I am a small guy about 5' 7", i know I should avoid fights as much as possible, but what would be the best strategy for me if i have to fight guys who are bigger than me? I am about 20 years of age and there are a variety of martial arts schools/gyms in my area, but I am confused right now because I am not really sure which one I should train in. Can someone please give me some advice? Any input is appreciated.
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Hello friend,
This is the same reason I got into martial arts. Its not so much that I'm short, but that I am thin and very light, so I also needed something that offered me a strategy and some tools to work with against heavier, stronger guys.
Have a search and see if there are any Progressive Fighting Systems schools in your area, or give me your location and I can try to find out. One of the main goals of PFS (Paul Vunak's expression of JKD) is to negate the attributes of your opponent and end the altercation in the most efficient manner possible. The whole mantra of this system is not to stand there and trade blows with a bigger, stronger guys and all I can say is that it has really worked for me when I have really needed it.
Failing PFS, just try to find a good school that teaches Jun Fan Gung Fu and/or Filipino Kali. Again, both arts came from individuals who were smaller in stature and therefore had to develop intelligent strategies to work against the larger, stronger guy. I have trained in both systems for a long time, and once again have found that what they say they do - they do.
I hope that helps, drop me a line if you need any further advice.
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- Dec 2004
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St. Louis MMA Training Club - MMA Boxing / Clinch / Submission Grappling / Wrestling Gym
Portland MMA Training Club: MMA Boxing / Brazilian Jiu Jitsu / Greco Roman Wrestling
Judo. Wrestling. Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Boxing.
Originally posted by formulab View PostI am a small guy about 5' 7", i know I should avoid fights as much as possible, but what would be the best strategy for me if i have to fight guys who are bigger than me? I am about 20 years of age and there are a variety of martial arts schools/gyms in my area, but I am confused right now because I am not really sure which one I should train in. Can someone please give me some advice? Any input is appreciated.
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Originally posted by bodhisattva View PostJudo. Wrestling. Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Boxing. those are my submissions.
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Originally posted by Michael Wright View Posttwo hands, two feet, two knees, two elbows, a head, a brain, a heart and a pair of balls.
We're armed my friend
Eliminate the foundation and let the toppling begin...
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Originally posted by Michael Wright View PostAlthough I am a big fan of all the above, all four arts are focussed around and operate within weight categories. Therefore I'm not sure that is what the guy was looking for. Would the attributes taken from any of those arts help him in a fight? Sure, but its perhaps not the specific answer to the problem posed, IMO.
Judo and BJJ were developed so the smaller guy can overcome the bigger one. Those I can vouch for. I'm sure boxing and wrestling can do the same, but I can't vouch for them.
But either way, the attributes developed from learning and training in those arts can help him in a fight, yes.
I will agree that Jeet Kune do concepts is a very good 'art' to 'learn'. It is more designed for the street than MMA. Not to say MMA is street useless, but you catch my drift.
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The guy asked about an art or a training method that is based on the specific concept and strategy of handling someone bigger and stronger.
If you train to fight someone in your weight category, then you aren't training to fight someone bigger and stronger. That isn't to say it won't assist your fighting attributes, but it isn't the specific solution he asked for.
Further to his request, I offered examples of arts and methods that were formed and are based around his specific need. I'm struggling to see the confusion in this, but maybe thats just me.
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That's the beauty of Judo... It doesn't take much force to topple or choke. When you need to apply torque to destroy a limb you can use both hands and arms, both legs and your whole core against one joint...
Targeting specific "vital" areas is not unique to judo.
Gentle is sort of a mis translation of "JU"...
People are breakable.
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