If an uppercut is thrown and the opponent simultaneously moves quickly inwards, and the punch lands on the knee----can the fighter get 5 minutes to recover if the punch was debilitating? Is it a low blow?
If an uppercut is thrown and the opponent simultaneously moves quickly inwards, and the punch lands on the knee----can the fighter get 5 minutes to recover if the punch was debilitating? Is it a low blow?
It shoudnt be unless you are packing an anaconda that hangs down to your knees. lol
What if Mila Kunis was sat naked ringside, you happen to notice her and your large boner points just above the belt line? If your opponent goes for a body shot, but catches your elevated hard on, is that a low blow?
I would suggest that it depends on where the knee is. If the knee is moving up into the area of the body I believe one has every right to hit the little bastard as hard as one can. 'Get below waist height you insurbordinate little git' is what a fighter should be telling a rapidly rising knee. If that knee doesn't listen then it will be getting a bopping. Secretly every opponent secretly desires to set loose upon the knee. Well, that's my tuppence worth.
Yes that should constitute a very low blow.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
5 minutes would seem like a lot though, for a knee recovery. as opposed to a testicle recovery.
Uuuuummmmm ok.
Wether a punch is intentional or unintentional does not matter. You can not hit below the belt line. So to answer your question. Yes it is a low blow. If the ref. deems the punch to be a hard enough punch he can award time to the boxer to recover. Wether intentional or not.
Hope this answers your weird ass question.![]()
Is a punch a foot below the belt a low blow?!
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