I am finding it very hard to believe that CLF, or any other kung fu style, could win a fight against a good MMA practitioner. Does anyone have any opinion on this? Just curious.
I am finding it very hard to believe that CLF, or any other kung fu style, could win a fight against a good MMA practitioner. Does anyone have any opinion on this? Just curious.
look at Cung le's MMA fights. just need to be **** hot in your stand up skills. Cung le fractured his last opponent's arm. No reason why can't do that with a Sau Choi. Can you spend 4 hours+ a day training though?
Last edited by stout; 05-01-2008 at 10:42 AM.
I am finding it very hard to believe that CLF, or any other kung fu style, could win a fight against a good MMA practitioner. Does anyone have any opinion on this? Just curious.
look at Cung le's MMA fights. just need to be **** hot in your stand up skills.
Psalms 144:1
Praise be my Lord my Rock,
He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !
How does choy lee fut swinging looping punches and defense fare against western boxing tight defensive and punching structure?
I don't stick to one way of defending, whatever works.
But as a CLF fighter that cross trains in Western Boxing/Muay Thai from time to time, on a particularly long streak of Thai Boxing training, I had my guard up boxing style and got KTFO by a Sow Chui that came out of nowhere. Went right around my guard and like my Sifu teaches, came crashing downward (as opposed to completely horizontally) and sent me to queer street.
So what I'm trying to say is, it works pretty well against a boxing guard.
k
No disrespect intended but,
Bruce lee even said that western boxers had the best hands by far, He even went as far as to say that western boxers would distroy most kung fu guys when it came to fighting.
So if there are CLF techinqies which works better than western boxing why haven't professional boxers adapted them in the ring? or why haven't there been any CLF fighters that's holds a a boxing title? considering the amount of money they would make, i think they would definately compete if they thought they had a chance.
In boxing, any blow landed with the front padded area of the glove (not the back), to a valid target area would be valid. So, no backfists or hammerfists, but all the other closed-fist strike (Sao, Pao, etc) would be fine.
And yes, boxers pretty much DO have the fastest, most efficient and powerful hand strikes in the martial arts. They HAVE to, it's their entire arsenal.
Time
Slips through fingers
Like this world of dust
Actually, it's occasionally worked pretty well for Chuck Liddell in the UFC. In the street, you're not wearing 16 oz pillows on your hands. Bare knuckle sparring is a lot different than sparring with boxing gloves on, and if you say different, you're lying.
For that matter, playing CLF short for close range is the closest I've seen Kung Fu to boxing so it works for me...someone quoted that once, but I forgot. No one said boxing techniques (and other styles for that matter) aren't effective. If they weren't I wouldn't cross train in them. Likewise, I wouldn't train CLF at all if it hasn't worked for me in real-world situations.
k
Last edited by k-no; 05-03-2008 at 07:35 PM. Reason: update
I completely agree about chuck lidde and abut the 16 oz pillows, i always thought his punches were from CLF, but weren't sure. Did Chuck ever trained CLF?
But even chuck was defeated with boxing by way of Quinton Jackson. Quinton took full advantage of chuck's wide punches by covering up and then punching chuck when he exposed himself, knocking him out.
Every fighting style can be countered. It's just a matter of time before someone finds the answer to Rampage. That's just the way it is, you can't escape reality.
And the answer can come from almost anywhere, maybe even CMA.