Fight Class: Basic Takedowns

We’re going to be training some basic takedowns and takedown defenses for the next few weeks in Fight Class. If you missed class this week or you need a review, these videos are quite close to what we did.

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Head Movement and “Hands-free” Punch Defenses

A key point in our Inside Defenses is to move the target—your face! Last night in Fight class, we focused on head movement and making punch defenses without using our hands. As I clarified in class, while this does have direct application to self-defense, we can’t take it to the extremes that boxers do. Their head movement, without doubt, is the best among combat athletes, but they also don’t have to worry about kicks or takedowns or broken beer bottles!

The techniques from the Krav Maga curriculum are:

  • Slipping
  • Lean Back and Trap (slightly modified last night, as we didn’t “trap”)
  • Bobbing and Weaving

Why is this kind of training important?

  • If your head defenses are good, you’re going to be hard to hit. Couple them with good hand defenses all you’ll be really hard to hit. If you’ve never had the opportunity to spar with someone who’s skilled at this, trust me, it’s really aggravating to be constantly missing what seems like an easy target.
  • Making a hand defense, by necessity, takes your hand out of position, even if the movement is tight and small. You are potentially creating new openings any time your hands come out of position. By keeping your hands up and moving your head to dodge the punch, you’re both better protected and better able to throw an immediate counter.
  • Your opponent expects to hit something. Even if you block or redirect the punch, it still feels like hitting something. If your opponent punches with this expectation and hits NOTHING, it can disrupt his/her balance and create a short “What the—” moment on which you can capitalize.

Let’s suspend judgement of Mike Tyson as a person for a moment (a brief one) and remark on the sheer awesomeness of his head movement:

 

Here’s the slip being used against Tyson. (How do I still remember that pass key?!):

 

How do you practice this stuff? Well, come to Fight class for one! If you’re looking for some solo training options, make yourself a slip/maize bag:

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11.17.12 Fight Seminar Reminder

Sparring Guy
The Fight Seminar is this Saturday, 11/17, at 10am.

Be sure to bring ALL of your fight gear:

  • Headgear
  • Mouthguard (make sure it’s properly formed!)
  • 16-oz gloves
  • Groin protection
  • Shin guards

It’s going to be a fairly active seminar, so sustenance and a change of clothes are recommended!

 

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Fight Class Grappling Wrap-up: Fall 2012 ed.

Ottawa BJJ Open 2012 (Sun)We’ve made it through the first rotation of the groundfighting section of Fight Class! Thanks to all who attended. We’ll be circling back to this range of fighting soon enough, but I wanted to document what we worked on this go-round. Below is the list of techniques, some of which link to videos. Not all the videos perfectly represent what we did, but they’re close enough.

  1. Passing Closed Guard
    • Under-the-leg Pass: Inside
    • Under-the-leg Pass: Outside
  2. Side Control
  3. Side Control Transitions
  4. Mount
  5. Closed Guard

Here are some old posts that relate to the subject:

 


Photo credit: SLImagesCa, on Flickr

 

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Krav Maga Fight Seminar: 11.17.12

Fight Seminar 11.17.2012

Date & Time: Saturday, November 17, 10am – 1pm
Cost: $180 (includes approved fight gear); FREE if you already have *approved* fight gear
Prereqs: Krav Maga Advanced students only
Note: Please form your mouthguard before the seminar

Click Here for Details & to Sign Up »

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Krav Maga Fight Seminar: POSTPONED

The Fight Seminar scheduled for Saturday, 11/3, has been postponed. Please click here for the new date.

Click Here for Details »

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Krav Maga Fight: Launch Date, Curriculum, & Prerequisites

KMW_018
The new Krav Maga Fight class begins next week Wednesday, 10/3, at 7:30PM. (Reminder: the Wednesday evening Krav Maga Fundamentals class moves to 6:30PM.) Please read through the details below before attending the class.

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To Punch the Impossible Punch

Patrick let me borrow the keys to the blog, so while waiting for Part Deux of his training manual, I’ve written up some notes on generating more power in our strikes and blocks. They hold true (if they hold true) for Kenpo and Krav. —Josh

If you can “work smarter, not harder,” does the same hold true for punching? Can you punch smarter, therefore harder? I say that you can, but before we know for sure, let’s consider what it means to punch smarter.

In Kenpo we learn there are four elements of power (and this will be on the test, black belt candidates): speed, backup mass, torque, accuracy. With the possible exception of backup mass (about which more in a second), each of us has the ability to improve on our power.

As baseball players obsess about bat speed and golfers obsess about club speed, we could all stand an examination of our fist speed. If you don’t believe me (or David Ortiz or Tiger Woods), how about my high school physics teacher, Mr. Hertz? (Yes, I actually had a physics teacher named Hertz.) It was from him I learned Newton’s Second Law of Motion: : force equals mass times acceleration:

A related equation: Kinetic energy equals one half times the mass of the object times the square of the speed of the object.

Force derives from acceleration, energy derives from velocity: however you define power, it is dependent on, even inextricably tied to, speed.

So, how do you punch faster? Listen to Bas Rutten. Remember how he implores us to make a combination faster by imagining it faster: Bum-bum-bum-bum! Condensing the time between punches also makes each individual punch faster, therefore stronger. Bruce Lee, among other fighters, also counseled staying loose, tensing only at the instant of throwing the punch (the same holds true for blocking). This is invaluable advice. The tighter you are, the more you clench the muscles that pull back your arm (mostly biceps), as well as the muscles that extend your arm (mostly triceps). You are literally fighting yourself. The next time you do shoulder tag, focus on keeping your arm and shoulder muscles poised but loose. Note how you swat away with ease and contempt your partner’s useless efforts to score off you, while your own finger tips cut the air like flesh-colored ginsu knives.

As to backup mass, I wouldn’t suggest anyone put on weight, especially—well, you know who I mean. But we could do more with the weight we have, which is why I’ll consider backup mass along with torque. I don’t care how massive your guns are, they are only a small percentage of your body weight. When your punch carries behind it the force and weight of your entire body, it will be massively more powerful than a mere spasm of the triceps muscle. Again, listen to Bas: twist your body, keep your feet on the ground. Think of your jab as a full-body strike, extending from your toes, through the arch of your foot, up your back calf muscle (right leg for a left jab), your hamstring, quads, and glutes, your obliques and lats, your pecs, before even getting to the muscles of the shoulders and arms. If all act in concert and at the same time, you are bringing a whole heck of a lot of backup mass and torque to a simple jab.

Here’s another way to think about it. Ancient architects knew that to keep a structure standing—a cathedral, a bridge, a viaduct, etc.—they had to direct the force of its weight, via arches and buttresses, laterally and into the ground. Hang on a sec:


See? Why should force not run the opposite way, as well, from the ground, through your body and out your fist?

Try this experiment: stand in your fighting stance and try to push with one hand a tombstone shield held by your opponent. Push as hard as you can. What posture do you take? You drive through your legs, twist your body, and lean into the pad. With some modifications to avoid losing balance or speed, that should be your punch.

Last, accuracy. I would say last and least, but if you can’t hit the target, or can’t hit it cleanly, your speed, mass, and torque will be for naught. When hitting pads, try to hit them squarely—straight out, straight back–with no “chipping” or “swimming” motion. When using your combatives, remember to strike sensitive targets, not solid bone. And punch with the first two knuckles of your fist, which are not only stronger, but a more direct extension of your forearm than the smaller outer knuckles. (This can sometimes be hard to maintain in the heat of battle; turn your fist vertical if you find yourself leading with your weaker knuckles. With this “thrust punch,” the stronger knuckles will usually connect first.)

One closing piece of advice is to remember to connect with the punch at near-to-full extension (while avoiding the painful result of hyperextension). Full extension allows the fist to generate greater momentum (mass times velocity, says Mr. Hertz) before impact, but it’s also good body mechanics. If your push-up is easiest at full extension (and hardest near the ground), your punch should be stronger there too. Too often, we hit the pad at close range and just push it away rather than connect with full impact.

Of course, you can train physically to punch stronger (push-ups and rotational core exercises being obvious ways), but some of the strongest hitters I’ve known have been some of the slightest people. Power is about mechanics as much as it is about strength. These observations come from ten-plus years of training at MacDonald’s Academy in Kenpo and Krav, my trials and errors patiently endured and corrected by Brian (more trials than Perry Mason, more errors than the ‘62 Mets). Like anything new, some of these tips may feel awkward at first, but drill them—on the mitts and pads, in the mirror while shadow boxing, during shoulder tag. Adjust them to make them work for you. And let me know if punching smarter, or at least punching with a lot of intrusive, annoying thoughts and corrections in your head, has helped you to punch harder.

Have a great long weekend, everybody! I’ll post again when something occurs to me, or when Patrick allows it, whichever comes second.

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Bas Rutten Round Kick Defenses

Here’s a great excerpt from Bas Rutten’s Big DVDs of Combat where Bas shows defenses and counters for round kicks. These are virtually identically to the Krav Maga techniques we’ve been training for the past several weeks, so much of this should be familiar.

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Advanced Class Fight Gear Reminder

Just a reminder to everyone attending the Krav Maga Advanced class that you should always bring all your fight gear. Even when we are not running the sparring curriculum specifically, we will often include fighting in skills training and drills. If you do not have your gear, you cannot participate in class.

If you are new to the Advanced class and have not yet purchased the required gear, please do so before attending.

 

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