This is fascinating to me. Having seen hundreds & hundreds of hours of boxing and MMA competition, I'm wondering how do so many fighters take so many strikes to this very area without being knocked out and/or incapacitated? It seems from this video any quality strike to these nerve areas would cause tremendous incapacitation. I'm speaking from ignorance, though, so thanks for your patience.
Hey I love the video you make the nerve moves easy to do thanks
Hey this stick again I wanted to say thank you for the lesson
very detailed, accessible with a good visual illustration.
thanks a lot sir!
She did a great job for her first time!
@@EvanPantazi Yes, it looks easy in her performance, she probably had some kind of preliminary preparation.
thanks sir.
No Kyusho or Karate type training, just a model we got to show how easy it was to start learning. Thanks for the comment!
@@EvanPantazi you welcome.
I love your moves
This is fascinating to me. Having seen hundreds & hundreds of hours of boxing and MMA competition, I'm wondering how do so many fighters take so many strikes to this very area without being knocked out and/or incapacitated? It seems from this video any quality strike to these nerve areas would cause tremendous incapacitation. I'm speaking from ignorance, though, so thanks for your patience.
The trajectory is the key… ua-cam.com/video/BSgtSGoFrz8/v-deo.html
Also check what Mike Tyson said and did... ua-cam.com/video/a7vGML56sxg/v-deo.html
👌👏great ,Good explain
Thank you 🙂
Great video!! Tag it self defense do more can see!! Good day
OK I will try the experiment.
what kind of training should you do for train the targets?
Slow incremental hands on application
why does this target not work in bareknuckle boxing? Is it because the opponent expects to get punched?
Well I have seen it work in Boxing as well as UFC. If you have not seen it work, maybe you have not seen all the fights.
Something a lady needs to know for self defense. Thanks!
🎖🤝
What's the name of that Kyoko/Pressure point. Thanks. I'm a customer by the way.
It is a nerve about 3-4 inches long, the temporal branch of the facial nerve.