from wrestling let it be. Whatever.
Hey Coach, I am currently trying to add more wrestling to our HEMA/SCA practice but I am having some trouble teaching people to fall. I was going over the way I learned it and I am not having as much success. Let me know your thoughts and thanks for the constant stream of interesting techniques.
Hello Coach, I hope everything is going great for you and your close ones. Recently I've been trying to up my training by slowly introducing strength and endurance sessions coupled with my regular martial arts training. My question was mostly about what exercises do you recommend for a fighter to do for strength and conditioning, and also which kind of repetitions or sets (ie, many repetitions, low but explosive reps, long rest, short rest, light weight, heavier weight...). I know it could be specific to the fighter, but some general pointers would be of great help to me, since I'm having doubts how to proceed on this matter. I've been doing some separate research and asking questions, but I'd be glad to count on the opinion of somebody with proven experience on the field of professional fighting to contrast opinions. Thank you so much. Also, in case you already answered this question on any previous video, I'd be very thankful if someone could point it out to me so that I can watch it and better program my training. Best wishes to all.
Could it actually start off as an actual chop or forearm strike to the neck before cupping/collar tie-ing? Like a blow that sticks and becomes a clinch?
If you watch the way Mark Schultz went for collar ties during his wrestling career, that’s exactly what he did. He called it “clubbing” rather than “chopping”.
For sure, you’ll see this stuff in catch wrestling! The takedown I show at 4:10 is one I learned from the late great Billy Robinson, for example. When an old man who uses a cane to walk can sweep you off your feet with ease, it’s worth learning.
@@RamseyDewey he and my coach worked together a lot. He asked me if worked with him when I talked to him about some of the techniques I picked up from your videos. My coach is John potenza. He has a channel on TH-cam as well but he doesn't post much
Hey Ramsey, would it be fair to say that you haven't yet pressure tested the techniques yet? I mean I know you are teaching them, but could we see the pressure testing process? Thanks from the west indies.
Ramsey I have a friendly question😀 Ex boxer that stopped working out and balooned😔😔😔 I've meet a bully 6ft3 220 that know some BJJ moves but is not a fighter. How to deal with that man if fight somehow happens? Tnx anyway😀
I, for one, have never thought you liked picking on Tien Yu. Now, Liu Xiao on the other hand... That poor man spends more time in kneebars, ankle locks, and toeholds than the average Rousimar Palhares opponent.
If by tips, you mean advice, the comments section is right here. If you mean monetary donation, there’s should be a “super thanks” tip button below the video next to the like and share buttons. Thanks for watching!
Hi Ramsey, I'm on the path to become a Jeet June Do instructor. I never was a guy with much authority, only recently I learned how to "verbal spar" and to command respect with my words if need be. I'm new, very new. Do you got advice on how to be authoritarian without looking like we are on military drill? does it depend on the personalities of the students?
People laugh at the "Star Trek judo chop" but i was on the receiving end of a outside blade hand to the side of the neck 80% power and it was the most painfull and crippling strike i ever received.I've received accidental bokken strikes to the side of the head and bare fist punches to the face and none of those dazed and crippled me like that chop to the jugular just under the ear...It felt like an instant and severe cramp in the neck and my arm was unusable for the immediate future because when i tried lifting my arm it was super painfull im my neck muscles..It took the rest of the evening and over night to fully recover and not feel it anymore......man that was seriously the most crippling and painfull strike i experienced....Just chop yourself in the jugular a little hard and you'll begin to see how a hard chop could mess you up.
Interesting Ramsey. If your doing a karate chops etc as a grab, is the following the kind of Poomsae application you talking about? th-cam.com/video/jTDLwlJswmo/w-d-xo.html. Skip to 5:45 for techniques. Do you think they are efficacious for grappling beginners? Maybe a bridge to wrestling or very light self defence from a striker who is being grappled?
Most martial arts schools are limited to a local customer base. Advertising outside of the town where the gym is located doesn’t make sense. There are a few widespread martial arts franchises (Eg: Gracie Academy Online) that advertise to the world, but those are the exceptions.
@@RamseyDewey But with NFC (Near Field Communication) and other like tech, the ads could be based on wherever the video is being viewed... I would see ones for Dallas Texas, someone else would see one for Kuwait at the same time.
All these short people who don't watch your entire videos talkin bout how "mean" you are. As a barely not short man, I can smell it from a mile away. Pay them no mind coach
Got questions for the coach for future videos? Let me know in the comments section!
What s your opinion regarding hand forms (like tiger claw or crane beak) in traditional martial arts?
Got any any good beginner tips for someone trying to to on a diet for the first time in their life? Specifically, what are some myths to watch out for and what's good to eat in order to try and regain a lost physique for training?
@@leonardovegaolmedo5483 He might not know that - but I can tell you that, properly used, most hand forms are both safe (you won't get your fingers grabbed and/or broken) and much more effective than a simple fist/knifehand/grab. Eagle claw and tiger claw are both veeery nasty. But I will also say that improperly used, it's as silly as it looks in kung-fu movies.
@@adcyuumi i know, I just want to know his opinion
@@leonardovegaolmedo5483 well, I spent a lot of time learning that stuff back in the day, and zero time using it in fights.
I’ve heard some interesting interpretations of “tiger claw” and “crane beak” hand positions in the forms, ranging from the literal (scratch and poke) to the symbolic (eg: tiger claws = attack with fierceness and raw physical power like a tiger, not literally try to scratch the guy with your fingernails) and quite a few other ideas on those movements. I don’t know where the truth lies with those specific techniques.
I learned the open and closed hand thing from my Sabumnim. He showed us a lot of locks that were apparently in Taekwondo, but other schools don't teach it for the sake of being Olympic focused. I didn't expect to be learning how to do an armbar in a TKD class, but here I am.
There are a number of standing armbars in the Taekwondo forms. The old shotokan/tou te do/tang soo do/Taekwondo forms are about 60% grappling techniques. It’s amazing that so many schools that follow that tradition teach the forms religiously, but never ever use any of the techniques from the forms.
@@RamseyDewey
That's one of the problems with almost all TMA, they have practical things hidden, and almost no one knows. The "masters" simply have no idea of their own art.
Indulging the karate fans I see, much appreciated!
After a while I realized that in Karate, many techniques and also "stances" are rather transitional than static. You train them more static to build your strenght to perform them, but later they represent options. Like a strike could become a grab, a defense could become an attack, a shock technique could transition to a lever or a throw. A stance could be just a momentary transition to another technique or stance, or a transition from defense to attack or vice versa. Everything has to hold another option, since we fight a moving target that fights back. Just like in boxing, a cross or a hook or a jab could become a parry followed by another strike with the other hand etc.
I love these episodes where you show contemporary utility out of traditional practices. Transitioning from traditional martial arts to combat sports was rough, and I disparaged my former practices as useless for a long time. Now, looking at my old practices is more like reading a once-favorite book and getting something new out of it.
Awesome. Lots of great info, Coach! 👍🏼👍🏼
Thanks!
That karate grip breaking break down is sick. As a child i was doing karate for 2 years and I practiced that form to the death. It never clicked durring rolling.
After i watched the first video where you mentioned it i immediately turned from somebody who just dragging the hand for 2 minutes without result to a beast who couldn't be touched more than few seconds.
Since then i just got better. As I see now the best defense is to shot down every attempt to get or hold a good grip on you
Excellent. Keep on doing what you Dewey do so well.
The sweaty factor is a whole series. I have used dumog against people twice my size and weight non-sweaty. This only used the elbow to wrist. With sweat even shoulder to elbow would be hard.
I love these technique videos. They are a significant contribution to human knowledge.
Seriously, everything you have said about open-handed strikes being "for grabs" fills in some important gaps left in my experience of aikido's syllabus. That difference in driving them back through the grab or not, that alone makes the teppo/shomen uchi motion make sense.
Big feels. Much thanks. Me am words feel unlike Bizzaro about it.
The Danger! Thank you for these set ups and helpful remarks. Your instruction is quite inspiring. Thank you for the Lesson(s). Pure Love & Respect.
P.S. Happy [Belated] Birthday! On 4 September 1978, was born an up-and-coming Champion Fighter to be known as The Danger.
Two Tigers
Very interesting to see movements from traditional martial arts being used in a totally different context. Great video coach
I’m not the one who changed the context of the forms. How many karate/Taekwondo/tang soo do school practice their forms religiously, but have no clue on how to use any of those movements in a fight? How many of those schools never actually use the techniques taught in their forms and instead just do punches and kicks that aren’t even part of the forms of their so called style? That’s taking the forms out of context.
Awesome video man, sweet takedown. thanks!
Great video, but now i have a QUESTION for you...
So, the armlock one reminded me of the sumo fisherman throw... Wich is basically an armdrag with an armlock into a throw... But they throw ACROSS, with the intention of geting the oponent out of the ring... So my question is, sumo throws that throw across instead of down, like kotenage(sumo whizer throw) amiuchi(fisherman throw) tottari(armlock throw) shitate dashi nage(underarm swing arround belt throw) and uwate dashi nage (over arm swing aeround belt throw) or similar throws from other martial arts like aikido, ninjutsu, whatever... What use could they have in mma to throw an oponent across instead of down?
Also, they always try to stay standing if possible... I can se some potential uses for self defense and sports with ring out... But i wanna know if they would be usefull for mma and if they are worth learning for someone who wants to be an mma fighter
Well, I had to look up “fisherman’s throw”. I haven’t used that one before. I’ll have to play around with it a bit in the gym and get back to about it’s utility for MMA.
The distance of throwing across would make it harder for the thrower to get on top/mount? But if you want to make space, that distance allows you to re-establish striking range (or kick them when they're down if the rules allow?). In self-defense you could run while the thrown person is busy picking his face off the sidewalk?
Great video, loved the detail you went into each one. Would be interesting to see how the TKD / Karate forms are with the stripping and grappling.
Seemed like homage to Tony Fergusons ankle pick threat to Werdum
You know, I’ve never actually seen a full Tony Ferguson fight before. I didn’t even know he landed an ankle pick during his fight career.
@@RamseyDewey he doesnt really ankle pick very often. But he threatens to a lot, at least a few years back. Like in an interview he had where it was the interviewer, him and Fabricio Werdum. Werdum said something and Ferguson made the threat. Just funny to see a lightweight threaten a heavyweight with an ankle pick.
Ever since I first heard you say that Tai Chi forms are grappling forms, my first thought when trying to make sense of traditional forms is "what would this look like if I was grabbing my opponent" and the second is "what would this look like if my opponent was grabbing me".
Gotta say, though, the angle of attack of the traditional karate chop still baffled me, until you hooked it into the elbow.
Once you understand the application, if you do a shuto uke at any other angle, it doesn’t make sense- you would be to far away from your opponent to have any level of control.
Great video Ramsey! You shouldn't have grappling matches. Live with you over looking them .
Do you have any go-to jab to takedown combos that work against mild resistance? I have one go-to (jab to the shoulder transition to rear-naked choke) I was taught a while ago but I'd love to see yours.
Yep. The takedown I show at 4:10 is one I set up a lot from a jab from a Philly shell. Jab, close the distance while retracting the jab, trap your opponent’s lead arm between your shoulder and his own body, then arm drag and ankle pick.
@@RamseyDewey sorry, but when you say philly shell jab, you mean orthodox yes? Just trying to work out which arm transitions to where for the arm drag
@@RamseyDewey sorry to impose, but a video of the setups would be very appreciated if you are looking for content. I'm having problems seeing which targets are used for the jab and visualising the transition. If you don't get around to it, that's understandable too.
Since I can't find any wrestling camps or MMA camps near me I think I might go take a karate or TKD camp and use the things I learned here to make it my clinch fighting camp. I prefer takedowns from the clinch anyway so it might work. Any opinions on this plan would be appreciated.
Q: this seems a bit of a silly question to me, since more strength and size is an advantage almost everywhere. What are the main techniques you first think of that aren't as difficult against a larger, stronger opponent, as in being more leverage based? I am pretty athletic in my opinion at 145 lbs, 5' 10", and 16 years old, but since I chose to go to the adults class instead of being the largest in a kids class, I'm rolling with other men who are 40+ lbs above me.
We actually did one of these during a class a couple of days ago at a place I just started going to.
The main thing is to be proactive. You should always win the race to the next position because you have less inertia, so you can always change direction a little sooner with a little less energy. Assert yourself and push your speed advantage. More important than specific techniques is knowing how to get from position to position fast/clean and attacking as soon as you're in position. Any small difference in speed/maneuverability is lost if you're clumsy. Heavier weight class fighters will generally fatigue faster, so the longer you can go, the better chance you have to see the difference become exaggerated.
@@AdobadoFantastico true, yes. I was rolling yesterday, and out of like 10 matches I got one submission by rear naked choke when I basically jumped over a larger guy when he was waiting for me to try to pass guard. I went against a 250 lb white belt and held my own for a good amount of time,almost getting a submission, and after he submitted me, a keyword I think, he was panting and red in the face, while I was already relatively ready for another round.
@@andymax1 An athletic smaller dude can do like a handful of transition while a bigger dude is still trying to stand up or move to one position or something. If the big dude is that athletic though - like Ramsey - then uh oh lol
wait, last lesson yesterday my coach in the grappling class just taught us takedowns from the armdrag. i concede, they were different takedowns, but still!
Arm drags are incredibly versatile!
great video!😊
Hi Ramsey, could you do a video about wich sweeps from open guard against a standing opponent could be set up from standing without guard pulling?
Like I always do that arm drag to ankle pick on the ground simmularly how you showed. I also do single legs and double legs.
Because our gym only allows the person who is passing to stand up.
And i try to practice as much sweeps that would count as a takedown if you were transitioning from standing as possible.
So im not a complete fish out of water if i have to wrestle .
A worthy topic! Yes, I have many solutions for you! Some you might not think of as “sweeps” from the guard is a standing fighter vs downed fighter scenario: kata guruma/fireman’s carry, double leg takedown, X-guard into a single leg takedown. I’ll have to show you in a video.
@@RamseyDewey thank youuu so much!!!
I really looking for esspecially that x guard single leg transition. Thoose are my highest % "sweeps"
To me and thankfully to my coach if you set up your grips on the ground it technically counts as a sweep according to ibjjf rules even if you stand up.
Or at least he tolerates it when I'm doing it bc he knows that i know what I'm doing and i'm one of the safest person to roll with in the gym.
Personally i find the division of sweeps and gravitational takedowns super arbitrary and I just stick with the conventional names.
If somebody calls the same thing single leg sweep from turtle in bjj but single leg takedown if you got there from wrestling let it be. Whatever.
Thanks again coach. I am definitely going to drill this.
Hey Coach,
I am currently trying to add more wrestling to our HEMA/SCA practice but I am having some trouble teaching people to fall. I was going over the way I learned it and I am not having as much success.
Let me know your thoughts and thanks for the constant stream of interesting techniques.
Hello Coach, I hope everything is going great for you and your close ones. Recently I've been trying to up my training by slowly introducing strength and endurance sessions coupled with my regular martial arts training. My question was mostly about what exercises do you recommend for a fighter to do for strength and conditioning, and also which kind of repetitions or sets (ie, many repetitions, low but explosive reps, long rest, short rest, light weight, heavier weight...). I know it could be specific to the fighter, but some general pointers would be of great help to me, since I'm having doubts how to proceed on this matter.
I've been doing some separate research and asking questions, but I'd be glad to count on the opinion of somebody with proven experience on the field of professional fighting to contrast opinions. Thank you so much.
Also, in case you already answered this question on any previous video, I'd be very thankful if someone could point it out to me so that I can watch it and better program my training. Best wishes to all.
Could it actually start off as an actual chop or forearm strike to the neck before cupping/collar tie-ing? Like a blow that sticks and becomes a clinch?
Yes.
If you watch the way Mark Schultz went for collar ties during his wrestling career, that’s exactly what he did. He called it “clubbing” rather than “chopping”.
@@RamseyDewey That is awesome. What's the legality of that in modern grappling and also in MMA? A diagonal hammer fist into clinch sounds badass
That gym looks awesome
It is awesome!
Takedown at 3 minutes looks like one we do in catch class. Cup the heel and push him over with the shoulder from a very low sprawl
For sure, you’ll see this stuff in catch wrestling! The takedown I show at 4:10 is one I learned from the late great Billy Robinson, for example. When an old man who uses a cane to walk can sweep you off your feet with ease, it’s worth learning.
@@RamseyDewey he and my coach worked together a lot. He asked me if worked with him when I talked to him about some of the techniques I picked up from your videos. My coach is John potenza. He has a channel on TH-cam as well but he doesn't post much
Hey Ramsey, would it be fair to say that you haven't yet pressure tested the techniques yet?
I mean I know you are teaching them, but could we see the pressure testing process?
Thanks from the west indies.
No, that would not be fair to say. These are techniques I use constantly when sparring.
You will never see me teaching techniques on this channel that I don’t use live, frequently, and successfully.
Ramsey I have a friendly question😀
Ex boxer that stopped working out and balooned😔😔😔
I've meet a bully 6ft3 220 that know some BJJ moves but is not a fighter.
How to deal with that man if fight somehow happens?
Tnx anyway😀
If you’re worried about fighting a grappler, learn how to grapple. Since you already know how to box, you’ll be all the better off for it.
I, for one, have never thought you liked picking on Tien Yu. Now, Liu Xiao on the other hand... That poor man spends more time in kneebars, ankle locks, and toeholds than the average Rousimar Palhares opponent.
Where can we send you tips bother ?
If by tips, you mean advice, the comments section is right here. If you mean monetary donation, there’s should be a “super thanks” tip button below the video next to the like and share buttons. Thanks for watching!
Hi Ramsey, I'm on the path to become a Jeet June Do instructor.
I never was a guy with much authority, only recently I learned how to "verbal spar" and to command respect with my words if need be. I'm new, very new. Do you got advice on how to be authoritarian without looking like we are on military drill? does it depend on the personalities of the students?
People laugh at the "Star Trek judo chop" but i was on the receiving end of a outside blade hand to the side of the neck 80% power and it was the most painfull and crippling strike i ever received.I've received accidental bokken strikes to the side of the head and bare fist punches to the face and none of those dazed and crippled me like that chop to the jugular just under the ear...It felt like an instant and severe cramp in the neck and my arm was unusable for the immediate future because when i tried lifting my arm it was super painfull im my neck muscles..It took the rest of the evening and over night to fully recover and not feel it anymore......man that was seriously the most crippling and painfull strike i experienced....Just chop yourself in the jugular a little hard and you'll begin to see how a hard chop could mess you up.
Next vidoe: How to double leg like Chimaev
Interesting Ramsey. If your doing a karate chops etc as a grab, is the following the kind of Poomsae application you talking about? th-cam.com/video/jTDLwlJswmo/w-d-xo.html. Skip to 5:45 for techniques. Do you think they are efficacious for grappling beginners? Maybe a bridge to wrestling or very light self defence from a striker who is being grappled?
Hey RD, All the commercials during your videos are about self defense classes. QUESTION!!! Why don't martial arts gyms advertise?
Most martial arts schools are limited to a local customer base. Advertising outside of the town where the gym is located doesn’t make sense. There are a few widespread martial arts franchises (Eg: Gracie Academy Online) that advertise to the world, but those are the exceptions.
@@RamseyDewey But with NFC (Near Field Communication) and other like tech, the ads could be based on wherever the video is being viewed... I would see ones for Dallas Texas, someone else would see one for Kuwait at the same time.
... The bottom of Bruce's shirt is a far lighter shade of grey than the rest of his shirt. Good lord that's moist.
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All these short people who don't watch your entire videos talkin bout how "mean" you are. As a barely not short man, I can smell it from a mile away. Pay them no mind coach
OSU!
Hi I am here
Cool!