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    Default Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    I havent but it gives me great confidence in general that i have the ability to whup ass, i also wouldn't use my boxing expertise because it can be dangerous for my opponent.

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    Three guys in my gym THIS YEAR alone have stuffed up their fists by hitting things/ people without gloves on. Takes months to recover!

    I won't say it can't work but I think I'd hurt my hand because I'd need 100 % perfect skills and a bit of luck to not hurt myself hitting someone.

    I'm just beginning to learn a bit of Judo. I think if I had to I'd end up using a combination of things as fast and as hard as possible and then just running.

    I like to think that anyway. I wonder if I'd be ready for it when it happened in an unfamiar situation - would I react instantly the way I might if i was sparring? I don't know!

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    14 views?
    Last edited by Karas; 02-14-2008 at 02:58 AM.

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    ps: dont forget to welcome me on my greet thread! thxs!

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    Hi Karas,
    Yes, I have used my boxing skills in real-world engagements for self-protection purposes a fair amount of times...

    I've made significant adaptations/modifications with my sportive boxing-based skills due to the various differences between the "street" and "sport" arenas. For instance, I use palms instead of fists to reduce the likelihood of breaking my hands. I also don't concern myself with defense (slips, parries, etc) on the street. Instead, I'm all about awareness/assessment, guile, surprise, and offense. And when I have to go physically offensive, I'm all about constant forward pressure and relentless attack until my adversary is sufficiently neutralized.

    "Sport" fighting is a symmetrical contest battle; i.e. a give-and-take/back-and-forth match affair with a rhythm and flow far different than "street" fighting. "Street" fighting, on the other hand, is a different "animal." Among other things strategic/tactical, if you understand the all-important pre-fight cues/signs/rituals and utilize them to your advantage, street fighting is often the opposite, a through-and-through asymmetrical engagement; i.e. a one-way demolition.

    For self-protection/self-defense purposes, I always proactively maneuver/manipulate volatile situations for an asymmetrical engagement if it degenerates into that, using deception and surprise as precursors when all other peaceful/reasonable options such as avoidance, evasion, deescalation have been exhausted or are not viable due to the circumstances I'm in. When a gratuitous situation has become this dire, I've always employed the most important physical strategy of them all--PREEMPTION (i.e. attacking first off of deception & surprise and clinically blasting my opponent with an accurate, power-based shot to the jaw. With that said, I've ended the majority of my real-world engagements with one punch, either a left hook or left cross. Now, in those rare times when my preemptive strike didn't KO, TKO, or neutralize my adversary sufficiently enough to make a safe escape, I immediately followed-up and barraged my adversary with boxing-based blows in a rapid-fire, relentless, ferocious manner until he was neutralized enough for me to do so.

    Knocking someone out with one punch is not as difficult as it might seem. If you can keep your wits about you and pack decent punching power & accuracy, you can easily (relatively speaking) KO a gratuitous/confrontational adversary with one clinical punch. The most difficult aspect for most normal, good, law-abiding citizens is having the courage, the wherewithal to preemptively attack an adversary. There are many fears that abound which cause this hesitation, this deliberation. Anyway...

    Karas, I've expounded quite a bit. This is a subject of passionate interest with me. If you are interested in more of this kind of discourse, please visit my website (see my signature below for details).

    I've been an obsessive, passionate self-protection based, combat-oriented martial artist for most of my life. I've successfully competed in the sporting arena and in the "street" arena. Whenever anyone asks me what "martial art" to study strictly for self-protection/street fighting purposes, I always say first and foremost Western boxing. On the street, as my mentor Geoff Thompson likes to say, "hands are king." If anyone plays his/her cards right, practically any opponent can be clinically taken out with one punch. And, at the bare minimum, if the preemptive punch doesn't neutralize an opponent sufficiently enough, a follow-up barrage of blows almost always does the trick if the initiative was maintained from the onset.

    While I'm proficient in muay Thai, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, and freestyle/folkstyle wrestling among other systems, for me, Western boxing is the foremost system I recommend for self-protection/street fighting. For me, and loads of other more experienced combat martial artists/street fighters, boxing reigns supreme in the "street" arena. Everything else is "support system."

    On a final note, take a look at this link to see but one example of what I mean: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKdZg...eature=related

    Take Care,
    Lito

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    Hi Karas,
    Yes, I have used my boxing skills in real-world engagements for self-protection purposes a fair amount of times...

    I've made significant adaptations/modifications with my sportive boxing-based skills due to the various differences between the "street" and "sport" arenas. For instance, I use palms instead of fists to reduce the likelihood of breaking my hands. I also don't concern myself with defense (slips, parries, etc) on the street. Instead, I'm all about awareness/assessment, guile, surprise, and offense. And when I have to go physically offensive, I'm all about constant forward pressure and relentless attack until my adversary is sufficiently neutralized.

    "Sport" fighting is a symmetrical contest battle; i.e. a give-and-take/back-and-forth match affair with a rhythm and flow far different than "street" fighting. "Street" fighting, on the other hand, is a different "animal." Among other things strategic/tactical, if you understand the all-important pre-fight cues/signs/rituals and utilize them to your advantage, street fighting is often the opposite, a through-and-through asymmetrical engagement; i.e. a one-way demolition.

    For self-protection/self-defense purposes, I always proactively maneuver/manipulate volatile situations for an asymmetrical engagement if it degenerates into that, using deception and surprise as precursors when all other peaceful/reasonable options such as avoidance, evasion, deescalation have been exhausted or are not viable due to the circumstances I'm in. When a gratuitous situation has become this dire, I've always employed the most important physical strategy of them all--PREEMPTION (i.e. attacking first off of deception & surprise and clinically blasting my opponent with an accurate, power-based shot to the jaw. With that said, I've ended the majority of my real-world engagements with one punch, either a left hook or left cross. Now, in those rare times when my preemptive strike didn't KO, TKO, or neutralize my adversary sufficiently enough to make a safe escape, I immediately followed-up and barraged my adversary with boxing-based blows in a rapid-fire, relentless, ferocious manner until he was neutralized enough for me to do so.

    Knocking someone out with one punch is not as difficult as it might seem. If you can keep your wits about you and pack decent punching power & accuracy, you can easily (relatively speaking) KO a gratuitous/confrontational adversary with one clinical punch. The most difficult aspect for most normal, good, law-abiding citizens is having the courage, the wherewithal to preemptively attack an adversary. There are many fears that abound which cause this hesitation, this deliberation. Anyway...

    Karas, I've expounded quite a bit. This is a subject of passionate interest with me. If you are interested in more of this kind of discourse, please visit my website (see my signature below for details).

    I've been an obsessive, passionate self-protection based, combat-oriented martial artist for most of my life. I've successfully competed in the sporting arena and in the "street" arena. Whenever anyone asks me what "martial art" to study strictly for self-protection/street fighting purposes, I always say first and foremost Western boxing. On the street, as my mentor Geoff Thompson likes to say, "hands are king." If anyone plays his/her cards right, practically any opponent can be clinically taken out with one punch. And, at the bare minimum, if the preemptive punch doesn't neutralize an opponent sufficiently enough, a follow-up barrage of blows almost always does the trick if the initiative was maintained from the onset.

    While I'm proficient in muay Thai, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, and freestyle/folkstyle wrestling among other systems, for me, Western boxing is the foremost system I recommend for self-protection/street fighting. For me, and loads of other more experienced combat martial artists/street fighters, boxing reigns supreme in the "street" arena. Everything else is "support system."

    On a final note, take a look at this link to see but one example of what I mean: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKdZg...eature=related
    Click again on the white screen afterwards. To access this video, you'll have to log in or join YouTube. If this doesn't direct you to the video then use the search function and type in "Dual KO Bar Fight" It's worth checking out...

    Take Care,
    Lito
    Last edited by StrictlySP; 02-14-2008 at 06:17 AM. Reason: The link wasn't taking me to the specific YouTube video O

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    I was jumped in Limerick Ireland last year. This place is known locally as "stab" City or lately "Sawn-off" CXity!

    Three guys set after me with a hurl (like a short hockey stick) and a crutch.
    I hospitalised two but was ashamed for using my boxing on the street, particularily as I continued to strike when I had disarmed them.
    091

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    Quote Originally Posted by StrictlySP View Post
    Hi Karas,
    Yes, I have used my boxing skills in real-world engagements for self-protection purposes a fair amount of times...

    I've made significant adaptations/modifications with my sportive boxing-based skills due to the various differences between the "street" and "sport" arenas. For instance, I use palms instead of fists to reduce the likelihood of breaking my hands. I also don't concern myself with defense (slips, parries, etc) on the street. Instead, I'm all about awareness/assessment, guile, surprise, and offense. And when I have to go physically offensive, I'm all about constant forward pressure and relentless attack until my adversary is sufficiently neutralized.

    "Sport" fighting is a symmetrical contest battle; i.e. a give-and-take/back-and-forth match affair with a rhythm and flow far different than "street" fighting. "Street" fighting, on the other hand, is a different "animal." Among other things strategic/tactical, if you understand the all-important pre-fight cues/signs/rituals and utilize them to your advantage, street fighting is often the opposite, a through-and-through asymmetrical engagement; i.e. a one-way demolition.

    For self-protection/self-defense purposes, I always proactively maneuver/manipulate volatile situations for an asymmetrical engagement if it degenerates into that, using deception and surprise as precursors when all other peaceful/reasonable options such as avoidance, evasion, deescalation have been exhausted or are not viable due to the circumstances I'm in. When a gratuitous situation has become this dire, I've always employed the most important physical strategy of them all--PREEMPTION (i.e. attacking first off of deception & surprise and clinically blasting my opponent with an accurate, power-based shot to the jaw. With that said, I've ended the majority of my real-world engagements with one punch, either a left hook or left cross. Now, in those rare times when my preemptive strike didn't KO, TKO, or neutralize my adversary sufficiently enough to make a safe escape, I immediately followed-up and barraged my adversary with boxing-based blows in a rapid-fire, relentless, ferocious manner until he was neutralized enough for me to do so.

    Knocking someone out with one punch is not as difficult as it might seem. If you can keep your wits about you and pack decent punching power & accuracy, you can easily (relatively speaking) KO a gratuitous/confrontational adversary with one clinical punch. The most difficult aspect for most normal, good, law-abiding citizens is having the courage, the wherewithal to preemptively attack an adversary. There are many fears that abound which cause this hesitation, this deliberation. Anyway...

    Karas, I've expounded quite a bit. This is a subject of passionate interest with me. If you are interested in more of this kind of discourse, please visit my website (see my signature below for details).

    I've been an obsessive, passionate self-protection based, combat-oriented martial artist for most of my life. I've successfully competed in the sporting arena and in the "street" arena. Whenever anyone asks me what "martial art" to study strictly for self-protection/street fighting purposes, I always say first and foremost Western boxing. On the street, as my mentor Geoff Thompson likes to say, "hands are king." If anyone plays his/her cards right, practically any opponent can be clinically taken out with one punch. And, at the bare minimum, if the preemptive punch doesn't neutralize an opponent sufficiently enough, a follow-up barrage of blows almost always does the trick if the initiative was maintained from the onset.

    While I'm proficient in muay Thai, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, and freestyle/folkstyle wrestling among other systems, for me, Western boxing is the foremost system I recommend for self-protection/street fighting. For me, and loads of other more experienced combat martial artists/street fighters, boxing reigns supreme in the "street" arena. Everything else is "support system."

    On a final note, take a look at this link to see but one example of what I mean: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKdZg...eature=related
    Click again on the white screen afterwards. To access this video, you'll have to log in or join YouTube. If this doesn't direct you to the video then use the search function and type in "Dual KO Bar Fight" It's worth checking out...

    Take Care,
    Lito
    I've done that. I've knocked down 2 of my classmates (in less than 5 seconds) when I was in first year high school. They both took mid-section punch in their body. Knocked the wind out of 'em cousins. I ran like hell after it, just like the guy did in the video.

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    Default Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    Quote Originally Posted by Karas View Post
    I havent but it gives me great confidence in general that i have the ability to whup ass, i also wouldn't use my boxing expertise because it can be dangerous for my opponent.
    Once when someone tried to stab me and a few times in school fights.

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    Talking Re: Ever used your boxing skills in a real life scenario?

    I've heard people say that boxing doesn't help in a steet fight. They're stupid.

    My old trainer said it best when I asked him this very question. A nice old guy, retired pro, rarely says a bad word or curses.... but I quote.... he said "Oh FUCK yeah. You've got two hands. They've got one."

    With the average chump, a boxer would see those big ugly shots coming a mile away and could counter them with ease. Plus boxers have two hands.

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