I like Muay Thai. It's so effective but one of the most brutal self-defense styles to learn. And easy to recall when the adrenaline is flowing not to mention sparring against killers. I have respect to 52 practitioners.
@@stainless4140 Do you fight? You are welcome to test me out and see if it works. Cosmo Alexandre is my teacher; check out his reels. Plus, I have a knife work background, and not to mention, I am incredibly nice with a gun. Muay Thai is a very effective to add to my arson of other styles I have. I just leveled a dude just on low-leg kicks alone. Do you train more than 5 days a week? Come down and test me out if you wish 🙏
I have been following 52 blocks for many years many years and I think it’s a wonderful art and there’s different expressions of it from East Coast to West Coast
The mark of an effect system is its ability to adapt to the individual. I think that is what Bruce Lee was trying to get across to his students. So glad I found this.
I support this 100!%! I'm from the hood and train in MMA with Pro Fighters, UFC included. I practice and teach the same stuff but never heard of this system before, Love it!!!
I've been studying 52 block style for quite a number of years it's real and definitely is a formidable fight style. But just like any fight style its effectiveness is also determined by the fighter using it and their athleticism and tenacity.
Also the nature of the combat. With the growth of MMA many people see it as the ultimate combat style. However, MMA fighters train habits that could be weaknesses in certain life of death situations, such as the habit of grabbing, pulling guard, lack of situation awareness, assuming 1 on 1, etc.
52 blocks was originated in NYC ! I was taught this in the projects if Brooklyn in the 70s and It has worked for me ever since! Absolutely an effective style if utilized correctly!
I also learned 52 in Queens NY in the late 80s 90s. I didn't know I was learning a system this is the way we fought amd we fought alot at that time. Much respect
People are saying they don't think this would wor I have to disagree with that because this was formulated in prison where you have to literally fight for your life😊
I'm from the hood in the East Coast, fought 10 guys at once before, and I train in MMA with UFC fighters now. This 100% is legit, and Kickboxing is my Expertise.
@@RamboRichardson I have been fighting MMA before it was even called that, I'm a eighth degree black belt and karate and I was kicked off the 1988 Olympic team for fighting 6 gangster disciples in high school and sending all of them to the hospital. If you're wondering a little skinny Mexican kid named Juan Moreno took my spot on the US Olympic team and won the bronze medal,
Then all you have to do is hit them as effectively as you can and then just run afterwards. You don't have to stay and let your opponent hit you back. Just get your hits off and run.
Depends, the person that would out of his way to assault you is not the average man who trains in a martial art as a casual. The people who train are probably the last kinds of people you'd get attacked by in a street fight.
You don't really need to train to street fight though deep down you really should already know how to do it. I honestly think that's where these guys are failing. You just hurt him and don't let him hurt you there are no rules if you try to box like the science in the street, I think that you set yourself up for failure. Fighting on the street is supposed to be purely defense you aren't supposed to just walk up and box a guy because your mad at something he said it is supposed to be a near life or death struggle so you hurt them, or you get hurt you win big or go home. The guys boys are going to jump in on you anyway, someone's gonna pull out a weapon, you can't just win this is pure danger you gotta survive hurt them quick and get the out or you might die. Guy trys to stab you then you hit him real hard and fast and get out, you crack him with a bottle or a pipe if you have too. There is no one on one really you are going to be defending yourself from getting jumped by at least 2 dudes, this doesn't work like the movies. They grab you they throw wild punches and then kick you in the head while your down, all kinds of madness. You're at the bar and the dude's girlfriend smashes you in the head with a beer bottle, stuff like that. If you want to win you have to fight for your life with pure instinct, you aren't going to be thinking of "moves and techniques" you are really best off with pure physicality. Speed, power, and awareness and you don't think you just hit them. See the ball hit the ball, it goes too fast to think too much. Rule number 1 don't get hit, rule number 2 don't get hurt, if you gotta hit them hard or knee a guy really hard in his forehead to put him away so you can get away, then that's just what you do. Your pride means nothing its win, run or get hurt bad.
Just give the credit to "Bruce Lee, dude! "I fear not the man who practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practice 1 kick 10,000 times." Bruce Lee
If the instructor’s history of 52 blocks is correct he said after the civil war which would pre-date Bruce Lee and if you watch the Hollywood mummy movies you see that Egyptian culture pre-dates Chinese culture so in other words every culture overtime has adapted, changed and applied the use of one’s hands, feet, knees and elbows to match their environment and point in time in history. The key is what is the best way to use your hands and feet that meet your skill set because their is only one Bruce Lee, Ip man, Jim Kelly, Muhammad Ali, etc
52 blocks developed in the 1970's in prison. No where I have red saying that 52 blocks was around the Civil War era. It was a prison fighting system for defense.
Love using the elbows especially off the lead jab or extended fingers eye jam(ain't nothing dirty in fighting for survival). I like the ghetto boxing cause it's nobody using classic boxing defense that leaves open the groin, entire lead leg and foot open for attacks. It's simple and effective movements, great presentation 👏 👍
Good tactical close quarter combat maneuvers. Simplistic and easy to transition from one technique to another upstairs to down stairs and vise versa Good job
52 blocks aka Jail House Rock is the only martial art developed in North America. I used to take classes for capoeira and the maestro also taught us about jail house rock. He told us both had very similar techniques. Unfortunately he never got really deep into it but seeing it here is appreciated. He told us it was made to be close quarters combat in small spaces as the person in this video said.
There is another one developed in the South called "Rough and Tumble". It was so brutal that it eventually got banned (they were gouging out eyes and killing people)
I'm a martial arts master with a fifth degree black belt. This guy is the real deal. Keep teaching buddy! You're a natural born leader. You're teaching these people how to be better human beings through martial arts. Thank you my brother. Airborne!
I have trained in over of Japanese and Chinese systems of martial arts and have had to use them on the street, and I am pleased to say that 52 blocks link the best parts of practical applications to a whole other level.
That first bit about having your strong arm forward is legit. I'm a right handed southpaw. Nobody expects your jab to have ass behind it like that. Many fights ended right there.
In boxing that called a converted southpaw. Roy jones jr is one of the most famous ones. Back in the day many trainers were against people fighting southpaw
I like how they filmed this at the loading dock behind the bodega in Compton with all the graffiti & stuff, just for that extra grit of 'reality'... I can practically smell the urine from here 😜
The way he broke it down, he pretty much explained a philosophy of Muy Boran and Wing Chun combined. And both of those martial arts were made for quick and effective self defense, not sport! 🙌🏽✊🏽👏🏽
You can’t reinvent the wheel, you can only refine it. I can appreciate combat styles that is both effective and simple to learn. I really believe all martial arts are useful, but many of them takes years of practice to be effective. Most people are looking to fight in a cage match. They’re in a situation and they need that situation to be over with as quickly and safely as possible. Fighting isn’t like the movies. It’s quick and it’s dirty. If you can finish a fight in one punch and walk away, that’s way preferable to dancing around with someone.
This style is very brutal. And I see a lot of comments talking about fighting for survival. Hopefully you can gauge both your intensity and targets(throat, groin) when fighting for the other things in life. It all depends if a sucker needs to get bodied, floored, whooped, or pummeled. You are really skilled at fighting if you can deliver the necessary beating the situation calls for. All I'm saying is some homies don't need their sac in their stomach for some minor bullshit
This is a potent way of stopping someone as fast as possible. It works. Someone was selling a book on this,called it something else. Said he learned it from a prisoner in the worse prison in the country. I immediately knew it was the 52
If Ludacris took martial arts, especially Karate, he’d know that we train by the adage, “You must practice 10,000 blocks to block an opponent once,” and the same for strikes, kicks, etc. I’m definitely not the best of martial artists but I live by that saying because has enabled another latent skill for self-defense: In the absence of of thought, technique will flow 🙏🏽
I confirm 💯% - these are effective tools for the tool box. Like pliers: Vice grips can’t do it all, so they created needle nose, crimping, lineman, round nose, diagonal etc.
I appreciate how the angles being shown here make it hard to enter a grapple. That would be my first instinct since judo is all I've trained, but getting in from knees and elbows and headbutts isn't easy.
I'm going to Nigeria and I don't know if I'll be able to carry a firearm or not so I'm definitely going to implement this style since I already have 6-8 years of boxing experience. I gotta stay sharp out there just in case.
@gxtmfa you ever see anybody dance? They have slick footwork but can't fight. This too flashy and chasing g hands. Never going to work against a real boxer
Im from the Bronx. We been doing the 52 hand blocks when i was coming up ever since the 80's. I seen all types of shit. Cats tapping the ground and walls to create faints, doing windmills, throwing some elbows, even boxing with razors, but the way you throwing those elbows is serious. Not only is that dangerous, but it look like some ghetto Bruce Lee shit. Lol. Shit is dope!. Gotta add this to my arsenal. Good looking for the video family!
I like all martial arts but if you give credit to Bruce Lee. You have to give credit to Ip Man since Bruce first and primary influential art was wing chun and Ip man must give credit to red boat practioners, etc. There is a saying that there is nothing new under son so thing may look different or applied in a different sequence but man has always had conflict and a desire to protect himself or his family
Yes, and I practice wing chun but I grew up fighting in the streets so I started wing chun as a hobby because my knees would no longer allow me to play basketball anymore. In the streets, I would not assume the traditional Mun sao stance but take a basic boxer stance and may like in wing chun decide to lead with my dominant hand or go traditional boxing philosophy. The entry with the slide step is wing chun entry although traditionalist would not want his back foot elevated. He threw a vertical punch which can be considered a wing Chung punch with the intent of exposing the throat, he followed with a left cross which could haven been bil ghee or Sut sao. His elbow work can be taken from chum kiu and bil ghee forms horizontal, angled and vertical elbows and his inside and outside leg attacks would be Chi Gerk.
Fun fact the first Martial arts were perform by ancient Zulu's and Mandingo warriors. The Egyptians would hire them for protection and of course training. Their teachings spread around the world. Remember Chinese people are probably the best imitators. Most of what they know they learned from the black people of the world. Even their philosophy goes back to ancient Africa
It definitely has some Bruce Lee,Gypsy boxing,Muay Thai influence. However I’ve seen people use this in the ring like Kamaru Usman,Israel Adesanya,Conor Mcgregor,and a few others.
Let's clarify something about the head-butt. He said to use your forehead, but that's not exactly the area you want to use. Contact should be made ABOVE your forehead/hairline, and target the opponents forehead BELOW their hairline. If you do the opposite, then you will head-butt yourself. For that reason, it's best to avoid head butting the opponents head altogether. It's best to squat down a little and then lunge upward/forward into the face with the top of your head.
Paul Vunak, is that you? Your statements are correct. I've heard Paul speak about this in his Street Safe series. Diallo was not asked to be specific on each of his techniques during this shoot, though I'm sure this is what he would have said since has trained with Paul Vunak in the past.
@@FightFast That's just something I learned from kung fu. Funny you should mention Paul vunak though. I just commented on his video the other day. If you look at my other comment I made on this video "I love how everyone combines kung fu, boxing, and Muay Thai, and then slaps their name on it. 🤣" I had Paul Vunak in mind when I said that. Paul's "RAT" system is just a bunch of kung fu, boxing, and Muay Thai techniques. Yet, he markets "his" system by saying to "not use traditional martial arts for self defense because it's ineffective and dangerous." As someone who has trained in boxing, shaolin kung fu, Chinese Kempo, and Muay Thai over the past 20 years that has wrecked multiple people simultaneously in the streets on several occasions, that statement kinda irks me. Then I see this video and a lot of it is kung fu, boxing, and Muay Thai. Now I'm wondering how similar 52 blocks is to Mantis style kung fu or Wing Chun. I've never heard of 52 blocks before, so now I'm intrigued.
How do you mention Diddy when it's a video that has absolutely nothing to do with him??!!! Seems like you woke up with that man on your mind goofy hhhmmmmm lol
If you liked this, join our private FB group where you get exclusive access to more great videos like this
► facebook.com/groups/802319941874794/
Dude is deceptively quick, i can't believe I've never seen him before. Salute!
hes one of paul vunaks old students
@@stevebb2915 lolllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
I like Muay Thai. It's so effective but one of the most brutal self-defense styles to learn. And easy to recall when the adrenaline is flowing not to mention sparring against killers. I have respect to 52 practitioners.
Muay Thai is definitely an intense but effective martial art!
@@FightFast Yes sir thanks for the training video
Nippon Kenpo Karate is a hybrid MMA slash Karate style it has Japanese Jujutsu, Muay Thai, Boxing, Judo, Freestyle Wrestling, Karate, And Kung fu
You sir will get knocked out every time in a street fight....js...Muay Thai is only effective in an MMA setting...never in an actual street fight
@@stainless4140 Do you fight? You are welcome to test me out and see if it works. Cosmo Alexandre is my teacher; check out his reels. Plus, I have a knife work background, and not to mention, I am incredibly nice with a gun. Muay Thai is a very effective to add to my arson of other styles I have. I just leveled a dude just on low-leg kicks alone. Do you train more than 5 days a week? Come down and test me out if you wish 🙏
I have been following 52 blocks for many years many years and I think it’s a wonderful art and there’s different expressions of it from East Coast to West Coast
That's awesome to hear! 52 blocks is such a unique and fascinating art form with different regional variations.
The mark of an effect system is its ability to adapt to the individual. I think that is what Bruce Lee was trying to get across to his students. So glad I found this.
I support this 100!%! I'm from the hood and train in MMA with Pro Fighters, UFC included. I practice and teach the same stuff but never heard of this system before, Love it!!!
I've been studying 52 block style for quite a number of years it's real and definitely is a formidable fight style. But just like any fight style its effectiveness is also determined by the fighter using it and their athleticism and tenacity.
Nice! Keep honing those 52 block skills and stay tenacious in your practice!
I 1000% agree with you
Also the nature of the combat.
With the growth of MMA many people see it as the ultimate combat style. However, MMA fighters train habits that could be weaknesses in certain life of death situations, such as the habit of grabbing, pulling guard, lack of situation awareness, assuming 1 on 1, etc.
Thanks for liking my comment
Didnt zab judah use this on floyd Mayweather?
52 blocks was originated in NYC ! I was taught this in the projects if Brooklyn in the 70s and It has worked for me ever since! Absolutely an effective style if utilized correctly!
Thank you for sharing your experience with 52 blocks! It's always inspiring to hear how martial arts have made a positive difference.
I also learned 52 in Queens NY in the late 80s 90s. I didn't know I was learning a system this is the way we fought amd we fought alot at that time. Much respect
yerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
52 blocks started during slavery from slaves that were brought from Brazil which is why it looks similar to capoeira
@@BradyHudson-qp3jzNegativeZ 52 Blocks comes out of NY Prison System
People are saying they don't think this would wor I have to disagree with that because this was formulated in prison where you have to literally fight for your life😊
I'm from the hood in the East Coast, fought 10 guys at once before, and I train in MMA with UFC fighters now. This 100% is legit, and Kickboxing is my Expertise.
@@RamboRichardson I have been fighting MMA before it was even called that, I'm a eighth degree black belt and karate and I was kicked off the 1988 Olympic team for fighting 6 gangster disciples in high school and sending all of them to the hospital. If you're wondering a little skinny Mexican kid named Juan Moreno took my spot on the US Olympic team and won the bronze medal,
Well, I guess we shall call it the "prison-tested" method then lol
That's quite the journey you've had! Keep up the hard work in your training.
@davidshareefChTPhD
Lmao 😂
This is one violent man 😆😆😆 He's doing alotta smiling and joking
hes never touched a hair on a flies head
@@MuayThaiDreadlockThe smiling jovial mfs are either complete pushovers or monsters. See; Sugar Ray Leonard, Pernell Whitaker
You get in a fight on the street now, you better be ready. Lotta people training these days.
Then all you have to do is hit them as effectively as you can and then just run afterwards. You don't have to stay and let your opponent hit you back. Just get your hits off and run.
Depends, the person that would out of his way to assault you is not the average man who trains in a martial art as a casual. The people who train are probably the last kinds of people you'd get attacked by in a street fight.
@@SurtierWood agree.
You don't really need to train to street fight though deep down you really should already know how to do it. I honestly think that's where these guys are failing. You just hurt him and don't let him hurt you there are no rules if you try to box like the science in the street, I think that you set yourself up for failure. Fighting on the street is supposed to be purely defense you aren't supposed to just walk up and box a guy because your mad at something he said it is supposed to be a near life or death struggle so you hurt them, or you get hurt you win big or go home. The guys boys are going to jump in on you anyway, someone's gonna pull out a weapon, you can't just win this is pure danger you gotta survive hurt them quick and get the out or you might die. Guy trys to stab you then you hit him real hard and fast and get out, you crack him with a bottle or a pipe if you have too. There is no one on one really you are going to be defending yourself from getting jumped by at least 2 dudes, this doesn't work like the movies. They grab you they throw wild punches and then kick you in the head while your down, all kinds of madness. You're at the bar and the dude's girlfriend smashes you in the head with a beer bottle, stuff like that. If you want to win you have to fight for your life with pure instinct, you aren't going to be thinking of "moves and techniques" you are really best off with pure physicality. Speed, power, and awareness and you don't think you just hit them. See the ball hit the ball, it goes too fast to think too much. Rule number 1 don't get hit, rule number 2 don't get hurt, if you gotta hit them hard or knee a guy really hard in his forehead to put him away so you can get away, then that's just what you do. Your pride means nothing its win, run or get hurt bad.
@@weshouser821thas sum real shit
Just give the credit to "Bruce Lee, dude! "I fear not the man who practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practice 1 kick 10,000 times." Bruce Lee
If the instructor’s history of 52 blocks is correct he said after the civil war which would pre-date Bruce Lee and if you watch the Hollywood mummy movies you see that Egyptian culture pre-dates Chinese culture so in other words every culture overtime has adapted, changed and applied the use of one’s hands, feet, knees and elbows to match their environment and point in time in history. The key is what is the best way to use your hands and feet that meet your skill set because their is only one Bruce Lee, Ip man, Jim Kelly, Muhammad Ali, etc
@@vincenthyman895 Yea, but it's almost impossible to look up. If it's true, then Bruce is really the one who popularized it!
52 blocks developed in the 1970's in prison. No where I have red saying that 52 blocks was around the Civil War era. It was a prison fighting system for defense.
That part. Fuqin SELLebrities 🤡
Best comment i have seen about martial arts @@vincenthyman895
Love using the elbows especially off the lead jab or extended fingers eye jam(ain't nothing dirty in fighting for survival). I like the ghetto boxing cause it's nobody using classic boxing defense that leaves open the groin, entire lead leg and foot open for attacks. It's simple and effective movements, great presentation 👏 👍
Good tactical close quarter combat maneuvers. Simplistic and easy to transition from one technique to another upstairs to down stairs and vise versa Good job
52 blocks was originally called jailhouse, and it was developed in the New York State prison system. Facts!
52 blocks aka Jail House Rock is the only martial art developed in North America. I used to take classes for capoeira and the maestro also taught us about jail house rock. He told us both had very similar techniques. Unfortunately he never got really deep into it but seeing it here is appreciated. He told us it was made to be close quarters combat in small spaces as the person in this video said.
Capoeira and 52 probably would have similar theory bc they're almost similar in root. Captivity.
There is another one developed in the South called "Rough and Tumble". It was so brutal that it eventually got banned (they were gouging out eyes and killing people)
I'm a martial arts master with a fifth degree black belt. This guy is the real deal. Keep teaching buddy! You're a natural born leader. You're teaching these people how to be better human beings through martial arts. Thank you my brother. Airborne!
Thank you. I’ve been wanting to know about 52 Blocks for a long time!
I'm glad the video was helpful for you!
Bro said "I dont care if your in india tying weights to your sack doing squats it ain't getting stronger"
I was in stiches 😂😂😂
That man going down
😂😂🤣😂🤣😂😆
You drop it they drop😭😭😭 Facts “OVER”
Powerful. Simple. Effective.
Sounds like the ingredients for success!
Working the high line and low line that's what its all about 👌🏻
Everybody has a plan, until they get punched in the face !
: Iron Mike Tyson
This Teacher is very entertaining while teaching well!
Entertaining and educational, the best combo!
Agreed
Great vid. There will always be a place to implement these types of techniques.
I've seen this style as a kid, but they always kept this fighting style a secret. Ty for this.
I have trained in over of Japanese and Chinese systems of martial arts and have had to use them on the street, and I am pleased to say that 52 blocks link the best parts of practical applications to a whole other level.
That first bit about having your strong arm forward is legit. I'm a right handed southpaw. Nobody expects your jab to have ass behind it like that. Many fights ended right there.
In boxing that called a converted southpaw. Roy jones jr is one of the most famous ones. Back in the day many trainers were against people fighting southpaw
In the boxing ring I did this because I was outweighed by 50 lb I didn't have a choice on streets orthodox
Aye facts Micheal jail white says the same thing
What if both of your arms are just as strong?
7:56 "Drop it down to the sack" was funny as hell to me
I like how they filmed this at the loading dock behind the bodega in Compton with all the graffiti & stuff, just for that extra grit of 'reality'... I can practically smell the urine from here
😜
Coming straight out of Compton.
*A BRAH!* 😂😂😂
I knew he was from Cali. I said this under one of their other video.. I can hear his Cali accent! Didn’t know it was the CPT, though..
@@nmr20067, if you listen very carefully you can hear the pitter-patter of tiny homeless feet in the background
Damn. I can’t believe I’ve never heard of this! It looks legit! Good concept for a street fight and some self defense.
@jonathansalazar3207 Get The Full Video Here fightfast.com/yt/52BLK
Man I remember back in day we used to slap box on the corner just to test skills.
and body punch to test durability
Damm really Luda. He raps like a New Yorker and learned the 52 blocks? Wow!
No he sounds nothing like he's from MY CITY.
@@rakim6466 I said raps like, not sound like
You guys have the best UA-cam Channel! Thanks for all you guys do
Great work ,i believe in this and urban combatives holland.
I love to play the cat like a funky piano.
This is not the 52 blocks we do in NYC!!! Ours features actual BLOCKS!!!
This is a few tips in 3 dvds we have.
The way he broke it down, he pretty much explained a philosophy of Muy Boran and Wing Chun combined. And both of those martial arts were made for quick and effective self defense, not sport! 🙌🏽✊🏽👏🏽
😳 Did anybody notice that beautiful roll big man pulled off at 18:21?!
You can’t reinvent the wheel, you can only refine it. I can appreciate combat styles that is both effective and simple to learn. I really believe all martial arts are useful, but many of them takes years of practice to be effective. Most people are looking to fight in a cage match. They’re in a situation and they need that situation to be over with as quickly and safely as possible. Fighting isn’t like the movies. It’s quick and it’s dirty. If you can finish a fight in one punch and walk away, that’s way preferable to dancing around with someone.
Great Breakdown of Vital, Practical close quarter action! Many Thanks!
Growing up in Brooklyn we used to slap box and do 52 blocks. Dope to see the art form is spreading.
This style is very brutal. And I see a lot of comments talking about fighting for survival. Hopefully you can gauge both your intensity and targets(throat, groin) when fighting for the other things in life. It all depends if a sucker needs to get bodied, floored, whooped, or pummeled. You are really skilled at fighting if you can deliver the necessary beating the situation calls for. All I'm saying is some homies don't need their sac in their stomach for some minor bullshit
Yeah, Bruce said it 1st be afraid of the guy that practices the same kick 10000 times not the one that practices 10000 kicks.
Well I'm impressed, nothing is fake about this. This guy would mess me up lol
Not sure how but glad tis came across my feed 🔥🔥
I learned 52 Blocks the hard way, in Rikers Island.
Alot of people know 52 blocks especially if your from NYC that's where it started
🫡
This is a potent way of stopping someone as fast as possible. It works. Someone was selling a book on this,called it something else. Said he learned it from a prisoner in the worse prison in the country. I immediately knew it was the 52
Thanks for sharing 🙏🏾
What happened to the "Skull and Cross Bones" block?
I believe this is a variation of it! I'm from Brooklyn and dudes in my neighborhood was nasty with it!!
If Ludacris took martial arts, especially Karate, he’d know that we train by the adage, “You must practice 10,000 blocks to block an opponent once,” and the same for strikes, kicks, etc. I’m definitely not the best of martial artists but I live by that saying because has enabled another latent skill for self-defense: In the absence of of thought, technique will flow 🙏🏽
I have a hard time believing they were saying “guard your grill” around the time the civil war happened. 😂😂😂
You know it’s ole school when you see TRS in the videos 😎
Simple and effective tactics for close quarters hand-to-hand combat!
I confirm 💯% - these are effective tools for the tool box. Like pliers: Vice grips can’t do it all, so they created needle nose, crimping, lineman, round nose, diagonal etc.
If you don't think this would work just because he's bigger or thicker your not looking closely. Angles change he's showing you moves for a video
Getting hit in the sack and the throat is putting any man down 😂 and I mean any lmaoo
@@yyosemaloThroat and diaphragm strikes are my go to against taller men
@@KageumiUmikage that’s how i was taught bro
I appreciate how the angles being shown here make it hard to enter a grapple. That would be my first instinct since judo is all I've trained, but getting in from knees and elbows and headbutts isn't easy.
This here is very important impressive knowledge
I thought you could only upgrade the story-mode characters. Fight for NY remaster looks amazing
I laugh so hard my head hurt 🤣🤣🤣
so this was luda inspiration for " throw dem bows " 😂
Hahaha! @41 seconds....He said it was developed in the "penile" system. Lost me right there😂😂😂
The penus system
He meant penal but lol still 😂
I'm going to Nigeria and I don't know if I'll be able to carry a firearm or not so I'm definitely going to implement this style since I already have 6-8 years of boxing experience. I gotta stay sharp out there just in case.
Excellent style thank you and have a good day 😊😊😊😊😊.
That punch to throat is real deal diabolical this is real shit Noting but Gold great Video
52 is basically mix of boxing a wing chun.
But way shittier lol
Of course my fellow keyboard expert
@@S.N.T.247IDK man, his footwork is slick
@gxtmfa you ever see anybody dance? They have slick footwork but can't fight. This too flashy and chasing g hands. Never going to work against a real boxer
I don't see where he is chasing hands bud. But yeah, I guess that cocaine you are trying is one hell of a drug
Yea never heard Of MR.52 Block NYC been fighting like this
definitely going to get this training dvd
Jailhouse rock!
Im from the Bronx. We been doing the 52 hand blocks when i was coming up ever since the 80's. I seen all types of shit. Cats tapping the ground and walls to create faints, doing windmills, throwing some elbows, even boxing with razors, but the way you throwing those elbows is serious. Not only is that dangerous, but it look like some ghetto Bruce Lee shit. Lol. Shit is dope!. Gotta add this to my arsenal. Good looking for the video family!
This is JKD what bruce was teaching. Fighting with dominate hand as your lead hand and cracking the opponent with that straight lead.
Thought jkd was basically mma but a system for bruce taking the best and effective techniques
All his assistants dwarf the dude, but you can tell they want 0 smoke. The dudes legit
I like all martial arts but if you give credit to Bruce Lee. You have to give credit to Ip Man since Bruce first and primary influential art was wing chun and Ip man must give credit to red boat practioners, etc. There is a saying that there is nothing new under son so thing may look different or applied in a different sequence but man has always had conflict and a desire to protect himself or his family
Do you see wing chun
@@aquiredskill
Yes, and I practice wing chun but I grew up fighting in the streets so I started wing chun as a hobby because my knees would no longer allow me to play basketball anymore. In the streets, I would not assume the traditional Mun sao stance but take a basic boxer stance and may like in wing chun decide to lead with my dominant hand or go traditional boxing philosophy. The entry with the slide step is wing chun entry although traditionalist would not want his back foot elevated. He threw a vertical punch which can be considered a wing Chung punch with the intent of exposing the throat, he followed with a left cross which could haven been bil ghee or Sut sao. His elbow work can be taken from chum kiu and bil ghee forms horizontal, angled and vertical elbows and his inside and outside leg attacks would be Chi Gerk.
Good Educational Content
It works really well if the other guy is just standing there 😂
Fun fact the first Martial arts were perform by ancient Zulu's and Mandingo warriors. The Egyptians would hire them for protection and of course training. Their teachings spread around the world. Remember Chinese people are probably the best imitators. Most of what they know they learned from the black people of the world. Even their philosophy goes back to ancient Africa
Joe took forever to get on camera, he doesn't want to get punched on.
😅
LMAO
My man realized in real time he was crazy for saying "Great punches to finish a man off, touching the body"
Nice Feed👍
Thanks 👍
I think it’s cool how he got 2Pac to guest host
I prefer any art that doesn’t have limits. When an art acknowledges no rules I listen and has things you can’t even practice - tell me more.
It definitely has some Bruce Lee,Gypsy boxing,Muay Thai influence. However I’ve seen people use this in the ring like Kamaru Usman,Israel Adesanya,Conor Mcgregor,and a few others.
Outstanding. Thanks.
WE NEED A YOU VS LYTE BURLY FOR THE 52 BLOCK CULTURE
Can't we All just get along!👀
Legendary Knowledge 🤛🏾
Let's clarify something about the head-butt.
He said to use your forehead, but that's not exactly the area you want to use.
Contact should be made ABOVE your forehead/hairline, and target the opponents forehead BELOW their hairline.
If you do the opposite, then you will head-butt yourself.
For that reason, it's best to avoid head butting the opponents head altogether.
It's best to squat down a little and then lunge upward/forward into the face with the top of your head.
Paul Vunak, is that you? Your statements are correct. I've heard Paul speak about this in his Street Safe series. Diallo was not asked to be specific on each of his techniques during this shoot, though I'm sure this is what he would have said since has trained with Paul Vunak in the past.
@@FightFast That's just something I learned from kung fu. Funny you should mention Paul vunak though. I just commented on his video the other day.
If you look at my other comment I made on this video "I love how everyone combines kung fu, boxing, and Muay Thai, and then slaps their name on it. 🤣" I had Paul Vunak in mind when I said that.
Paul's "RAT" system is just a bunch of kung fu, boxing, and Muay Thai techniques. Yet, he markets "his" system by saying to "not use traditional martial arts for self defense because it's ineffective and dangerous."
As someone who has trained in boxing, shaolin kung fu, Chinese Kempo, and Muay Thai over the past 20 years that has wrecked multiple people simultaneously in the streets on several occasions, that statement kinda irks me.
Then I see this video and a lot of it is kung fu, boxing, and Muay Thai. Now I'm wondering how similar 52 blocks is to Mantis style kung fu or Wing Chun.
I've never heard of 52 blocks before, so now I'm intrigued.
Seems like a lot of similarities of JKD just different names of the concepts but damn near the same. Thank you Bruce Lee
Dope video!! Good looking💯💯💯💪🏾
Reminds me of Kenpo.
Some arts have techniques that were borrowed or adapted from other arts Kenpo has a lot of techniques 52 has
I love how everyone combines kung fu, boxing, and Muay Thai, and then slaps their name on it. 🤣
Jordan 17s are killer great video
“ touch em sacks”. “Super sacks”. Ayoo, Pause B!
Awesome I like that Chaotic Combat 💪🏿
I always played as Luda on every Def Jam game
It’s called a hop skip, and simultaneously striking with move.
I love this!
Real talk 👄
Ludacris trying to learn the arts to keep Diddy from his ass...
That's crazy everybody been talking about diddy
😂😂😂😂😂
How do you mention Diddy when it's a video that has absolutely nothing to do with him??!!! Seems like you woke up with that man on your mind goofy hhhmmmmm lol
Wish i could train with this brother.
If there's enough interest, I'm sure we could put a seminar together with Diallo Frazier in the future. He's on Instagram @52thoughts
This dynamic. So basically it’s dirty boxing.
Get The Full Video Here fightfast.com/yt/52BLK