Retired LEO and long time trainer here. Good stuff, but…is that how you wear your handgun daily? Train like you wear, most likely with a concealment garment. If you do open carry you need a retention holster. These two items will inevitably slow you down some.
This was filmed during the filming of a tutorial course that takes into account concealed carriers and duty carriers --- in order to efficiently serve both groups in terms of the fundamental concepts being taught, these were the holsters used. Keep in mind the course focus was not on drawing the weapon which can actually be a course on its own. Thanks for the comment sir!
Something to add- if someone is inside your reactionary gap and is going to stab you- most likely they will grab you with a leveraging arm to hold you in that stabbing range. So addressing the leveraging arm to get space might be a second part to this lesson.
Intersting concept moving OFF the X but,,, I see a little problem with it, On a stressful situation you are stressed and under pressure putting your Arm out there while shooting could be a mistake where a round hits your hand or wrist
I see it as the defender needs to make distance between themselves and the attacker to enhance the fact they have a weapon that works where theirs does not.Also as you rightly suggest the pistol is not your only weapon, use your body to destablize the attacker i.e. push or pull them or kick to the side of the leg.
In this scenario knife wins still as your not training as you fight because your not open carrying and you haven't cleared your cover garment with that draw... put a shirt on and use it with slide reciprocating if it's an auto you carry...see if that clears...this is case where you are so close you go hands on to make distance then draw and shoot
Since I'm not trained in hand to hand combat my thought is to turn and sprint. I'm quicker than average and stabbing/punching is difficult to do at a full sprint. Since I carry in the appendix position I should be able to clear my shirt and draw my gun pretty well while running. This seems to have the best odds for me.
From there, it's unlikely anyone would have been shot. It's far more likely that your gun would drop that his knife would drop. These are different grips. Guru Inosanto explains this very often in terms of establishing space. The best thing we can do to avoid violence is to treat each other with respect and love, but when all else fails, the best thing we can do is establish combative range, attack quickly and effectively, and get away.
if martial arts club had indoor gun ranges and taught shooting, then that would solve a lot of problems, those that had no gun licenes and were not interested in owning guns would be able to learn basics of survival
whats the counter if they anticipate your side step dodge? if they roll with your initial counter step? getting off the x axis is a good idea but hands move faster than feet and body. you guys are are great shooters im thinking in terms of regular people who dont have your reaction speed and training not shitting on what youre teaching but like in sport we need counters to the counters to move smoothly.
Great question. Generally there 2 broad ideas in play: fight through the ambush or evade. These two ideas can take on any number of iterations that only training can produce. Watching videos can give us ideas, but the work is up to you.
OFF TOPIC QUESTION: How would you plan a hit (not lethal, just physical) on someone who knows you AND avoid their retaliation. Hypothetically this person knows where your mother and grandparents live.
As you're drawing, step back, drop down and backward, landing on your butt and ultimately your back as quickly and without hurting yourself as possible so he now has nothing to attack at all but you can still shoot up at him. You've created a functional separation of distance that you can overcome (with a gun) that he can't and he has no target at knife level, which he still had if you moved sideways. As you said, you may still get cut doing so but dropping onto your back gives you all the advantage in that scenario. Of course it doesn't work in every scenario. This one, yeah.
Great material, I guess. I'm wondering why it looks like Tom of Finland is these guys wardrobe dresser. Why are their shirts too small. It looks like they shrunk or put on a children's size because they forgot to do laundry.
@@FunkerTactical It used to be that The Warrior Poet and Yankee Marshall channels were tied for most gay gun channel, I'll add your channel to the list.
Retired LEO and long time trainer here. Good stuff, but…is that how you wear your handgun daily? Train like you wear, most likely with a concealment garment. If you do open carry you need a retention holster. These two items will inevitably slow you down some.
This was filmed during the filming of a tutorial course that takes into account concealed carriers and duty carriers --- in order to efficiently serve both groups in terms of the fundamental concepts being taught, these were the holsters used. Keep in mind the course focus was not on drawing the weapon which can actually be a course on its own. Thanks for the comment sir!
We definitely need more instructors like you two. Great stuff
Fantastic info dude...
Just was sharing this video with my son...
Creating space is super important!
when uncertain keep your distance, That is the main reason for being aware of your surroundings at all times. Great video!!!
Something to add- if someone is inside your reactionary gap and is going to stab you- most likely they will grab you with a leveraging arm to hold you in that stabbing range. So addressing the leveraging arm to get space might be a second part to this lesson.
Self preservation before weapon presentation. Full agree
Amen to that
Great video guys, solid way to look at those ranges. Would like to see more from this point of reference
One of the best techniques for creating space is to roll onto your back and unload. Of course not going to work against multiple attackers.
Contextually valid
Simplicity matters in this situation. Good one guys.
Team Zero done it years ago with Funker tactical already. Thank You
This was a great lesson!!
Thank you!
Intersting concept moving OFF the X but,,,
I see a little problem with it,
On a stressful situation you are stressed and under pressure putting your Arm out there while shooting could be a mistake where a round hits your hand or wrist
I see it as the defender needs to make distance between themselves and the attacker to enhance the fact they have a weapon that works where theirs does not.Also as you rightly suggest the pistol is not your only weapon, use your body to destablize the attacker i.e. push or pull them or kick to the side of the leg.
Killa bee trying to take that WuTang swag for himself 😅
Lol!
Thank u sir for sharing this🔥🔥🔥🔥
I’ll be sure to send this to my son he starts school in September
Valuable.
Good, but more focus may be placed on controlling the distance, the true crucial issue
Agreed..but the attacker isn't going past you like Roadrunner
In this scenario knife wins still
as your not training as you fight because
your not open carrying and you haven't cleared your cover garment with that draw... put a shirt on and use it with slide reciprocating if it's an auto you carry...see if that clears...this is case where you are so close you go hands on to make distance then draw and shoot
Since I'm not trained in hand to hand combat my thought is to turn and sprint. I'm quicker than average and stabbing/punching is difficult to do at a full sprint. Since I carry in the appendix position I should be able to clear my shirt and draw my gun pretty well while running. This seems to have the best odds for me.
If running is a valid option, take it.
From there, it's unlikely anyone would have been shot.
It's far more likely that your gun would drop that his knife would drop.
These are different grips. Guru Inosanto explains this very often in terms of establishing space. The best thing we can do to avoid violence is to treat each other with respect and love, but when all else fails, the best thing we can do is establish combative range, attack quickly and effectively, and get away.
inverted? my guitar gently weeps of the beatles?
if martial arts club had indoor gun ranges and taught shooting,
then that would solve a lot of problems,
those that had no gun licenes and were not interested in owning guns would be able to learn basics of survival
whats the counter if they anticipate your side step dodge? if they roll with your initial counter step? getting off the x axis is a good idea but hands move faster than feet and body. you guys are are great shooters im thinking in terms of regular people who dont have your reaction speed and training
not shitting on what youre teaching but like in sport we need counters to the counters to move smoothly.
Still buys you a split second, since they have to react, anyway, I'd reckon most attackers like that are not expecting a super well trained person.
Great question. Generally there 2 broad ideas in play: fight through the ambush or evade. These two ideas can take on any number of iterations that only training can produce. Watching videos can give us ideas, but the work is up to you.
Are wristwatches actually important for close combat?
Did you even see the equalizer?
OFF TOPIC QUESTION:
How would you plan a hit (not lethal, just physical) on someone who knows you AND avoid their retaliation. Hypothetically this person knows where your mother and grandparents live.
FBI Informant here. turning you in for observation just made me $1000 bounty!
As you're drawing, step back, drop down and backward, landing on your butt and ultimately your back as quickly and without hurting yourself as possible so he now has nothing to attack at all but you can still shoot up at him. You've created a functional separation of distance that you can overcome (with a gun) that he can't and he has no target at knife level, which he still had if you moved sideways. As you said, you may still get cut doing so but dropping onto your back gives you all the advantage in that scenario. Of course it doesn't work in every scenario. This one, yeah.
haha, thats good advice but next to impossible to practice and train
great content. too much camera movement!
Sweet :-p
Great material, I guess. I'm wondering why it looks like Tom of Finland is these guys wardrobe dresser. Why are their shirts too small. It looks like they shrunk or put on a children's size because they forgot to do laundry.
Next time we'll get them wearing hoodies and flannel so you're not so tempted to stare and get distracted.
@@FunkerTactical It used to be that The Warrior Poet and Yankee Marshall channels were tied for most gay gun channel, I'll add your channel to the list.
3 rounds, 3 ft, 3 seconds. Completely false
#Activeselfprotection
When you contest information it's good to have a source or two...
@@geedoubleu641 #Activeselfprotection He's got plenty of sources.
@@evanclarke2364 Excuse me, you should GIVE some sources.
@@geedoubleu641 He gave the source. Active Self Protection is a youtube channel that covers what he is claiming.
@@jackjack4412 Excuse me, I meant.a reliable source.
Simplicity matters in this situation. Good one guys.