Mixed Martial Arts Fighting Techniques. Danny Indio
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Mixed Martial Arts Fighting Techniques - Danny Indio страница 6
Punching/Medium Range—The medium range is conducive to both kicking and punching—so keep your guard up!
Trapping/Close Range
In this range, you engage with your opponent primarily with elbows, knees, upper cuts, hooks, grabs, throws, takedowns and headbutts. This is also considered a clinching range, and being able to manipulate your opponent’s body and “trap” their limbs will effectively neutralize their hitting capabilities while you remain able to hit them.
Trapping/Close Range—The claustrophobia-inspiring close range brings with it the option of clinching (or being clinched by) your opponent.
Grappling/Extremely Close Range
In this range, you are rolling on the ground attempting to gain a superior position from which to disable your opponent or cause him to submit. The transition into this range is usually initiated by the takedown. Many of the offensive tools you use in the trapping/close range are effective here with the additional offensive tools that are exclusive to the grappling arts such as the arm bar or the triangle choke.
Grappling/Extremely Close Range—Following the takedown, many of the offensive tools that are effective at close range remain so on the ground.
Natural Weapons of the Body
Just about every part of your body can be used as a weapon to strike, pin, leverage or distract your opponent. This is especially true in the clinching and grappling range where tools like shoulder bumps and headbutts are very effective.
1) HEAD—to strike with the top or the back of your skull.
2) TEETH—for biting, tearing or gnawing on an opponent in an extreme life-or-death situation.
3) HANDS—an instinctual and effective tool that can cause a high amount of damage to your opponent. There is a risk of hurting your hand when throwing punches.
CLOSED HANDS
Punch—the traditional boxer’s weapon used for throwing jabs, crosses, hooks, and uppercuts.
Hammerfist—a closed fist that hits with the bottom, meaty portion of the hand.
OPEN HANDS
Palm—to stun or push an opponent.
Fingers—to grab, poke, gouge, or pinch an opponent.
Knifehand—to strike an opponent in certain soft and vulnerable body parts, like the throat.
4) ELBOWS—to hit an opponent with the very hard bone in your elbow.
5) FOREARMS—used to smash against an opponent’s face, throat or other body part.
6) SHOULDERS—to bump against your opponent’s face in a clinching or grappling situation.
7) KNEES—like elbows, these very effective strikes cause high amounts of damage with minimal risk to you.
8) LEGS—to strike your opponents with a variety of kicks.
9) FEET—to use the instep, heel or ball of your foot in stomping or sweeping your opponent.
You’re practically a walking arsenal.
Target Areas of the Body
A key element to finishing a street fight quickly and safely is to target the most vulnerable areas of your opponent’s body. Ideally, the best target areas on your opponent’s body are those that render him unconscious or prevent him from fighting back. Target areas are best attacked with combination strikes (example: jab to the eyes, kick to the groin, hammerfist to the jaw-line). To improve accuracy with combination strikes, use shadowboxing, cooperative partners and marked punching bags or training dummies.
Target these points on your opponent, while you protect your own.
Hand-to-Hand Combat Concepts
A key strategy to adapt from MMA to the streets is to strike quickly and overwhelm your opponent(s) with brutal hits. Clinch if you must, but avoid the ground as much as you can. Strike while in the clinch, and throw or take your opponent down.
When engaging an opponent with strikes in the various ranges (with or without a weapon), you should employ the following critical tactics:
• Neutralize your opponent’s offense quickly.
• Emphasize limb destruction.
• Emphasize the angles.
• Emphasize body manipulation.
• Emphasize speed and high hit percentages.
Neutralize Your Opponent’s Offense Quickly
Strike before your opponent hits, deceive your opponent or use counterfighting techniques to neutralize your opponent’s offense and end the fight quickly. Even in the ring, you don’t want to absorb punches like boxer. Although knowing how to “take a punch” is important, the fewer strikes you absorb and the more strikes you give improve your chances for victory (e.g., kicking before an opponent’s punch reaches you).
This is a good example of neutralizing the opponent’s offense is using a long-range attack: your kick, to stop the opponent’s mid-range attack, the cross. Here the kick does damage against the opponent while keeping you at a safe fighting distance out of range of getting hit.
Emphasize Limb Destruction
Focus on hitting an opponent’s limbs as well as body and face. Although striking an opponent’s limb won’t immediately end the fight, it can cause your opponent to lower his guard or feel pain in their limbs (e.g., as with an elbow to an oncoming punch). This can effectively neutralize your opponent’s offense.
Here, I am throwing an elbow at my opponent’s cross. Done with correct form and proper timing, an elbow thrown at an oncoming punch is a great example of limb destruction. Without healthy limbs (arms, hands, feet and legs), your opponent’s ability to fight is rendered nil. Therefore, targeting those areas with counterattacks that break bones or cause great pain (like elbows to punches or foot stomps to feet) will “destroy” your opponent’s limbs and end the fight quickly.
Emphasize the Angles
Use angular movement in your footwork to evade and parry incoming strikes and retaliate from a position against which your opponent is unable to defend. Also, hit different areas of your opponent by aiming at