johnwang wrote:marvin8 wrote:Please point to which explanations or clips you "do not understand.
None of your clips use rhino guard. It has nothing to do with our discussion here.
Say there are
two stages to the Rhino Guard. The
first stage is extended arms with hands clasped. The moment a hand touches the rhino guard is the moment the second stage starts.
The video clips of Rousey vs Nunes (also see Rousey vs Holm)
"use" the second stage of the Rhino Guard: extended arms separated, reaching for head and arm as you describe here:
johnwang wrote:The moment that A's hand touches on B's rhino guard, the moment that B's rhino guard will be separated into 2 arms. The grappling game will start from there. The rhino guard is a temporary stage. It help to protect your head when you enter. After that the rhino guard's task is finished.
johnwang wrote:marvin8 wrote: "The moment that A's hand touches on B's rhino guard, the moment that B's rhino guard will be separated into 2 arms." At that moment, "A punches B in the face from the side door or outside the grappling range without giving B "a chance to arm wrap."
The following is what I don't understand.
I cannot picture how this can happen. "A punches B in the face from the side door or outside the grappling range without giving B "a chance to arm wrap."
You do not have to "picture" you can
watch It "happen" in the fight (Foreman and Nunes) and demonstration (Chu and olympic woman boxer) videos that I posted. George
Foreman uses the side door and Nunes controls the distance to knockout their opponents.
Rousey continued to get punched in the face while extending her arms and attempting to grab Nunes' neck. What part of the videos, explanations, timestamps, transcriptions and highlights do you not understand or disagree with?
Here are two methods to
punch the clincher's head while not giving clincher a chance to headlock and arm wrap (used in the Foreman and Nunes fights):
Control position (angle) — (Foreman fight) One way is to enter the side door (see Foreman, Chu, olympic woman boxer, video clips and explanations). Puncher enters side door and punches (uppercut) clincher's exposed head (extended arms, head tucked) before clincher can turn around, square his shoulders and grab puncher's neck.
Control range (distance) — (Nunes fight) For sake of the topic there are four ranges:
1. Kicking: Kicks
2.
Punching: Punches land on clincher's face. But, clincher cannot reach puncher's neck in this range. Puncher's goal is to control the distance and stay in the punching range as much as possible, staying outside of clincher's reach. (OP reads clincher only clinches.)
3.
Clinching: In this range, clincher can reach puncher's neck and arm wrap. However, puncher tries to stay out of the clinching range as much as possible.
4. Grappling: Ground work