TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

What Move Would Swinging An Opponent

How could you beat an opponent who rapidly swings?

Well there are about two thing you can do. Either duck and slip your way into the inside and mix it up or you have to cut off the ring and work him onto the ropes. Work your jab as you cut off the ring considering just walking into your opponent would be a stupid idea. So which ever way he moves you gotta move that way while moving slightly diagonal and toss a jab out there and maybe a 1, 2 or a straight right to back him up. You can also put these two things together as in once you get inside after slipping you way in, you can start backing him up with hooks and uppercuts and such.
Hope I helped.

Boyfriend interested in swinging, what to do?

i think it is a good indication that your relationship as you knew it is over. there is a good chance that he won't cheat on you if you stay together though. it might just be something that he is interested in doing because he wants to have sex with other people. but if he loves you he will respect your feelings. maybe he just wanted to feel you out and see if you could be interested in it also. i don't think the pleasure would come from seeing him with somebody else, it would come from you being with somebody else. but there are those stories about guys liking to see their girls with somebody different. i think that's perverted but if they can find somebody who is also interested in it then who am i to judge. the point is, you should ask him if he is just interested in it or if it is really important for him to be able to have sex with other people. if it's the latter then you should definitely find another man because he will probably harbor resentment towards you forever. it's hard to make the choice between possible loneliness without him or possible eternal unhappiness with him but it is a decision only you can make.

How do you stop a Bum Rush (stop a person swinging in flurrys but moving forward)?

Timing is everything on this one.

The best kick to use would be a front kick, or a teep. Another good kick would be a leg kick using your shin.

Keep your guard up. Using lateral movement is a great idea. If you face an opponent who can turn on a dime, remember this....

When he is turning, that is a second where he can't flurry against you. Right when he turns, time an overhand right (which should be hard for him to see, because of the angle of the punch, plus he is turning). If you can connect with that, he'll be dazed. Or, drive a hard front kick to his gut, (If you weren't in TKD, I would suggest a hard leg kick to take the spring out of his step)

Your jab is a really good tool to either stop him or gauge distance. Try using feignts to see if how he will react, maybe it'll slow him down, or it'll give you an advance notice of where you can strike him next.

Kiai, don't use it too often. But, if he rushes you, and you kiai really loud, that might give you a split second where he freezes up.

Stay in the pocket. Protect yourself, when it is your turn to counter, fire in bunches, and then move.

If you are in trouble, remember, you can always clinch.

Good luck.

Look, get used to using a sword in your opposite hand. Its called mirror guard/same-sword handing and its the fastest way for a beginner to confuse an untrained opponent. Untrained people do what they see in movies, they overswing. In old times, youd have never overswung unless you were untrained. A trained opponent will always have something dangerous pointed at you. With that being said, stay just out of range, when he over strikes, tap him above the eyes with the kisaki of your sword. When he starts bleeding into his eyes, and starts yo rub them, he'll create non verbal cues, and gentures, and changes his timing to adjust for wiping the blood from his eyes. When/if he overstrikes again, take his wrist/hand off in the midst of his swing.Also a nice trick is to use the entire sword. Just when an opponent thinks they can get out of the pocket, use which ever hand is on the bottom of the tsuka, and release the top hand. Strike a stab like this when they are close, or swing for the shin. Any sword worth its weight (carbon steel and full tang) will severe the tibial artery and will make it slippery for him.

Filipino boxer who causes opponent to twitch?

Manny Pacquiao vs. Emmanuel Lucero. Pacquiao knocked the Mexican semi- senseless legs wobbly and twitching while tottering along the ropes.

What you witnessed maybe weird but that's not rare. As in fighters being knocked out cold. Manny is not also the first Pinoy I have seen knocking his noted opponent (Hatton ) out cold by a single swig. I have seen that before when Ben Villaflor kayoed fierce Japanese rival Kuniaki Shibata cold with a single left hook in the very first round!

You are not also referring to Doniare sending the tall Jeff Methabula tumbling down in their recent fight with a well placed punch? Or Donaire sending Fernando Montiel sprawling legs twitching?

I completely agree with James, to put it shortly, there is no absolute best “move” in fencing. Fencing which is the art and science of swordfighting has no absolutes, only relatives. It is a dialogue between two people and the best move changes according to a multitude of factors among which we can include:the weapons they are usingtheir distancethe timing of their actionswhat are they doing during a specific momentwhat are you planning to do during the same specific moment.the relative position of your bladesSo the lunge is the best move if your sword has a point, your are at a distance that allows you to hit with their lunge, you have control of your adversary sword (you are either engaging them and have leverage or their blade/point is not a threat to you at that moment) and you have the time to lunge.You can also lunge out of time and out of distance if you want your adversary to react to your lunge and so give you the time do some something else (like closing the distance). But in this case the lunge is a false attack that will allow you, eventually, to hit.But if your adversary is lunging at you, the best move for you is different. It can be a parry riposte. And even there you have options you have to pick from to determine which one is the best parry. So your best move will depend on where the attack is directed at, how much time do you have? do you have a time to perform a circular parry with your weapon? Can you make a beat parry to have more time for your riposte? Do you want to parry early in time to be safe, but also creating the risk that your parry is seen coming and the attack will be delivered on another angle? Or do you want to take the risk to parry late in time to make sure the attacker is fully committed, but also risking to be to late to be effective.And you might decide not to parry at all but to act with an action in countertime, like a stop thrust, a demivolte or OMG, a passata sotto.The fact that you have so many options open and basically less than a second to decide is what makes fencing something that you never stop learning and learn other things that allow you to pick more “best moves” for each situation you are in.

What wrestling move is underrated, in your opinion?

I just answered this on another question.

I know Chris Masters isn't on WWE anymore, but I'd say The Masterlock.

Analyze the move: its a standing full nelson. (swinging one, but still) it applies neck pressure, it can cause neck crack or breathe problems. Very dangerous move if not applied correctly (banned on many fighting disciplines) I respect Chris Masters and his Masterlock challenge because you HAVE to be strong and have skills to pull (and HOLD) a move like that correctly. One wrong turn and your opponent can end up dead. (literally) . Very powerfull move, and Masters made it fun to watch.

Masterlock was a great move and Chris Masters had a lot of potential. Sadly WWE misused him.

TRENDING NEWS