what do you guys think of good kickboxing skills for self defense?
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kickboxing for self defense
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Kickboxing works great in a fight. My brother got in a fight at school once with an older kid. He did one well placed low kick and the kid couldn't get back up. You can really hurt people with kickboxing that have no martial art experience or are not conditioned well. Know the guy you are fighting. My brother wouldn't have gone with the low kick if he was fighting a football player or something. These guys can take some pain. My brother is a grappler as well. He would have went for the clinch and gave the player some knees and elbows. Muay Thai is my favorite striking art.
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Originally posted by 7r14ngL3Ch0k3Isnt Muay Thai(ring style) just the standard kickboxing now?
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Originally posted by bigboywasimIt has been proven effective in MMA. This art uses everthing from boxing, kicking, and using knees and elbows. Here is a little info and a nice clip.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...98&q=Muay+Thai
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Originally posted by 7r14ngL3Ch0k3Lol, I know. And ive already seen that info and that video. I just wanted to know if it was the standard art(minus the knee,elbows) used for kickboxing competitions, and it is. Thanks though!
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some techniques you'll see in the ring not based on modern Muay Thai are the side kick, jumping back kick, axe kick, spinning backfist. But basically you are right, most of the top guys are training Muay Thai now, they just work some different strikes in to catch people expecting just Muay Thai. Genki Sudo, and Cung Le are some fighters who use strikes that are not indicitive of Muay Thai to great effect.
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Registered User
- Feb 2003
- 2093
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The law of tyranny:
1. Any power that can be abused will be abused
2. Abuse always expands to fill the limits of resistance to it.
3. If people don't resist the abuses of others, they will have no one to resist the abuses of themselves, and tyranny will prevail.
Welcome to the Socialist States of Amerika . Coming soon Jan 20th 2009!
Kickboxing is of vital importance in self defense; however it is only one component. KB without other supporting or extending platforms leaves to many things out. What if the fight is against multiples?? What if the fight you get is a gun fight? What if the fight you get is against a college linebacker who bench presses 450lbs who will most likely be able to overcome your unarmed skill sets?
KB is great to cross train in or you may train in it as a primary and cross train in something else. But make no mistake if SD (not sport or for purely fitness) is your goal you will need a integrated multidisciplinary generalist platform.
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Originally posted by hEmPYkickboxin's shit
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Registered User
- Feb 2003
- 2093
-
The law of tyranny:
1. Any power that can be abused will be abused
2. Abuse always expands to fill the limits of resistance to it.
3. If people don't resist the abuses of others, they will have no one to resist the abuses of themselves, and tyranny will prevail.
Welcome to the Socialist States of Amerika . Coming soon Jan 20th 2009!
I know Adept doesn't like it when I start free styling my answers, but this is the same question "IS Judo good for a street fighting", "Is karate useless", "is kickboxing good for self-defense", etc?
The answer is yes, within certain limits. Those limits are fragile when you consider multiple assailants (multiple armed assailants), disproportional armament, the fight takes place in a range you are not accustomed too, sudden ambush, or the bad guy out classes you physically, etc.
Kickboxing rather it is karate, western kickboxing, or Muay Thai (or any striking art) has a finite limitation. They are single minded approaches to multiple possibilities and range specific in an environment where ranges can change dynamically.
If the question was “Do you recommend kickboxing for cross training in as an adjunct to my grappling, and weapons training?” then the answer is absolutely. Now we can talk about what type of kickboxing…I prefer Muay Thai because it gives you more robust options both in the striking range and the stand up grapple.
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