don't pick a fight with a good boxer!

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circular shots are harder to see , something about the right brain left brain thing eith optics and whatever ......I would have thought such large circular gross motor shots, well telegraphed, would have been easy to block by a professional fighter.
All of us Europeans have the ‘beautiful game’ in common, especially the ones who have played it, like you and I.We have a lot in common ,and I think you would be very much at home in our discussions on soccer a day never goes by without the topic pops up ,even when the economic situation is depressing ,we have only three days work left .Unless David Beckham wants another villa building .
These filters effect our body language, on natural movement, our individual look is intertwined .
Well, the funny thing is that Sanchin is not really a kata as according to many Okinawan masters, but just an exercise. We were discussing this precise point with Walter when he was visiting my house during the holidays. And Walter studies under Takara and Nakahodo senseis.Looking at the opening for the first time ,and fully knowing Kanbun’s method gave study to this ,and my knowledge of kata openings at the time, this one did not fit in with most fighters first instinctive response…
We need to remember that these sequences are taken out of context. We don't see the other 99% of the fight that led up to the KO sequence. That's where the two men went toe-to-toe, round after round, until one of them wore the other down. As I tell my students, remove the starch from your opponent and the rest is orders of magnitude easier.Van Canna wrote:
I would have thought such large circular gross motor shots, well telegraphed, would have been easy to block by a professional fighter.
True story... A fellow I trained with early in my Uechi days was also a Bando practitioner (Burmese kickboxing) He entered the UVa intramural boxing tournament 2 years in a row, and was voted Most Valuable Boxer both years. (Obviously he won his weight class with ease.) When he was training for the third year, he was doing some gentle sparring with the fellow who had won the lighter weight class the previous year. Well his opponent threw a left hook. Mack ducked while "answering the telephone." That was perfect but... the hook was a setup for his opponent's right uppercut. Mack dropped his face right into it, and broke his nose. Needless to say, there was no "threepeat".Van Canna wrote:
I am especially interested in some of you guys telling me how you would have blocked those nasty uppercuts...even now as monday morning quarterbackers, having seen the punch coming from your PC chair...in the ring you won't even see it.