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Look at from the other way too, how about upsetting the distractor?
Like those people who put their hands behind their backs move their head from side to side and poke their tongue out. Relax look bored as, then leap at them so you are nose to nose distance and swing one through the path of their head (follow its pathway with your shot you cant miss like you will if you stay at a long distance over reach and take straight jabs at his head like he is fully expecting you to ((over lean onto your front foot, so you are trapped there). Or simply turn around and walk back to a corner behind the ref and let him deal with it, either way you out smart him and he doesn't do it again cause he either got tagged or he looked stupid on his own.
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On the topic: watch Roberto Duran in lightweight, he was one of the masters at feinting. In fact, I would argue that it is what made him the dominating force he was in the lightweight division...besides chucking dynamite at their faces.
Here is an article on Roberto Duran's fight style. I hope you learn something from it.
http://www.myboxingcoach.com/roberto...nos-de-piedra/
P.S. That site it awesome.
Last edited by Peter Som; 02-01-2013 at 11:02 PM.
When sparring or fighting think and look like a killer.
You are going to kill the guy, stop him from raping your family, go for him like he had hurt you gf/sister/mother.
you want the advantage you attack him, the same way you would a intruder to your home.
You want the advantage do the above.
I am not going to tell you ways to distract the opponent, there are many ways but I am not going to teach you how to be a weasel.
Good luck.
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An interesting and just point of view.
I find the limits and different peoples stances on how far they will push or break the rules of warfare physiologically fascinating.
Ive actually made a few points for consideration that come under that score lately.
I try to think of most things in life from two opposing directions. When distraction as a topic came up, I tried to think of both points of view, like from the winning side and the losing sides point of views and what within the rules could be done from both points,that way I figure I get to a more balanced perspective on the limits of both possibles.
I think if you dont show people what is done, they cant counter it.
Lets take only the lesser of all evils in the ring "talking to your opponent constantly in order to put him off his game".
Now to mention it as a legal and viable distraction; if you have the opposing point of view (which most of us do) that it stinks and is unmentionable as a tactic; If we take that point of view we wont consider or discuss it, instead we would say my point on that matter is such and such and it ends right there.
But if you talk it out and cover all the things the fighter will be trying to say to you and what he is aiming at doing by stating those things he has found out and will say, then straight away you have already considered the worse he can do, and so his effects will be neutralized.
Same goes for anything mental or physical; you have a better shot at countering any distraction if you recognize it.
Im sort of saying if you dont stick to a fixed point you can draw two lines from both points that gets things into perspective.
There are of course unmentionable illegal and dangerous things we dont go into openly, but at some stage you will still have to choose when and who you tell and show those things to for their own security, especially if their opponent is famous for that illegal or dangerous move.
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