What do people think of these gloves for training?
http://store.titleboxing.com/title-m...ng-gloves.html
FP
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What do people think of these gloves for training?
http://store.titleboxing.com/title-m...ng-gloves.html
FP
I don't like 'em. There's too much padding up top. Get the regular NHB gloves, and go a little lighter in training. Get some 14 oz boxing gloves for heavier work.
My club uses these:
http://www.combatsports.com/detail_tuf.aspx?ID=22292
Pretty much the same design. I like them alot. The extra 2 or 3 oz allows you to spar harder w/o getting hurt, and you can still grapple.
We use 14oz boxing gloves when we want to hit hard, but when you want medium contact with no head gear, these kinds of gloves are perfect.
Thanks for the info MK. They look pretty much the same, title's being a bit cheaper.
I like the design of these types of gloves because you can hit hard and still utilize the fingers and forearms for trapping...which is essential to some kung fu styles. Are there any sparring formats similar to San Shou that use these gloves? I seem to remember seeing a Kuo Shu sparring vid where they had similar gloves.
IMO, these should be standard for any kung fu school.
the Kuo Shou Lei Tai doesn't appear to have a standard rule for gloves. Saek San might let us know differently.
The local group allows really bad gloves, imo. They have disallowed MMA gloves for some reason but allow some cheap gloves that don't protect the fighters much less the hand.
I was happy last week that they allowed my guys to use 12oz boxing gloves.
sometimes we use 'karate mitts' for sparring. they are designed for sport karate but are basically a thumbless pad for the hand and allows the fingers to be free. they are pretty cheap at $20 but aren't good for more than medium contact.
I prefer these:
http://www.txmma.com/cart/index.php?...roducts_id=184
That style glove has a totally different feel. For the CMA guys, these are better, IMO, for using bridging skills.
You can't hit hard with those and still look pretty at work the next day. Boo.
agreed. I's gots to preserve what little game I gots left.
I know, Bro, and there's a trade off. We would always go real light, and focus on techniques, transitioning, the more technical parts of the game. We would use the 16 ouncers when we sparred heavy. Training that way worked out real well for me. It gave us a very 'smooth' game.