they do it all the time in muay thai, and i saw a vid of the first muay thai vs kyokushin karate match where the kyokushin guys kept throwing and taking the back of the muay thai fighters.
this. one time during kickboxing class, when the instructors were in their off-season, we basically did sumo but with boxing gloves as a mini-game. the one or two times i took my sparring partner down was with a trip where i grabbed them somewhere on their upper body and pushed them over one of my feet - i did so instinctively, as i have hardly any meaningful grappling experience, much less in gloves.
There's literally an entire sport of it. Look up shootboxing.
yep. same with muay thai, sanda, and other kickboxing rulesets that allow a decent amount of stand-up grappling.
Leg sweeps aren't throws even though some of the techniques sort of skirt the line. You're not suppose to lift anyone off the ground in mt
It's because the Thais wanted to limit the influence that judo and Greco-Roman had in the clinch. Thailand was exposed to Judo in the early 20th century and it had an impact on chap koh. Later, when Japanese kickboxers began to compete regularly against Nak Muays, upper-body throws and hip tosses were utilized to great effect. Though there's still Nak Muays like Pajonsuk that can definitely skirt the line.
Leg sweeps aren't throws even though some of the techniques sort of skirt the line. You're not suppose to lift anyone off the ground in mt
There's a lot of gray area when engaging in neck-wrestling and clinching. It's partly the reason why dumps had to be banned because it would've caused serious harm. Also, guys would sneak in knees while their opponent drops to the ground from being swept or thrown.
Boxing + judo? That sounds like it would be fun as frick to watch. I mean boxing is only so boring cause of gassed homosexuals hugging to catch their breathe, this would kill that shit. You want a breather, take it on the ground, lol
Paulson's next series coming out is entirely on Shooto. I'd expect there to be a fair amount of that material covered since that's what he competed in most heavily.
practicing the same throwing drills with either a partner or a grappling dummy with gloves and using your wrists/forearms for contact is pretty basic but works well. You can do the same by keeping your hands open during the drill and not touching the dummy/partner with your hands at all throughout the throw.
just did this last night. practiced hip tosses on the suples dummy in my crunch w thai boxing gloves on. def feels awk but not that hard once u get used to it.
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Start throwing objects with small gloves and work your way up to bigger objects and gloves, try changing technique.
they do it all the time in muay thai, and i saw a vid of the first muay thai vs kyokushin karate match where the kyokushin guys kept throwing and taking the back of the muay thai fighters.
this. one time during kickboxing class, when the instructors were in their off-season, we basically did sumo but with boxing gloves as a mini-game. the one or two times i took my sparring partner down was with a trip where i grabbed them somewhere on their upper body and pushed them over one of my feet - i did so instinctively, as i have hardly any meaningful grappling experience, much less in gloves.
yep. same with muay thai, sanda, and other kickboxing rulesets that allow a decent amount of stand-up grappling.
>throws are allowed in muay thai
Are you moronic?
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Leg sweeps aren't throws even though some of the techniques sort of skirt the line. You're not suppose to lift anyone off the ground in mt
It's because the Thais wanted to limit the influence that judo and Greco-Roman had in the clinch. Thailand was exposed to Judo in the early 20th century and it had an impact on chap koh. Later, when Japanese kickboxers began to compete regularly against Nak Muays, upper-body throws and hip tosses were utilized to great effect. Though there's still Nak Muays like Pajonsuk that can definitely skirt the line.
There's a lot of gray area when engaging in neck-wrestling and clinching. It's partly the reason why dumps had to be banned because it would've caused serious harm. Also, guys would sneak in knees while their opponent drops to the ground from being swept or thrown.
There's literally an entire sport of it. Look up shootboxing.
Boxing + judo? That sounds like it would be fun as frick to watch. I mean boxing is only so boring cause of gassed homosexuals hugging to catch their breathe, this would kill that shit. You want a breather, take it on the ground, lol
>Boxing + judo?
Kickboxing+catch wrestling, so kickboxing with throws and standing submissions essentially
Paulson's next series coming out is entirely on Shooto. I'd expect there to be a fair amount of that material covered since that's what he competed in most heavily.
Do Judo and you can get the right techniques that some might work with gloves
yes, double le, single leg and upper body throws. just learn wrestling
Look up Sanda
Yes.
I went from Judo to Muay Thai for a while and ever time I got into a clinch I would just try to hit Koshi Guruma.
sauce for the image?
practicing the same throwing drills with either a partner or a grappling dummy with gloves and using your wrists/forearms for contact is pretty basic but works well. You can do the same by keeping your hands open during the drill and not touching the dummy/partner with your hands at all throughout the throw.
just did this last night. practiced hip tosses on the suples dummy in my crunch w thai boxing gloves on. def feels awk but not that hard once u get used to it.