I would not take the righthand>left high kick theory as gospel. Left straight, left high kick (and vice versa right hand right highkick) works just as good if not better because it is more suprising. Look up a Ernesto Hoost highlight, he does it all the time.
Depends on the trainer. Good boxing trainer > bad kickboxing trainer and vice versa. If both trainers have theoretically the same knowledge about the sport I would say kickboxing since it teaches you the fundamentals in incorporating kicks and knees while punching. Which is something boxers miss...
No, it's about polishing your punching technique, in a way that enables you to transfer the most power with the least amount of effort. You can do that in boxing or I would guess also in wing chong.
Hours long of shadowboxing. Doing your footwork drills hundred thousand of times. The exercises no one wants to do because they are not interesting on the surface are the things that helped me the most. No shortcuts from that imo.
1a) Be first.
1b) Be aggressive.
2) Throw combinations.
3) Adapt, you see him kicking from the outside constantly, and he is getting away with it. This is the perfect moment to take over and put pressure.
4) You have the better balance, use it. He is not comfortable doing more than single blows...
It does invalidate the comment that has been made about him being someone from a white society. He is a subhuman from the Caucusus as far as I can judge from the video.
He is born in Sil'di Russia, If i where to guess from a a nomadic tribe somewhere in the Caucusus. Learn to look up a map and pick up a few history books if you want to know about white people. You will find out that this russian caucusus guy will have very little, approaching zero in common...
I have been taught stance like this:
With the backfoot pointing towards the opponent. This makes your hip squared to the opponent which helps driving it in. How do you guys do it in muay thai. Is it different per gym ?
I stumbled upon this kendo video by coincidence that also happened to...
Power starts from the back leg which drives the hip into the knee/punch/kick. So it's not something in my textbook. However if the occassion occurs and if it's a viable option in a given situation. Why not ?
Also if your stance is not too wide you can switch in a split of a second and throw a...
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