I'm a boxer and have been in over 20 street fights. The shoulder roll is the BEST for haymaker 100% because u dont know if its gunna be a looping right or a straight right with good technique. Plus it can be done REALLY quick with little effort, then come back with a straight right. Done this a BUNCH of times. Not a wanna be internet warrior either.
S2 Strategic Defense yes even when I'm fatigued in sparring, gassed, slow and can't hardly move anymore I can still deflect 80% of the rights with the tiniest effort or movement as long as your chin is tucked behind your shoulder. So even someone who hasnt aquired the movement memory and is slow and sloppy with it can still pull it off. You dont need to be mayweather contrary to popular belief by boxing casuals.
Tyrell Johnson lol thats a very good question. No it wont. I didn't even take into consideration a southpaw fighter. You would have to take a small step with your back foot backward (very small quick step) and bend at the waist foward to duck under it all in one movement not 2.
@@Noname-lk2ol Hello im from Houston and over here everyone thats fights leans back or "weaves" i dont know anyways to defend against this i do know someways but i dont think thier much effective or useful for me if you have any tips to fight back against weaving please do lmk asap
Another simple but effective counter for a wild haymaker is a step in jab the moment you see that arm swinging backwards. It'll open up a whole list of combos afterwards... That being said, I really like that clinch headbutt. I'll have to remember that one.
Outside block 360defense.... Case closed. Or lean back like he says at first... A haymaker is the *EASIEST* punch to block. The *EASIEST* No one starts with that. The real deal is a well executed straight punch. You wanna stop that punch midway with your antagonistic hands palm. *If he throws straight right, you stop it with your left palm and hit him with your right straight, if he throws left straight, you stop that fist with right hand palm and simultaneously hit him with the right straight.* Watch out for punches in bunches...keep blocking until you connect a good counter punch and then just keep throwing. Until he is down.. Fighting is a timing and distance control game... That's it... Do an hour of shadowboxing, an hour of heavy bag to increase your speed and power and stamina... And play an hour of Counter strike 1.6 at expert difficulty, easy??? Play it against multiple bots, there is ALWAYS room for improvement.
More than half of those you completely leave yourself open for a left hook lol. Techniques like that That are based on a one strike attack are useless unless youre living in a Roadhouse movie. If you're extremely lucky and the laziest person ever tries to throw one punch at you with no follow through, sure. But even an untrained person Is more likely going to be flailing wild punches fast. So not anticipating that other hand is a problem. If you don't know he'd movement or how to roll punches then use a block you would see in muay thai for blocking a head kick. How do you withhold your fist up to your head in boxing, But extend the hand back more, curling your arm, With your elbow almost pointing at him. This will cover your head with your upper arm and forearm and hand, tight. Will help you absorb the blow, And more importantly keeps your right hand free to counter or block that follow up left hand punch. For bare knuckle that's the best way to block punches If you're not using head movement or rolling under punches
It clearly states" Defense against a haymaker".. which means the left hook isn't even a thing... which negates your perspective which sounds more like a MMA match than a street brawl. Thanks
hmm ...wouldn't wanna cop an overhand right from Vader, not with those steel gloves. You might be able to slip and land a liver shot, not sure if his armour, awesome as it is, covers his sides. Then again, think I'd back The Empire over the pathetic Rebellion, even tho in real life am an anarchist.
If there is distance between two fighters, the one throwing the haymakers will step forward with it. Just go low and trip them with a leg sweep. Simple effective.
It's my opinion that the open spear and stop hit is superior to the rest of them. It can effectively counter a diversity of attacks apart from the haymaker, including but not limited to linear punches, chokes, bear hugs and takedowns. Furthermore, it can work from various angles.
Low leg kick to break their momentum and balance or shoulder roll..The rest of these techniques will not be effective due to speed and power involved in a haymaker. Not to mention the angle can be very awkward. No way your catching that arm ahead of time.
With boxing and other combat situations, You should be focused on what parts of their body moves to minimize your reaction time and make it faster because you’ll see a punch coming far before it lands. distance management and reaction time goes hand in hand. A lot of people will be wildly punching, but remember that they only have two arms and so do you. Anyways, I’d say that there are three places in which you can strike a person on the arms in a combat scenario from a punch and you can do that in a number of ways by using blocks coming from a guard and strikes, and the three places would have to be the fists, the forearms, and the upper arms (triceps and biceps). (However this is a defense against straight punches, not haymakers). When you see wild punches coming at you, you could do a number of things since they cannot kick while doing their punching. Weaken the core with a kick to the solar plexus or groin to bend the person downwards to help you work a technique or finish the fight, or use modern boxing guards/panantukan counters against wild punches and open the centerline for strikes and takedowns or work an angle if you choose to use the upper body (fists) to attack them depending on the punch type. With distance management, you know the distance In which your reflexes will actually see the punch coming and be ready to stop it using the training you’ve done to do that. People can actually throw punches out really far. To see this, just extend your arm out to its maximum distance, then push the scapula forward, then twist the hips and lean forward and you’ll see your maximum punching distance, doesn’t matter if it’s a haymaker, Jab, or cross. You can control the distance and respond. A good base won’t be weakened while controlling distance and stopping punches and you won’t get thrown over, if you do, it’s rolling techniques from there which should be effective and leave the other person either unconscious, or with broken limbs and torn ligaments. BJJ fighters are good at rolling, I’d recommend you learn BJJ if you live in a bad neighborhood as well. Now, go learn and go spar!
That is a situational and circumstantial decision. Sometimes you are turned to the side, sometimes elbowing his face is not the right answer.....but certainly if that opportunity is there, consider it!
In one of my fights, the guy was throwing constant haymakers and I did a basic front snap kick to his nose and that ended it. Also, with the front push kick technique, if you hit with your heel or the ball of your foot on their sternum you can end the fight.
First two are great and proven push kick works and evade counter works,other 3 are bullshit only work on bums who can’t fight,you have to look at it that if it’s a street fight you don’t know if that guy is a boxer which means hands are fast believe me there going to throw that punch super quick,if you don’t move away or close the gap with guard up to protect your face your going asleep,should been spear elbow Muay Thai number one protects face and smash that elbow into there nose and can go into clinch knees elbows sweeps takedowns,also got wrestling takedowns duck underneath,if you are martial artist sidekick or blitz,
S2 Strategic Defense no good video you know what your talking about,I do Muay Thai karate and judo loads techniques I could go through,but when it comes to self defence got to look at it that bloke might be a boxer punches aren’t going to be sloppy and slow going to be very quick,and if your not martial artist them last 3 techniques hands not protecting your face like yours wasn’t if he’s quick boom that’s a knockdown then followed by kicks to the head,just feel if won’t to go for the close the gap techniques duck under wrestling ones are more suitable,or spear elbow hands protecting your face harder they throw that punch more elbow smash nose in,
If he's a boxer he will not attack you in such a moronic, telegraphed way. Haymaker/caveman strike is the default weapon of the incompetent and/or the unbelievably drunk. Almost anything but standing there motionless will work. Even old fashioned karate blocking and countering will work on a haymaker.
Linus Verclyte It's a fool's mistake to say things like "if he's a _____ he will not do ______" Go spend time in a rough bar and watch a few fights a night or go watch actual videos of real fights... The haymaker is the most common punch thrown deapite background or training. Reality and a ring/octagon/mat/dojo aren't the same thing. The rear hand overhand and the haymaker are 90% of the first punches ever thrown.
S2 Strategic Defense I don’t agree with that haymaker is most used punch in a street fight purely because 90% people in street fights can’t throw a punch don’t know how to fight so they go for big knockout one hope for the best,so your video is spot on,but there is no way a boxer is that sloppy and throws just a haymaker,I guarantee you jab first punch followed by a cross because straight down the pipe,got different kind off punches overhand comes over the top got back hand hook sneakes past guard that’s why if haven’t got hands protecting face back hand hook sneak in all the time that’s a ko,but there is so many easy ways to take out even a boxer in street fight,
Damn, that headbutt scared me! (kept looking like you were going to accidentally smash him in the face!) lol One that I do is come in real fast to meet his momentum and throw a front upward elbow under his chin (while at the same time forming a "Rampage" block on that side.) I sink into a good strong stance to brace for any impact during the collision.
PUN INTENDED!!!!!! IF JJ WAS IN A CELL WITH A HARD CORE STREET FIGHTER IN AN EPISODE JJ BECOMES A MAN JJ WOULD SAVE HIS OWN NECK AND DELETED A LOT OF HASSLES IF HE PROPERLY HEAD BUTTED THAT BIG GOON TRYING TO INTIMIDATE HIM 😆LOL 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Haymaker defence. Right leg slightly forward and left slightly back. As the punch comes in step in with your left leg and simultaneously raise your left elbow in front of your face with the left hand over the left ear. The right elbow is also raised high with the right hand underneath the left tricep. The aim is for his face to make contact with your left elbow. Once in close the left hand can grab his shoulder where you can then deliver right elbow strikes or the head butt. By stepping in you've shortened the distance to target and the punch goes around the back of you. Once committed he can't change anything- hope this makes sense.
4 is great 5 will work little more dangerous in a fight BTW I'm almost 50 and due to a LOT of ignorant desisions I have had well over 200 actual street fights . Honestly though martial arts is great but dangerous as well. It gives ppl false impression they can fight when they are completely unprepared to face a grown adult intent on hurting them . A street fight is about hurting the other person as badly and as fast as possible period . Martial arts doesn't prepare you for that on any level . Martial arts is about defending yourself fighting is about destroying an opponent. Not only are they 2 completely different mind sets believe it or not they are completely different skill sets as well . And yes I am very well trained . Dabble in BJJ just to stay current . 8 years kempo 6 years ninjitsu 6 years Wing Chun and a little of this and a little of that along the way .
As a bouncer in my younger days I knew most rowdy drunks are right-handed. I’d usually give them two shots and tell them that’s it. If they throw a third, my left hand goes under the armpit quickly, followed by a downward straight punch to the bridge of the nose. Fight over. I’ve had law enforcement ask me how many times I hit a guy because they’re sewing his nose back on before he goes to jail. I’d tell them I only hit him once and didn’t want to. I’d also watch guys when they’d sit down. What hand do they use to pull out a barstool, what hand do they drink with, what hand do they use with their phone, how do they shoot pool, sign a tab, etc. Know your opponent. I never wanted to hit somebody, but what you want and what you get are two entirely different things. Good video!
I’m that first drill your punch is likely to be a glancing blow, and will not take him out. His reaction will be to immediately throw his left punch, then close the distance and either pummel or clinch
1& 2 are great. 3 is gonna get you headlocked, clinched or hit in the back of the head 4 same as 3 5 is just a plum which is great, but i dont think id risk hitting the hardest part of his head with the hardest part of my head... Then again..the guy is throwing a haymaker in a fight, chances are he has no idea what he is doing anyways.
And if you try to block first and then hit the bicep after, you're probably going to eat a bunch of follow up shots before your elbow can land. People are likely going to throw a flurry of haymakers, not just one.
Any line you defend will always open another. But a haymaker is a committed punch with weight emphasized on the front foot which prevents any real attack from the other side. And if they do launch it.. it usually hits the back, shoulder area. It's a trade off.
panagranit pana Not really. There's a way to do a headbutt properly. If you know that, then at worst it'll daze you a bit but it'll crush the other guy. It's a worthy trade off.
The 2 ways I deal with a hay maker is to first Lift my arm up in the air to the haymaker while coming in low and elbowing the liver , You'll either make you opponent go down or open them up for Head kicks And punches . My second way is to quickly come in with a clinch that automatically Blocks the haymaker then Knee my opponent to the Ribs or face as Much as I wish , By doing this you can easily knock out your opponent or Severely Damage the person Making it instantly easier to knock them out. After the clinch I usually go for Head Kicks Punches and sweeps. Use the clinch and Knee Strikes with caution you can break ribs cause breathing problems to them or kill somebody.
What's the difference between a haymaker and a right hook? If they are the same punch, could one defend against it by ducking (bobbing and weaving) like Mike Tyson did against Tillis?
Plenty of options out their. I tend to stay away from ducking/rolling under hatlymakers though. More often than not there's a lot of forward movement from the attacker which is closing the gap between us. So if you time it right you're sitting with your face down and head in range for them to grab it and start kneeling you in the face.
Disagree. There is PLENTY of actual video and description of pretty much all of these from absolutely untrained people. You don't need a "4th degree black belt" in anything to: 1) Step Backwards and the Counter Punch 2) Put your leg in between you and the other person such as push kick 3) Elbow to Bicep takes about 30min to learn how to do it, and about a good hour of focus to be able to consistently do it 4) Zero training required to jam someone up 5) Get close enough and headbutt. Nothing scientific about it,,, see pretty much ALL of these in bar fights regularly.
Why you chose to elbow his bicep when you can direct to his face which much more fatal? In that way, the agressor could execute counter left hook which much more fatal than what you do.
For several reasons: 1. To use the elbow you have to be a bit closer 2. To chamber and use the elbow you have to first deal with the incoming punch 3. The elbow to bicep line works better from the natural defense position where a person covers their head 4. The technique is actually based on using a blade rather than the elbow 5. Teaches students to use defense to offense 6. Does a better job at preventing a takedown 7. Sets up the rearward elbow which is FAR more devastating than a frontal elbow I could keep going but that should give some idea.
Often in street fights, people quickly follow a looping right with a looping left (or vise versa). A lot of these techniques seem to leave you open, without defense, when another left (in the videos case) comes at you. In that instance closing the distance similar to example 5 seems most optimal. Would you agree? Would you have another strategy for said conditions?
Cake, thanks for the comment. The earlier techniques relied on distance and I think I made mention of that. The later stuff like the head butt were in closer. If you're in close and the punch is coming your way...110% I agree that stepping inward is the better option. However, if you are at the extent of "fighting measure," that is the place to use the distance to your advantage by stepping out a bit, or using the reach of you leg.
Keep in mind, what works in slow motion in the gym will NOT work in a real fight when the punches are coming at you three or more per second. You have to use a bigger (longer?) weapon against an arm punch. In Shotokan karate, a split-second front kick to the bladder, solar plexus or face is longer than the attacker's arm. As soon as you see the attacker winding up to start punching - kick him and keep kicking him. When he's hurt and slower then punch the hell out of him. The instructor in this video looks to have heavy, slow leg kicks. He needs to practice more.
Keep in kind that works at full speed doesn't translate to camera. And the speed you'd execute in reality is not the speed you'd use to demonstrate or explain. That being said, you'd be far surprised and how quick the instructor kicks with his long history in arts such as Savate and Muay Thai. Lastly, you'd never make kicking motions against an aggressor with full.foward intent as with a haymaker punch; you'd be stuffed on range and complete off balance while the aggressor cold clocks you square to the nose. We see this on surveillance and bystander camera footage from bar fights literally thousands of times. Kicking in the real world is not like kicking dojo.
I stand corrected and bow to your experience in savate and muay thai. My only possible defense is that in Japanese and Okinawan karate there are two types of front kicks - a front snap kick and a front thrust kick. Many UA-cam videos show them using such a fast front kick almost like a jab or range finder. It's the same in UFC MMA fights. Not all kicks are intended as fight stoppers. Some are just judging your opponent's reaction and some to off-balance them momentarily. But as you point out, they better be fast cause MMA fights do show a lot of jammed or caught kicks.
@@STBRetired1 don't bow to anyone my friend... experiences are just things to share and learn from. That being said, you mentioned MMA/UFC... you see how many times someone tries to kick the opponent and in return they get knocked out, taken down, lose balance, etc etc. Now take it past that and into reality where you often times don't even see the fight coming on, don't know if it is one person or 5 people you are against, often in confined spaces like a bar room etc etc.... the LAST thing you want to do is get your feet off the ground for a kick until you are set and prepared and the moment is appropriate.
I don't think some of the techniques work under realistic conditions. Can you put on headgear, gloves, and pads and try it at full speed for another video?
I do that in our classes almost every evening, and am perfectly content in KNOWING they are realistic. How about YOU put the gear on, and start testing to see what you can do. That is where the growth will happen.
Sachin Joseph low leg kicks , you just lift you leg and let them kick shin bone. Dont lift too high though. If its a thigh kick you should be able to grab that fairly easily but when grabbing make sure you're pushing them down with a straight push to the chest . If you just grab it and dont follow up you might eat a punch
What about kicking the leg on that push kick? Seem like it would be a quicker strike that the guy wouldn't see coming. Also, could do quite some damage with the momentum, using the guys aggression against him. A nice heel kick in that knee thigh area
The thing to understand about the Wild Haymaker is that it gets that name for being the double-edged sword of punches. While it delivers the most power among punches; the Wild Haymaker also leaves one wide open for a counterstrike and is highly predictable to counter for more skilled fighters; two big reasons why you don't want to deploy a Wild Haymaker carelessly.
I like how he shows a pull counter first like it's nothing, anyone who box knows how hard it can be to read the punch and pull just enough to stay in striking distance. Get it wrong u get smashed off balance.... Not good
#3 would never ever work in real life. It amazes me that people still practice techniques today that have never effectively been used in 20 + years of real live mixed martial arts. In real life you don't have time to get both arms over to the guys striking arm while positioning your elbow at a specific exact point on their arm, note they were doing this slo mo AND the defender knew what shot was coming. Even if this miraculously worked (even though I've never seen it in 20 years of watching MMA and a few years of TKD sparring) you'd be wide open for a left hook. Funny how the next video on auto play is "nerve strikes that work" how the fuck did I get here?
I feel like that explaining guy is even more haymaker than the second guy) And guys, just block counter, shoulder roll counter, if you can slip and counter it is that simple
Long story short some friends got jumped, someone sent a haymaker my way, boom L block and i was like "woah thanks for teaching me a little shaolin kempo mrs castromanner" 10+ years later
I like to lower my level and blast double as they come in. Worked for me several times already. It helps I'm already short and was an all American college wrestler
Use the top of your head to the front of their face... not face to face. Reduces the risk to yourself exponentially while increasing the damage to the target.
The problem with haymakers is that they come out of nowhere when employed at close range. Especially when they attacker is smaller than you are, his back shoulder can be obscured by the head. So any technique you use stands or falls with you anticipating it.
First 1was best step away and back in with a right cross the other s mmmm maybe if ur aponent was tired or stupid but in a real fight it's not that easy
Pat Mcdonagh Thanks for comment. I always love when people say things like "in a real fight". Let's take a moment to talk about a "real fight" without talking about personal experience. We are lucky enough these days to have thousands of hours of footage of "real fights" we can review, as well as the closest thing to a "real fight" in a controlled manner via mixed martial arts/UFC. Over and over and over again we see footage of "real fights" from bars, schools, parking lots etc and see the counter right hand literally drop people to the floor. There is currently a viral video on social media of a guy who swings at a bouncer/doorman who literally leans back and counters with the right straight and lays the dude out on the pavement. We can watch dozens of fights from UFC matches where we see knock out after knockout using the same exact technique. Is it hard in "real life?" Well, it's a fight. Damn right it's hard. Any fight is difficult. That's why we train.
I'm a boxer and have been in over 20 street fights. The shoulder roll is the BEST for haymaker 100% because u dont know if its gunna be a looping right or a straight right with good technique. Plus it can be done REALLY quick with little effort, then come back with a straight right. Done this a BUNCH of times. Not a wanna be internet warrior either.
I love the shoulder roll, quick and almost always allows me to counter quickly! Thanks for the input!
S2 Strategic Defense yes even when I'm fatigued in sparring, gassed, slow and can't hardly move anymore I can still deflect 80% of the rights with the tiniest effort or movement as long as your chin is tucked behind your shoulder. So even someone who hasnt aquired the movement memory and is slow and sloppy with it can still pull it off. You dont need to be mayweather contrary to popular belief by boxing casuals.
Tyrell Johnson lol thats a very good question. No it wont. I didn't even take into consideration a southpaw fighter. You would have to take a small step with your back foot backward (very small quick step) and bend at the waist foward to duck under it all in one movement not 2.
No name I love the shoulder roll, even with a small movement, it’ll help me clear a gap or create a striking angle and that’ll be it for them.
@@Noname-lk2ol Hello im from Houston and over here everyone thats fights leans back or "weaves" i dont know anyways to defend against this i do know someways but i dont think thier much effective or useful for me if you have any tips to fight back against weaving please do lmk asap
Another simple but effective counter for a wild haymaker is a step in jab the moment you see that arm swinging backwards. It'll open up a whole list of combos afterwards...
That being said, I really like that clinch headbutt. I'll have to remember that one.
Lots of good ones out there! Happy Headbutting!
The kicks are nice (don't forget to tell your opponent not catch your kicking foot though)
Outside block 360defense.... Case closed. Or lean back like he says at first... A haymaker is the *EASIEST* punch to block. The *EASIEST*
No one starts with that.
The real deal is a well executed straight punch. You wanna stop that punch midway with your antagonistic hands palm.
*If he throws straight right, you stop it with your left palm and hit him with your right straight, if he throws left straight, you stop that fist with right hand palm and simultaneously hit him with the right straight.*
Watch out for punches in bunches...keep blocking until you connect a good counter punch and then just keep throwing. Until he is down..
Fighting is a timing and distance control game... That's it... Do an hour of shadowboxing, an hour of heavy bag to increase your speed and power and stamina...
And play an hour of Counter strike 1.6 at expert difficulty, easy??? Play it against multiple bots, there is ALWAYS room for improvement.
More than half of those you completely leave yourself open for a left hook lol. Techniques like that That are based on a one strike attack are useless unless youre living in a Roadhouse movie. If you're extremely lucky and the laziest person ever tries to throw one punch at you with no follow through, sure. But even an untrained person Is more likely going to be flailing wild punches fast. So not anticipating that other hand is a problem. If you don't know he'd movement or how to roll punches then use a block you would see in muay thai for blocking a head kick. How do you withhold your fist up to your head in boxing, But extend the hand back more, curling your arm, With your elbow almost pointing at him. This will cover your head with your upper arm and forearm and hand, tight. Will help you absorb the blow, And more importantly keeps your right hand free to counter or block that follow up left hand punch. For bare knuckle that's the best way to block punches If you're not using head movement or rolling under punches
It clearly states" Defense against a haymaker".. which means the left hook isn't even a thing... which negates your perspective which sounds more like a MMA match than a street brawl. Thanks
I know number 4 &5 actually works I've personally tried it a few times in a real fight !
I didnt know that Lando Carlissian was into Martial Arts
IMMEDIATELY, the FIRST thing I thought, at the start of the video. LOL
Lol I thought this was ji jitsu
hmm ...wouldn't wanna cop an overhand right from Vader, not with those steel gloves. You might be able to slip and land a liver shot, not sure if his armour, awesome as it is, covers his sides. Then again, think I'd back The Empire over the pathetic Rebellion, even tho in real life am an anarchist.
He was ‘Forced’ into it.
I was like the fuck i know this from...lol thank you
How did you not hit him with that headbutt? It was super close
IKR I was like whaaaaaa?? he looked like he felt it too
He wasnt trying to this is practice
Pretty good. (Your sound effects in between techniques are WAY too loud.)
If there is distance between two fighters, the one throwing the haymakers will step forward with it.
Just go low and trip them with a leg sweep.
Simple effective.
Not simple. Less effective. Most haymakers are cheap shots or too quick to sweep kick lol it’s not even practical unless ur trained lol
Cant use it in boxing but gud tip👍
Dental implants are expensive
It's my opinion that the open spear and stop hit is superior to the rest of them. It can effectively counter a diversity of attacks apart from the haymaker, including but not limited to linear punches, chokes, bear hugs and takedowns. Furthermore, it can work from various angles.
Low leg kick to break their momentum and balance or shoulder roll..The rest of these techniques will not be effective due to speed and power involved in a haymaker. Not to mention the angle can be very awkward. No way your catching that arm ahead of time.
Or just step out of the way.
With boxing and other combat situations, You should be focused on what parts of their body moves to minimize your reaction time and make it faster because you’ll see a punch coming far before it lands. distance management and reaction time goes hand in hand. A lot of people will be wildly punching, but remember that they only have two arms and so do you. Anyways, I’d say that there are three places in which you can strike a person on the arms in a combat scenario from a punch and you can do that in a number of ways by using blocks coming from a guard and strikes, and the three places would have to be the fists, the forearms, and the upper arms (triceps and biceps). (However this is a defense against straight punches, not haymakers). When you see wild punches coming at you, you could do a number of things since they cannot kick while doing their punching. Weaken the core with a kick to the solar plexus or groin to bend the person downwards to help you work a technique or finish the fight, or use modern boxing guards/panantukan counters against wild punches and open the centerline for strikes and takedowns or work an angle if you choose to use the upper body (fists) to attack them depending on the punch type. With distance management, you know the distance In which your reflexes will actually see the punch coming and be ready to stop it using the training you’ve done to do that. People can actually throw punches out really far. To see this, just extend your arm out to its maximum distance, then push the scapula forward, then twist the hips and lean forward and you’ll see your maximum punching distance, doesn’t matter if it’s a haymaker, Jab, or cross. You can control the distance and respond. A good base won’t be weakened while controlling distance and stopping punches and you won’t get thrown over, if you do, it’s rolling techniques from there which should be effective and leave the other person either unconscious, or with broken limbs and torn ligaments. BJJ fighters are good at rolling, I’d recommend you learn BJJ if you live in a bad neighborhood as well. Now, go learn and go spar!
better elbow him right in the jaw/nose, why bicep when face is wide open?
That is a situational and circumstantial decision. Sometimes you are turned to the side, sometimes elbowing his face is not the right answer.....but certainly if that opportunity is there, consider it!
I seem some one do number 2 in a fight and the person who done the Haymaker cought the kick and buried him
Shaggy is teaching martial arts haha
Just do option 1 with a step back or duck under and unleash manic aggression.
Ha! I like that bro!!! Unleash Manic Aggression....should be on a T Shirt!
1. Distract enemy
2.enemy will perform a wild haymaker
3. Dislocate jaw
4. Discombobulate
Ok Sherlock Holmes
Yeah that's real
Thanks!
Step 1: Go to the nearest boxing gym amd learn how to trow a punch.
@John Constantine Gianan ok English teacher.
In one of my fights, the guy was throwing constant haymakers and I did a basic front snap kick to his nose and that ended it. Also, with the front push kick technique, if you hit with your heel or the ball of your foot on their sternum you can end the fight.
First two are great and proven push kick works and evade counter works,other 3 are bullshit only work on bums who can’t fight,you have to look at it that if it’s a street fight you don’t know if that guy is a boxer which means hands are fast believe me there going to throw that punch super quick,if you don’t move away or close the gap with guard up to protect your face your going asleep,should been spear elbow Muay Thai number one protects face and smash that elbow into there nose and can go into clinch knees elbows sweeps takedowns,also got wrestling takedowns duck underneath,if you are martial artist sidekick or blitz,
I wouldn't say one is better than another. They have all worked under the right circumstances.
S2 Strategic Defense no good video you know what your talking about,I do Muay Thai karate and judo loads techniques I could go through,but when it comes to self defence got to look at it that bloke might be a boxer punches aren’t going to be sloppy and slow going to be very quick,and if your not martial artist them last 3 techniques hands not protecting your face like yours wasn’t if he’s quick boom that’s a knockdown then followed by kicks to the head,just feel if won’t to go for the close the gap techniques duck under wrestling ones are more suitable,or spear elbow hands protecting your face harder they throw that punch more elbow smash nose in,
If he's a boxer he will not attack you in such a moronic, telegraphed way. Haymaker/caveman strike is the default weapon of the incompetent and/or the unbelievably drunk. Almost anything but standing there motionless will work. Even old fashioned karate blocking and countering will work on a haymaker.
Linus Verclyte It's a fool's mistake to say things like "if he's a _____ he will not do ______" Go spend time in a rough bar and watch a few fights a night or go watch actual videos of real fights... The haymaker is the most common punch thrown deapite background or training. Reality and a ring/octagon/mat/dojo aren't the same thing. The rear hand overhand and the haymaker are 90% of the first punches ever thrown.
S2 Strategic Defense I don’t agree with that haymaker is most used punch in a street fight purely because 90% people in street fights can’t throw a punch don’t know how to fight so they go for big knockout one hope for the best,so your video is spot on,but there is no way a boxer is that sloppy and throws just a haymaker,I guarantee you jab first punch followed by a cross because straight down the pipe,got different kind off punches overhand comes over the top got back hand hook sneakes past guard that’s why if haven’t got hands protecting face back hand hook sneak in all the time that’s a ko,but there is so many easy ways to take out even a boxer in street fight,
Damn, that headbutt scared me! (kept looking like you were going to accidentally smash him in the face!) lol
One that I do is come in real fast to meet his momentum and throw a front upward elbow under his chin (while at the same time forming a "Rampage" block on that side.) I sink into a good strong stance to brace for any impact during the collision.
PUN INTENDED!!!!!! IF JJ WAS IN A CELL WITH A HARD CORE STREET FIGHTER IN AN EPISODE JJ BECOMES A MAN JJ WOULD SAVE HIS OWN NECK AND DELETED A LOT OF HASSLES IF HE PROPERLY HEAD BUTTED THAT BIG GOON TRYING TO INTIMIDATE HIM 😆LOL 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Haymaker defence. Right leg slightly forward and left slightly back. As the punch comes in step in with your left leg and simultaneously raise your left elbow in front of your face with the left hand over the left ear. The right elbow is also raised high with the right hand underneath the left tricep. The aim is for his face to make contact with your left elbow. Once in close the left hand can grab his shoulder where you can then deliver right elbow strikes or the head butt. By stepping in you've shortened the distance to target and the punch goes around the back of you. Once committed he can't change anything- hope this makes sense.
Any type of stepping in and blocking is not effective.. Unless your reflex is like a fly and see the strike in slow motion 😂
About the Open Spear method, it's actually can be used with elbow pointing the opponent's face
4 is great 5 will work little more dangerous in a fight BTW I'm almost 50 and due to a LOT of ignorant desisions I have had well over 200 actual street fights . Honestly though martial arts is great but dangerous as well. It gives ppl false impression they can fight when they are completely unprepared to face a grown adult intent on hurting them . A street fight is about hurting the other person as badly and as fast as possible period . Martial arts doesn't prepare you for that on any level . Martial arts is about defending yourself fighting is about destroying an opponent. Not only are they 2 completely different mind sets believe it or not they are completely different skill sets as well . And yes I am very well trained . Dabble in BJJ just to stay current . 8 years kempo 6 years ninjitsu 6 years Wing Chun and a little of this and a little of that along the way .
Thank you
As a bouncer in my younger days I knew most rowdy drunks are right-handed. I’d usually give them two shots and tell them that’s it. If they throw a third, my left hand goes under the armpit quickly, followed by a downward straight punch to the bridge of the nose. Fight over. I’ve had law enforcement ask me how many times I hit a guy because they’re sewing his nose back on before he goes to jail. I’d tell them I only hit him once and didn’t want to. I’d also watch guys when they’d sit down. What hand do they use to pull out a barstool, what hand do they drink with, what hand do they use with their phone, how do they shoot pool, sign a tab, etc. Know your opponent. I never wanted to hit somebody, but what you want and what you get are two entirely different things. Good video!
I’m that first drill your punch is likely to be a glancing blow, and will not take him out. His reaction will be to immediately throw his left punch, then close the distance and either pummel or clinch
I like the elbow to biecept. Also it gives you a good close set up for a hip toss.
And leaves you clean open for a left hook
1& 2 are great.
3 is gonna get you headlocked, clinched or hit in the back of the head
4 same as 3
5 is just a plum which is great, but i dont think id risk hitting the hardest part of his head with the hardest part of my head...
Then again..the guy is throwing a haymaker in a fight, chances are he has no idea what he is doing anyways.
With that kick you’re more likely to end up on your ass than anything else. Never kick above the groin
Elbow in bicep? He won’t even feel it and now you’re in so close that he’ll grab around your neck with the other arm
Instead of kicking the guy in the stomach, why not kick him in the groin, that other stuff, if you mess up, your gonna get a beating
Damn man that head butt was connecting. I don’t even know how u did that without knocking him out.
Duck. Block. Counter. Step back. weave. Slip. Cover.
You can’t just stop a haymaker and accurately hit their bicep unless you’re batman
And if you try to block first and then hit the bicep after, you're probably going to eat a bunch of follow up shots before your elbow can land. People are likely going to throw a flurry of haymakers, not just one.
For technique 4 finish with an upward elbow to the chin / jaw area.
Head butt. You’re as likely to get hurt as he is.
Elbow destruction? you left yourself open on your right side for an attack from his left...completely open.
Any line you defend will always open another. But a haymaker is a committed punch with weight emphasized on the front foot which prevents any real attack from the other side. And if they do launch it.. it usually hits the back, shoulder area. It's a trade off.
How about duck + D'Amato shift
head butt could knock the defender out as well .... dubious at best.... last desperation trick only...
panagranit pana Not really. There's a way to do a headbutt properly. If you know that, then at worst it'll daze you a bit but it'll crush the other guy. It's a worthy trade off.
Worthy, as long as you don't hit their forehead on the way in; that would knock the defender out as well.
You aim the front of your dome(tuck your chin)to their face. And yes, you can actually jab with the headbutt. Burmese kick boxers do it frequently.
Obcourse after headbut you need a follow up to knock him out
The 2 ways I deal with a hay maker is to first Lift my arm up in the air to the haymaker while coming in low and elbowing the liver , You'll either make you opponent go down or open them up for Head kicks And punches . My second way is to quickly come in with a clinch that automatically Blocks the haymaker then Knee my opponent to the Ribs or face as Much as I wish , By doing this you can easily knock out your opponent or Severely Damage the person Making it instantly easier to knock them out. After the clinch I usually go for Head Kicks Punches and sweeps. Use the clinch and Knee Strikes with caution you can break ribs cause breathing problems to them or kill somebody.
The music sound is an irritant but thank you
What's the difference between a haymaker and a right hook? If they are the same punch, could one defend against it by ducking (bobbing and weaving) like Mike Tyson did against Tillis?
The haymaker is a wider elipse line that starts from a longer range, the hook is done in tight angle in close proximity. Bug difference
If it’s a street fight haymakers just swing pretty much windmilling I’m trying to figure out how to work with those kinda people
People start windmilling at first then 3 sec later they are out wind and mill. Open the distance and make them change angles.
Why not roll under the punch and deliver a counter liver or solar plexus punch in the same rolling under motion
Plenty of options out their. I tend to stay away from ducking/rolling under hatlymakers though. More often than not there's a lot of forward movement from the attacker which is closing the gap between us. So if you time it right you're sitting with your face down and head in range for them to grab it and start kneeling you in the face.
I subbed immediately. I've never seen that first teqnique. Excellent video. Cheers from Australia 🙂👍👍👍
Thank you!!
I think my right earphone not working
me trying to figure out how to beat sett
If you had classes near me i'd be there like yesterday, thanks for the vid.
In generally to talk by u urs most
Why you spend your time with defending moves when you got a gun with you?
Because self defense isn't limited to one tool, and 99% of the encounters most people will face will not be justified use of lethal force.
When you get into a fight if your not at least a 4th degree black belt all this stuff is pretty much useless!
Disagree. There is PLENTY of actual video and description of pretty much all of these from absolutely untrained people. You don't need a "4th degree black belt" in anything to: 1) Step Backwards and the Counter Punch 2) Put your leg in between you and the other person such as push kick 3) Elbow to Bicep takes about 30min to learn how to do it, and about a good hour of focus to be able to consistently do it 4) Zero training required to jam someone up 5) Get close enough and headbutt. Nothing scientific about it,,, see pretty much ALL of these in bar fights regularly.
Why you chose to elbow his bicep when you can direct to his face which much more fatal? In that way, the agressor could execute counter left hook which much more fatal than what you do.
For several reasons:
1. To use the elbow you have to be a bit closer
2. To chamber and use the elbow you have to first deal with the incoming punch
3. The elbow to bicep line works better from the natural defense position where a person covers their head
4. The technique is actually based on using a blade rather than the elbow
5. Teaches students to use defense to offense
6. Does a better job at preventing a takedown
7. Sets up the rearward elbow which is FAR more devastating than a frontal elbow
I could keep going but that should give some idea.
@@S2StrategicDefense number 4 is the practical justification incomes of actual application, and number 5 is the real purpose of this video tutorial.
Nobody wins in a headbutt
It's really interesting to actually see these moves in an actual street fight.
My right ear feels left out
Awesome 👍👍👌👌👊👊🥊🥊🙏🙏
If someone is to tall and than
i dont understand why u need the time to counter just grab pepper spray and then run off
but great video
just be a boxer 😀😀😀😀😀
5 ways can't be remembered when adrenaline dump hits
Train them and anyone can remember them. Or just pick one and train that
I think i seen technique #4 in Wing Chun.
number five is very very goooooood hhhhhhhh
Bensalah Youcef My favorite
headbutt and the push kick those 2 are effective
sabah sayyed They're all "field tested" and work well. ;)
S2 Strategic Defense in the first 3 techniques i dont know if the opponent is orthodox or a southpaw, i'll better use this two.
sabah sayyed Find the one's ya like my friend... That's the ticket. Different option for different people.
will try it my friend first i've to find a thug who wants to mess with me...search is on.
Step back is proven effective in a street fight or boxing
Often in street fights, people quickly follow a looping right with a looping left (or vise versa). A lot of these techniques seem to leave you open, without defense, when another left (in the videos case) comes at you. In that instance closing the distance similar to example 5 seems most optimal. Would you agree? Would you have another strategy for said conditions?
Cake, thanks for the comment. The earlier techniques relied on distance and I think I made mention of that. The later stuff like the head butt were in closer. If you're in close and the punch is coming your way...110% I agree that stepping inward is the better option. However, if you are at the extent of "fighting measure," that is the place to use the distance to your advantage by stepping out a bit, or using the reach of you leg.
i know im late to the party, but if you know how to wrestle, changing levels and shooting your double leg is the tried and "classic" MMA solution.
Takedowns take a lil extra training..but very valid if you know em. Just don't get your face punted by the guy's buddies when you hit the floor.
@@S2StrategicDefense yes, if he's with multiple people you're force to strike
thanks buddy I like it
Sachin Joseph Very welcome!
Did enjoy this video much, particularly techniques 4 and 5. Thanks S2.
Thank you Jose! Hope you subscribe...got TONS more coming out soon
Keep in mind, what works in slow motion in the gym will NOT work in a real fight when the punches are coming at you three or more per second. You have to use a bigger (longer?) weapon against an arm punch. In Shotokan karate, a split-second front kick to the bladder, solar plexus or face is longer than the attacker's arm. As soon as you see the attacker winding up to start punching - kick him and keep kicking him. When he's hurt and slower then punch the hell out of him. The instructor in this video looks to have heavy, slow leg kicks. He needs to practice more.
Keep in kind that works at full speed doesn't translate to camera. And the speed you'd execute in reality is not the speed you'd use to demonstrate or explain.
That being said, you'd be far surprised and how quick the instructor kicks with his long history in arts such as Savate and Muay Thai.
Lastly, you'd never make kicking motions against an aggressor with full.foward intent as with a haymaker punch; you'd be stuffed on range and complete off balance while the aggressor cold clocks you square to the nose. We see this on surveillance and bystander camera footage from bar fights literally thousands of times.
Kicking in the real world is not like kicking dojo.
I stand corrected and bow to your experience in savate and muay thai. My only possible defense is that in Japanese and Okinawan karate there are two types of front kicks - a front snap kick and a front thrust kick. Many UA-cam videos show them using such a fast front kick almost like a jab or range finder. It's the same in UFC MMA fights. Not all kicks are intended as fight stoppers. Some are just judging your opponent's reaction and some to off-balance them momentarily. But as you point out, they better be fast cause MMA fights do show a lot of jammed or caught kicks.
@@STBRetired1 don't bow to anyone my friend... experiences are just things to share and learn from. That being said, you mentioned MMA/UFC... you see how many times someone tries to kick the opponent and in return they get knocked out, taken down, lose balance, etc etc. Now take it past that and into reality where you often times don't even see the fight coming on, don't know if it is one person or 5 people you are against, often in confined spaces like a bar room etc etc.... the LAST thing you want to do is get your feet off the ground for a kick until you are set and prepared and the moment is appropriate.
I don't think some of the techniques work under realistic conditions. Can you put on headgear, gloves, and pads and try it at full speed for another video?
I do that in our classes almost every evening, and am perfectly content in KNOWING they are realistic. How about YOU put the gear on, and start testing to see what you can do. That is where the growth will happen.
S2 Strategic Defense good explanition and these seem to work in u practice enough
Its effective no doubt
They most certainly work. You'd know this if you did martial arts. I like the bicep elbow strike
Noice. U got my sub for this
Very good
A newbie question - do you really throw a punch to the head in bare knuckles in a street fight without gloves?
With bad intentions.
@@S2StrategicDefense I'm referring to potential issue with knuckle break.
@@huaxzhang Make a proper fist aim for the softest parts of their face, and not the top of their head. Then follow proper structural alignment.
How i can remember in fighting time
Training and practice.
how to block leg kicks...... upload soon as possible...... Thanks
Sachin Joseph low leg kicks , you just lift you leg and let them kick shin bone. Dont lift too high though. If its a thigh kick you should be able to grab that fairly easily but when grabbing make sure you're pushing them down with a straight push to the chest . If you just grab it and dont follow up you might eat a punch
3:30 'go slomo' dude this whole video was in slomo
What about kicking the leg on that push kick? Seem like it would be a quicker strike that the guy wouldn't see coming. Also, could do quite some damage with the momentum, using the guys aggression against him. A nice heel kick in that knee thigh area
The thing to understand about the Wild Haymaker is that it gets that name for being the double-edged sword of punches. While it delivers the most power among punches; the Wild Haymaker also leaves one wide open for a counterstrike and is highly predictable to counter for more skilled fighters; two big reasons why you don't want to deploy a Wild Haymaker carelessly.
Hey its the guy who taught me how to evicerate my enemies with a karambit
That never happened
Yeah but if I had enemies they would be evicerated by my sweet secrets of the ka ram bit
you forgot the BJJ technique: lower you centre of mass and clinch him with a gable grip
I like how he shows a pull counter first like it's nothing, anyone who box knows how hard it can be to read the punch and pull just enough to stay in striking distance. Get it wrong u get smashed off balance.... Not good
#3 would never ever work in real life. It amazes me that people still practice techniques today that have never effectively been used in 20 + years of real live mixed martial arts.
In real life you don't have time to get both arms over to the guys striking arm while positioning your elbow at a specific exact point on their arm, note they were doing this slo mo AND the defender knew what shot was coming.
Even if this miraculously worked (even though I've never seen it in 20 years of watching MMA and a few years of TKD sparring) you'd be wide open for a left hook.
Funny how the next video on auto play is "nerve strikes that work" how the fuck did I get here?
number 5 is fucking crazy
Ashley Haseley That's my favorite
I feel like that explaining guy is even more haymaker than the second guy) And guys, just block counter, shoulder roll counter, if you can slip and counter it is that simple
Long story short some friends got jumped, someone sent a haymaker my way, boom L block and i was like "woah thanks for teaching me a little shaolin kempo mrs castromanner" 10+ years later
I like to lower my level and blast double as they come in. Worked for me several times already. It helps I'm already short and was an all American college wrestler
Can’t the head butt do damage to your own face/head?
Use the top of your head to the front of their face... not face to face. Reduces the risk to yourself exponentially while increasing the damage to the target.
@@S2StrategicDefense Thanks for the reply so it’s not head-to-head- it’s your head to their soft face
@@allans7281 never go face to face or head to head. This isn't a VanDamme movie.
If you can, strike the attacker(s) pre-emptively.
Sorry but ur video sound is in mute,thanks!
How do you defend the "quart of blood technique"?
It's been a long time since I've been in a figh
Last one ☝️ savage move!
The problem with haymakers is that they come out of nowhere when employed at close range. Especially when they attacker is smaller than you are, his back shoulder can be obscured by the head. So any technique you use stands or falls with you anticipating it.
as I said, and elaborated on. my comment was deleted. not a sincere practitioner this
Great video. Thank you.
First 1was best step away and back in with a right cross the other s mmmm maybe if ur aponent was tired or stupid but in a real fight it's not that easy
Pat Mcdonagh Thanks for comment. I always love when people say things like "in a real fight". Let's take a moment to talk about a "real fight" without talking about personal experience. We are lucky enough these days to have thousands of hours of footage of "real fights" we can review, as well as the closest thing to a "real fight" in a controlled manner via mixed martial arts/UFC.
Over and over and over again we see footage of "real fights" from bars, schools, parking lots etc and see the counter right hand literally drop people to the floor. There is currently a viral video on social media of a guy who swings at a bouncer/doorman who literally leans back and counters with the right straight and lays the dude out on the pavement.
We can watch dozens of fights from UFC matches where we see knock out after knockout using the same exact technique.
Is it hard in "real life?" Well, it's a fight. Damn right it's hard. Any fight is difficult. That's why we train.