Did you know anyone who has used Boxing in a street fight how well did it work for them ? What were they level of boxing ? Were they recreational boxers or amateur or professionals ?
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How well has boxing worked for you in a street fight ?
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Its better to learn wrestling moves as once a guy grabs you are wrapped up in cocoon until you are separated see Joshua extending his fight with DDD about 2 or 3 rounds extra by grabbing him whenever he got in close.
John Ruiz made a run at heavyweight based on this too.WillieWild114 PBR Streetgang like this.
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I'm no Kimbo Slice and never was but the few scraps I've had involved very little clean punching ant a whole lot of grappling.
That being said, It's good to know how to throw punches with proper technique and have some defensive awareness (not leave your chin in the air).garfios likes this.
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Originally posted by PBR Streetgang View PostI'm no Kimbo Slice and never was but the few scraps I've had involved very little clean punching ant a whole lot of grappling.
That being said, It's good to know how to throw punches with proper technique and have some defensive awareness (not leave your chin in the air).
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Don't get into street fights. Period. Street fights are all about ego. Let it go and walk away. Get yourself home without injury and without getting arrested.
A self defense situation is different. For that, yes, boxing can be quite helpful. It doesn't mean it's the only martial art that is useful, nor is it always the best. But any martial art that features live training/competition against a fully resisting opponent in a freeform setting (boxing, most styles of wrestling, most styles of kickboxing, judo, BJJ, sambo, etc) is going to help you in a real fight. Ideally you pick a practical striking style and a practical grappling style and become competent at both. Boxing and judo pair very well together, BJJ and muay thai are a popular combination, freestyle wrestling and K1 kickboxing, mix and match, whatever.
It should go without saying, but unless you actually practice fighting you don't know how to fight. So yeah, a trained person is going to fare better than an untrained person.Last edited by famicommander; 09-22-2024, 05:30 PM.
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Originally posted by WillieWild114 View Post
What was your level of boxing ?
I mentioned in another discussion thread that boxing taught me that I didn't like getting punched in the face (or the body for that matter). I will leave that to others a bit tougher than me.WillieWild114 likes this.
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Originally posted by famicommander View PostDon't get into street fights. Period. Street fights are all about ego. Let it go and walk away. Get yourself home without injury and without getting arrested.
A self defense situation is different. For that, yes, boxing can be quite helpful. It doesn't mean it's the only martial art that is useful, nor is it always the best. But any martial art that features live training/competition against a fully resisting opponent in a freeform setting (boxing, most styles of wrestling, most styles of kickboxing, judo, BJJ, sambo, etc) is going to help you in a real fight. Ideally you pick a practical striking style and a practical grappling style and become competent at both. Boxing and judo pair very well together, BJJ and muay thai are a popular combination, freestyle wrestling and K1 kickboxing, mix and match, whatever.
It should go without saying, but unless you actually practice fighting you don't know how to fight. So yeah, a trained person is going to fare better than an untrained person.WillieWild114 likes this.
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Originally posted by famicommander View PostDon't get into street fights. Period. Street fights are all about ego. Let it go and walk away. Get yourself home without injury and without getting arrested.
A self defense situation is different. For that, yes, boxing can be quite helpful. It doesn't mean it's the only martial art that is useful, nor is it always the best. But any martial art that features live training/competition against a fully resisting opponent in a freeform setting (boxing, most styles of wrestling, most styles of kickboxing, judo, BJJ, sambo, etc) is going to help you in a real fight. Ideally you pick a practical striking style and a practical grappling style and become competent at both. Boxing and judo pair very well together, BJJ and muay thai are a popular combination, freestyle wrestling and K1 kickboxing, mix and match, whatever.
It should go without saying, but unless you actually practice fighting you don't know how to fight. So yeah, a trained person is going to fare better than an untrained person.
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