allen2saint wrote:Dragon,
Is the "ground and pound" what the art looks like in a fight? It appears to me to be a condition of fighting in a ring with rules that require submission. Most of these fighters, once having been knocked down with the blows we see here, are unable to continue being the aggressor in a fight. In my version of the art, that means it's over.
allen2saint wrote:Dragon,
Is the "ground and pound" what the art looks like in a fight? It appears to me to be a condition of fighting in a ring with rules that require submission. Most of these fighters, once having been knocked down with the blows we see here, are unable to continue being the aggressor in a fight. In my version of the art, that means it's over.
gimpster wrote:The fights are ground and pound because the rules and round times. Set each round to 30 seconds and watch the slug humping vanish.
Personally I'd allow them to sneak weapons into the ring as well, to simulate the real world. Saps, kosh's, blackjacks, mini-knuckle dusters, steel toed shoes, maybe leave a few chairs laying around. Make sure the all the ref's are at least half-blind.
gzregorz wrote:allen2saint wrote:Dragon,
Is the "ground and pound" what the art looks like in a fight? It appears to me to be a condition of fighting in a ring with rules that require submission. Most of these fighters, once having been knocked down with the blows we see here, are unable to continue being the aggressor in a fight. In my version of the art, that means it's over.
But is it? If you knock someone down who seriously wants to hurt you are they going to stop there?
gimpster wrote:The fights are ground and pound because the rules and round times. Set each round to 30 seconds and watch the slug humping vanish.
Personally I'd allow them to sneak weapons into the ring as well, to simulate the real world. Saps, kosh's, blackjacks, mini-knuckle dusters, steel toed shoes, maybe leave a few chairs laying around. Make sure the all the ref's are at least half-blind.
Ian Cipperly wrote:let me know again when you've had enough of ground rolling man massages.
I'm sure Bones Jones never trains any ground work...
gzregorz wrote:gimpster wrote:The fights are ground and pound because the rules and round times. Set each round to 30 seconds and watch the slug humping vanish.
Personally I'd allow them to sneak weapons into the ring as well, to simulate the real world. Saps, kosh's, blackjacks, mini-knuckle dusters, steel toed shoes, maybe leave a few chairs laying around. Make sure the all the ref's are at least half-blind.
Actually the opposite is true. When they had no time limits and no restarting on the feet the Pfizer mostly all ground fighting.
gzregorz wrote:allen2saint wrote:Dragon,
Is the "ground and pound" what the art looks like in a fight? It appears to me to be a condition of fighting in a ring with rules that require submission. Most of these fighters, once having been knocked down with the blows we see here, are unable to continue being the aggressor in a fight. In my version of the art, that means it's over.
But is it? If you knock someone down who seriously wants to hurt you are they going to stop there?
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