I prefer to use my iron crotch against the double leg. Obvious, really.
I prefer to use my iron crotch against the double leg. Obvious, really.
I would use a blue eyed, blond haired Chechnyan to ruin you- Drake on weapons
Surely!!!!
For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.
Honorary African American
grandmaster instructor of Wombat Combat The Lost Art of Anal Destruction™®LLC .
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I'd respectfully disagree with this post. I think that the MMA ruleset dictates the MMA answer. However, I'd consider a quick knee to the head of the incoming attacker would be a more proper real world solution. Most people when discussing MMA overlook a lot of the rules that make certain techniques more effective. In this case, there is a prohibition against kicking a down (he is considered "grounded" due to having a knee on the ground, as is trained in MMA to take advantage of this rule).
Also note that the move "striking downward with the point of the elbow" and also, "striking to the back of the head" is illegal in UFC. (15. (A)(x) and (xi) ). So, I'd disagree that your "reality based solution isn't the elbow to the back of the head-- you CAN'T do that in MMA.
http://www.ufc.com/discover/sport/ru...regulations#15 has a list of "fouls". Frankly, I think many of the fouls are some of the bread and butter of TCMA (especially the groin kicks-- anyone who's done a lot of TCMA training has to acknowledge we have a whole lot of groin kicks).
And I'd like to point out that this is how a Kung Fu lawyer argues... actually backing up his arguments with some research.
Sith Legal Kung Fu is unstoppable.
Psalms 144:1
Praise be my Lord my Rock,
He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !
LMAO at any idiot who thinks dropping the infamous elbow to the back of the head will stop a top notch wrestler. It always cracks me up the ones with no grappling experience because they think the shoot comes from 10 feet away, in slow motion, and one can easily see it coming.
Please try and apply that technique to this, see where it gets you.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hEhfPlswZI0
"The hero and the coward both feel the same thing, but the hero projects his fear onto his opponent while the coward runs. 'Fear'. It's the same thing, but it's what you do with it that matters". -Cus D'Amato