Not to worry, I've got used to repeating myself with you the forum retard,who doesn't seem to understand simple statements.
By the way, take it easy with those retard pills, you seem to be laughing out needlessly all over the place.
Aren't those retard pills supposed to be administered by professional mental health carers? Or have you managed to break the spastic proof lids on those medicine bottles? You naughty retard.
Now, call that nice man in the white jacket to come over and to detox you, ok?
There you go now, and as always wipe that drool from your mouth.
Here we go again...
Offering your leg to an experienced grappler, unless you happen to be an experienced grappler, is most likely to result in the expected outcome of him taking that leg, despite whatever theories you might be pinning your hopes on.
Folks whose experience with grappling is limited to "You go here, then I go here...wait! I wasn't ready!" 'training' with others in the kwoon just as inexperienced in grappling as they are only ends up reinforcing very false expectations about what real grappling is like.
A recipe for disappointment and disaster on wake up day...
Last edited by unkokusai; 04-11-2008 at 01:56 AM.
No I am not. I may however, be insinuating that most (if not all) so called TCMAs that have fought in MMA did not know what they were doing.Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin
Now, are YOU insinuating that no strikers that ever fought in MMA ever managed to stop a grappler dead cold in his tracks as he was coming in for a take down?
I was lucky to have a kung fu brother, who was a good wrestler, here in London in one of the none WC schools that I trained in. He seemed to "approve" of the anti take down techniques. He was good! He would even try to catch sifu out.Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin
A couple of times sifu let the wrestler take him to the ground and made him pay for it there, in the wrestler's own comfort zone, without rolling around the floor for half an hour, I might add.
By the way, sifu = late 50s. Wrestler = mid 30's (I am guessing).
I am certainly not insinuating that, I can name a few actually, can you?No I am not. I may however, be insinuating that most (if not all) so called TCMAs that have fought in MMA did not know what they were doing.
Now, are YOU insinuating that no strikers that ever fought in MMA ever managed to stop a grappler dead cold in his tracks as he was coming in for a take down?
And?I was lucky to have a kung fu brother, who was a good wrestler, here in London in one of the none WC schools that I trained in. He seemed to "approve" of the anti take down techniques. He was good! He would even try to catch sifu out.
A couple of times sifu let the wrestler take him to the ground and made him pay for it there, in the wrestler's own comfort zone, without rolling around the floor for half an hour, I might add.
By the way, sifu = late 50s. Wrestler = mid 30's (I am guessing).
Psalms 144:1
Praise be my Lord my Rock,
He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !
Does it matter if I can name them? Does it alter the facts? Ok then, what about Igor Vovchanchyn (Russia).
And that is it, I train kung fu and not wrestling.Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin
You can crosstrain all you want, but the fact is, if you dedicate 20 years to a dozen(and sometimes irrelevant) marial arts and if you happen to be in a situation where you are facing another man in the street who has dedicated his 20 years learning an authentic "in your face" style of kung fu- in an authentic kwoon, using the authentic conditioning including Iron Palm, Iron Shirt together with hard and soft chi kung - and has mastered that one art in all its aspects.
Then suddenly it kicks off then you have a good chance of having that "cross-training smile" wiped off your face in seconds. THAT IS A FACT!
That is why these arts are still around without them having been major global sports events, sponsored by big money and etc. If trained properly, they do what they are supposed to do. Very efficiently and very visciously.
Having said that I am not at all implying that your chances of winning against that same person would not have been considerably higher in the sports arena.