How fights go down in South Korea!! Those moves!
Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2017 9:07 pm
The better action starts @ 3:12
World Wide Martial Arts
Published on Oct 29, 2017:
How fights go down in South Korea!! Those moves!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfOIeKW15gY
Starting @ 3:12, this can be an example of deception: controlling (leading) the opponent without him knowing it. The officer uses a fighting strategy to take the opponent into custody. Make the opponent do what the opponent wants to do, without him knowing it. Then, finish him.
The officer takes a quick step backwards to avoid a punch, then he slows his pace down (setting rhythm) while continuing to walk backwards just outside of punching range (controlling distance). This distance and pace gets (lures) the opponent to swing at the officer. But, the officer is just outside of reach. The opponent believes he is in control (deception), lulled into a slow place, continuing to swing at officer. At 3:21, the officer times the opponent's right hand, catches the opponent’s arm, uses opponent's momentum, pivots quickly on his right foot (broken rhythm, timing) and finishes with a throw to the front left corner.
World Wide Martial Arts
Published on Oct 29, 2017:
How fights go down in South Korea!! Those moves!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfOIeKW15gY
Starting @ 3:12, this can be an example of deception: controlling (leading) the opponent without him knowing it. The officer uses a fighting strategy to take the opponent into custody. Make the opponent do what the opponent wants to do, without him knowing it. Then, finish him.
The officer takes a quick step backwards to avoid a punch, then he slows his pace down (setting rhythm) while continuing to walk backwards just outside of punching range (controlling distance). This distance and pace gets (lures) the opponent to swing at the officer. But, the officer is just outside of reach. The opponent believes he is in control (deception), lulled into a slow place, continuing to swing at officer. At 3:21, the officer times the opponent's right hand, catches the opponent’s arm, uses opponent's momentum, pivots quickly on his right foot (broken rhythm, timing) and finishes with a throw to the front left corner.