Always assume your opponent will be bigger and stronger than you.

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  • @BigJDinSC
    @BigJDinSC 13 днів тому +2

    Instructor here. Been teaching, training and studying combatives for a long time. To date, this guy’s content is the best I’ve seen on UA-cam regarding real-life scenarios. Am I noticing some Lee Morrison vibe in there 🤔?

    • @MateoToofeo
      @MateoToofeo 13 днів тому

      Really, I was just thinking what's stopping the attacker from slicing or stabbing the kidneys or lacerating the lower spine. Never a good idea to stand and wrestle someone bigger than you that has a weapon. You can clearly see it in the video so I wouldn't go as far as to say all that!! Thanks for supporting him but we can't be out here setting people up for failure.

    • @BigJDinSC
      @BigJDinSC 13 днів тому

      @@MateoToofeo your statement makes me wonder how much training you’ve actually done 🤔.

  • @busybeebaez
    @busybeebaez 18 днів тому +4

    I don’t like her odds but, if caught in this situation… like what else is there? Let go & get sliced & diced? 🔪🤷‍♀️

    • @smalf00
      @smalf00 18 днів тому +3

      difuse and run away, bro is setting people up to get murdered

    • @MateoToofeo
      @MateoToofeo 13 днів тому

      If caught in this situation you scratch, claw, bite, . Grab pull and twist , trying to use rules or fairness in a street fight will get you killed. It's easy for him to show it works on students 😂😂😭

  • @Bloodwolf1922
    @Bloodwolf1922 17 днів тому +3

    Turning the wrist exist... They can just turn the blade and cut or stab you. When he started pulling for the knife he could have easily positioned the blade to stab her as he knife got a good distance away from her back that would yabe allowed for a stab.

    • @will.roman-ros
      @will.roman-ros 17 днів тому

      Krav is the most pragmatic vs knife. Getting them to cut/stab themself is much less exhausting than attempting the disarm. For when the opponent is bigger/stronger: judo throw is prob the best option, but takes a lot of skill. You could say, be a good kicker, but that also takes skill. The least skilled, easiest way, is krav.

    • @Bloodwolf1922
      @Bloodwolf1922 17 днів тому +1

      @@will.roman-ros you also have to be able to grab their arm to get the knife and it's not that easy. It's been proven time and time again that a knife will always win. Your best option is to actually run as far away as possible for help or until the threat is gone. These are fantasies played out to show you what you COULD do but it's a fantasy could and real are two very different things.

    • @will.roman-ros
      @will.roman-ros 16 днів тому

      @@Bloodwolf1922 it's not fantasy when you train bc most likely the knife wielder is not the kind of person with the discipline to train like you can. I train kenjutsu and do knife disarm drills w my friends who have trained kenjutsu, so we are already playing w a scenario of a trained knife weilder, who can strike within 0.1 a second. You build reflexes and reads, so when the oppressor comes with a knife, and cannot strike that fast, bc they're some bum or crazy, then you can have some decent chances. Kenjutsu teaches to never be unaware of your weapons or surroundings. This is not the situation you run, or you would've: you're cornered against someone w a knife, is the situation.
      You don't necessarily need to grab the arm: you need to control their body. It has happened that sometimes the legs end up pinning the knife arm. You can grab the open arm and go around for a choke, and pin their shoulder, preventing the need to grab the arm. If you go for the arm: that is exactly what the knife weilder will expect. You will have to get creative to have good chances - doing what they expect is gonna end you quick. So many times you open w going for the arm, and that hand just gets slashed. In reality: you have to bait the knife's first strike where you want, and that is when you can capitalize in a variety of ways. Going for the arm they are prepared to guard is a lot harder than feining that, and striking them, for example.
      Krav suggests you just control the direction the knife is oriented to hit themself with it. If they hold the knife rightside up, then you are going for an upper movement to land the knife in their upper torso, neck, or face. If holding in icepick, then you go for a downward movement to hit themself in the lower abdominal, groin, or thigh. That is the path of least resistance: flowing w their movement. It forces them to react, drawing back their knife, leaving them open for strikes, and if they stiff-arm, you use that to threaten the open arm to bait the next knife strike. Once you've trained enough, you will learn the most common scenarios, strategies, tactics, and mind games. Nothing ends it cleaner than a clean jab at the end of their strike (the moment they are returning the knife to guard): lodging the knife into the weilder's self. Can be in the first few movements.

    • @Bloodwolf1922
      @Bloodwolf1922 16 днів тому +1

      @@will.roman-ros dude just because you see "training videos" on UA-cam and you "simulate" with your friends of what is going to happen step by step you aren't actually learning anything because in reality someone whom doesn't train is more unpredictable. Especially someone with the real intent to kill you are going to have a bad day and most likely come out the loser. If you are unarmed it is foolish for you to think you can come out on top when reality you have never faced the real deal and all your training goes down the drain once you've been stabbed a couple times.

    • @will.roman-ros
      @will.roman-ros 16 днів тому

      @@Bloodwolf1922 that's where you're wrong: who in their right mind holding a knife would expect their victim to have rehearsed a krav move, while sparring, to counter their attack, hundreds of times? No one. That is an element of surprise.
      Again, I never said there's an advantage: it will always be a disadvantageous situation, but training makes the impossible possible. The goal of kenjutsu is to end combat in one perfect strike - which is exactly the instinct you want when faced w such a deadly situation. If the knife weilder hesitates, we cease upon that time to strike: it's instinctive after years of training. Years of being on the receiving end of various asymmetric spars gives one the confidence to actually strike vs hesitate themself. It's absolutely key to surviving a situation like this. Whether military training, krav, kickboxing - they add something to the unarmed person's survivability.
      Training against the knife also teaches you to expect to get cut in the process. The rehearsal of mistakes can have the mind compensate for the mistake before the cut is even finished: helping one stay calm and proceed w their objective. Reading a mortal wound can move one to go for a trade, where they hold/pin the knife inside themself while going for eyes, throat, or groin. Again, not feasible unless you've rehearsed and planned this over the course of years. With training you know every stab or slash can be followed by ten, so a trade is a realistic scenario to survive, and again, must become instinctive to be successful in this scenario.

  • @greatestever7623
    @greatestever7623 17 днів тому +1

    everybody has a plan but real situation is another world

  • @xilefmoon
    @xilefmoon 18 днів тому +1

    Just bad

    • @Al-Ex-North-Star
      @Al-Ex-North-Star 16 днів тому +1

      Will you post a better one in your channel?

    • @xilefmoon
      @xilefmoon 16 днів тому

      @@Al-Ex-North-Star no but saying there is nothing vital on you back is ignorant