My Second IFK PKB Point Muay Thai Fight (First Time Dropping Opponent)
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- Опубліковано 11 лип 2024
- 5/21/22 at Los Angeles Fit Expo
Yes, I am still the Asian dude in the camo shorts.
Big step up in competition compared to my first fight. I had a slow start, and honestly, I was not too happy with my performance due to the sloppiness. But we dogged this one out.
On to the next... - Ігри
Your ability to maintain the pressure and stay flowing by the end of round three really shows how much training you've done. Great work
Appreciate that man!
Nice work man! Takes a lot of training and guts to compete. One thing I noticed is that when you get hit, several times you get aggressive, but drop your hands while on offense. Great work overall though, I'm much impressed
Thank you man! & yea def a bad habit of mine to just drop the hands and force my way into range.
@@kevjz5891 do you wear a jockstrap when you are fighting.
@@truthhurts6327 we wear a cup
@@kevjz5891 ok thanks I am new to kickboxing thanks
Good fight brotha, how long have you been training for and how many hours do you commit to training weekly?
Good work dude. What gym do you train out of?
good fight, make sure to work on front temp defense. He threw a couple of straight kicks at the start and you didn't really react, just let them through your guard, otherwise good though.
looking good dude! how long did you train for before having your first ammy fight?
i trained for about a year
did great for a second fight. definitely lots of room for improvement on defense, maybe the slow start was from nervousness. wishing you the best in the next fight. I wouldn't listen to the comments from people who hasn't done Muay Thai before.
Appreciate the comment!
@@kevjz5891 let's train if you're ever in NYC
@@pineappleapplepens Where are you at in nyc? city or si, bk?
How long were you training prior to this fight? I have my first fight coming up and could use some advice. What was your weight at this fight?
Was training on and off for about a year and a half. We fought at 180lbs. & in terms of advice, I would say just remember that whatever you’re feeling the other guy is most likely feeling the same. The first minute will be a bit chaotic, but don’t worry, you won’t get knocked out or embarrassed or any of that. It’s just hard sparring. Try to stay calm and do not try to throw everything at him. Simple shit. Jab, cross, hook.
In all honesty I was a bit disappointed when it ended cause it was so fun. Just have fun. If you’ve done the work then this should be nothing. Do your runs, do your rounds, try to go to an uncomfortable place mentally in training. Put yourself there and stay there. Don’t bitch out. You’ll find that other guy in you sooner or later.
Have fun, good luck!
Good job man. I have my first on next month.
Good luck! Just have fun
How much do you both weigh?
Great work! How big are you guys?
180lbs
Great job man!!!!
Thanks!
Is it allowed to catch the opponent's kick and then sweep?
yea it is
How do they decide whats point point fighting and what has intention behind it? I feel like that's subjective
you'd be right haha i guess they're not gonna let you keep going at the dude if you're fucking him up
Nice man what weight class was this?
180 lbs
dude was just hella lighter and more tired
What was the weight on this fight
180 lbs
how tall are you?
6’2
@@kevjz5891 holy, I’m 6”1 and 220, so is 220 division filled with tall guys?
Point Muy Thai?! Say what?! Why?
To get experience
@@antoniovasquez9946just fight straight up Muay Thai off rip it’s way better for experience
Just blind your opponents defense with punches and kick the shit out of him! Many punches, no kicks.
On amateur level, this is a very efficient approach because rookies tend to shell up and have poor ability to maintain distance.
Gotta hit with more power. You, hitting weak makes your opponent hit you back unpunished, while you are still in the middle of your combination, this is how the mess occurs. If you hit weak, work from the defense: teeps, sweeps, clinthes, counter-jabs. And more high kicks, absolutely. If you want to kick harder, focus on landing long combination with many kicks, and low/middle kicks as an ending, some random lows. And why no elbows? This type of fights looks more like a karate fight, no-KO's, all-points. No interesting, no fun. If you want to do so, do it, I am sharing my opinion only coming from my experience and analyzing professional fights with no guards and full contact. Hope it helps!
It's point kickboxing, you are not supposed to hit with power at all. It's like fencing with punches and kicks -- based entirely on making light contact to score points.
@@JHallOnline does point kickboxing help in street fights?
@@truthhurts6327 who gives a shit? street fights are incredibly stupid. this is a sport.
@@jordanhall4918 kickboxing is a hybrid martial art formed the combination of elements of various traditional styles?
@@truthhurts6327 what is your point?