Trapping develops excellent qualities but which in real fight are very limited as application possibilities. There is too strong and fast inertia to fall from boxing distance to grappling, that's the point. It is probably the structure of the human body. So trapping is a super thin work in an area halfway between hitting and grabbing that is very "evanescent". Maybe he doesn't deserve that much time to train. What do you think about it? With a lot of respect for your work.
For me, the answer to this depends on how you define trapping. For me, trapping is merely the control and immobilization of limbs that diminish an opponent's ability to attack and defend. This is something that is done with high-frequency and great success in combat sport fighting. Sometimes the trap may only create a small (yet potentially vital) window of opportunity, and other times it may completely immobilize someone's limb(s) for an extended period of time.
@@JaredWihongi Thanks for your answer! I understand your view of trapping. It's a form of standing grappling. Generally the trapping is proposed in a very short distance, a few fractions of a second before the clinch and I think it is more a technical drill than a technique applicable in real combat. The structure of the human body leads to "falling" towards grappling too easily to allow space for trapping. In analogy with the fights between ancient Galleons: first there was a fencing of cannon shots and then the boarding, with no middle ground. What do you think? Thank you for your time.
Trapping develops excellent qualities but which in real fight are very limited as application possibilities. There is too strong and fast inertia to fall from boxing distance to grappling, that's the point. It is probably the structure of the human body. So trapping is a super thin work in an area halfway between hitting and grabbing that is very "evanescent". Maybe he doesn't deserve that much time to train. What do you think about it? With a lot of respect for your work.
For me, the answer to this depends on how you define trapping. For me, trapping is merely the control and immobilization of limbs that diminish an opponent's ability to attack and defend. This is something that is done with high-frequency and great success in combat sport fighting. Sometimes the trap may only create a small (yet potentially vital) window of opportunity, and other times it may completely immobilize someone's limb(s) for an extended period of time.
@@JaredWihongi Thanks for your answer! I understand your view of trapping. It's a form of standing grappling. Generally the trapping is proposed in a very short distance, a few fractions of a second before the clinch and I think it is more a technical drill than a technique applicable in real combat. The structure of the human body leads to "falling" towards grappling too easily to allow space for trapping. In analogy with the fights between ancient Galleons: first there was a fencing of cannon shots and then the boarding, with no middle ground. What do you think? Thank you for your time.
Your uki is a bit stiff lol