Why do Karate guys always get wrecked by Boxers?

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  • Опубликовано: 16 май 2024
  • Why do karate and Taekwondo practitioners always lose fights against boxers? Aren’t kicks longer and stronger than punches?
    Q&A with the Coach
    ---
    Ramsey Dewey is a retired pro fighter, combat sports coach, referee, and fight commentator… and occasional musician based in Shanghai, China.
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    This video features original music by Ramsey Dewey
    Follow me on Instagram at: / ramseydewey
    ---
    I fought professionally in Mixed Martial arts, Sanda, Muay Thai, K1 and American kickboxing from 2004-2011 when I was forced to retire due to a broken skull and being blinded in one eye. I hold a brown belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Black belts in multiple traditional martial arts, including Taekwondo and kyokushin karate. I also train in catch wrestling, sambo, taijiquan, judo, and boxing.
    I currently coach at the Animal MMA gym, the Extreme Fight Lab, and the Mordor Fight Club, all in Shanghai, China.
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Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @ChaelSonnenOfficial
    @ChaelSonnenOfficial 6 месяцев назад +164

    You did a good job

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  6 месяцев назад +29

      Thank you!

    • @itsoracle
      @itsoracle 6 месяцев назад

      never seen a youtuber with a million subs have no likes on a comment or a ufc fighter 💀

    • @johntay3831
      @johntay3831 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@itsoraclebecause you tubers are more interested in bs comments

    • @ValleyDragon
      @ValleyDragon 5 месяцев назад +3

      Let's Hope this is the first in a long line of Chael Comments to Ramsey.

    • @ilikezappa3268
      @ilikezappa3268 5 месяцев назад +3

      So did you, Chael you crazy man ! Lol

  • @fighttips
    @fighttips Год назад +727

    Spot on, sir. I've never been to a boxing gym where we "light spar" or "tech spar". We'd straight up *fight* almost everyday. I'm not saying that's healthy or the right way to train, but in the context of this question... the boxer is GENERALLY just tougher through more ring time.

    • @njalsand133
      @njalsand133 Год назад +81

      meanwhile in taekwondo, you have to move slowly up the ranks, learn korean words and spend a fortune on graduation

    • @ZeroMalarki
      @ZeroMalarki Год назад +83

      That sounds mad.. there are plenty of boxing gyms I've been to where there is a time for hard sparring and time for light sparring.

    • @urmomgae5882
      @urmomgae5882 Год назад +9

      @@ZeroMalarki i think hes referring to the "kata" stuff that traditional martial arts ppl do

    • @stvillasquad
      @stvillasquad Год назад +37

      Damn I’ve been to a lot of boxing gyms that light spar lol

    • @turntablesrockmyworld9315
      @turntablesrockmyworld9315 Год назад +54

      Then you haven't been to good gyms. I have watched world champion boxers doing light training working on particular strategies and techniques. I have also seen the same in Muay Thai gyms, and full-contact Karate gyms, Judo clubs, wrestling teams, etc.

  • @Seekingtruth-mx3ur
    @Seekingtruth-mx3ur Год назад +413

    "Every man thinks he can fight until he gets beaten down and humbled."
    Wise words.

    • @A55455In47I0n
      @A55455In47I0n Год назад +3

      yeah so wise...

    • @nihatsavmaz6677
      @nihatsavmaz6677 Год назад +1

      Every man has a plan till he gets punched in the face. M. Tyson.

    • @SmugAmerican
      @SmugAmerican Год назад +12

      I always say I can fight an amateur. You can't beat a professional at anything if you're not in their world.

    • @Seekingtruth-mx3ur
      @Seekingtruth-mx3ur Год назад +9

      @@SmugAmerican true. Better to walk away.

    • @HenriFaust
      @HenriFaust Год назад +8

      @@SmugAmerican There are a lot of _self-proclaimed_ professionals out there though.

  • @Mr.Smiley_J
    @Mr.Smiley_J Год назад +127

    It took me decades to realize that boxing is way more "martial arts" than most things normal folk would consider "martial arts." I had no idea boxing had all the stances, special moves, strategy, grappling, and footwork that most martial arts claim, but on top of that, getting strong, fast, and competent at actually using your skill against live opponents comes built into the curriculum.

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  Год назад +20

      So true.

    • @boxer6796
      @boxer6796 Год назад +19

      That's the thing: Boxing is a lot more than just puching!

    • @Dussmasterzero
      @Dussmasterzero Год назад +17

      You're exactly right boxing IS a martial art. And one that is 100 percent tailored to actual physical combat despite not having any kicks or throws or submissions. Boxers train with the mindset that taking punishment is part of the game so like dude said unless you are REALLY good at kicks and maintaining distance a good boxer can and will flatten you in close range. Relying only on kicks is a weakness

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 5 месяцев назад +2

      What grappling? They're separated when they hold on?

    • @furyberserk
      @furyberserk 5 месяцев назад +3

      Then you misunderstood. Martial arts is about the philosophy and technique. But combat is about advantage.
      Advantage means taking advantage over weaknesses. I've seen a lot of fights where flailing boxers still win. Flailing works. Martial arts have taught everything right, but has failed to evolve.
      My brother went up to a yellow belt in shotokan karate. Do you know what he taught me that I've never seen people do? The 7 defensive evasions(weaves and foot work) or the cat stance (boxing) which is in karate. Karate is itself with boxing in it, but they never take the nimble positions.
      Some people want to just land the big moves, but all of boxing is fundamentals. It's like faints don't exist in all warfare or combat ever.

  • @ironmikehallowween
    @ironmikehallowween Год назад +1402

    My father was a boxer. He taught us to box at a very young age. I actually cannot remember when I started, but I know when a used it in real life, it was beyond effective. In fact, it made fighting seem quite easy. But, against other boxers, it was much more difficult to land my shots. The didn’t fall for my wonderful tricks as often. They didn’t just fall down when I hit them all the time like regular people did. Sometimes, they would even stay very low, so I couldn’t just crack them at will. Even too low for my stellar uppercuts. It was very frustrating. So I decided to do kick boxing. That would fix those pesky short, strong, stocky guys wouldn’t it? I can just kick their legs out from under them, and knee them when they came in low. Then these judo/wrestler type guys, you know the ones. Well, they are just short of being animals. No talent at all. No. They are just strong. No technique at all. Why they would sometimes be able to sneak in there, tie me up, grab me, and throw me down. Completely uncivilized if you ask me. Not Queensbury Rules at all. So, I lifted a lot of weights and took Hapkido/Judo/Aiki Jujitsus. That will fix those heathens. Then, these people started chocking me. WTH I thought. This is ridiculous. Choking people just isn’t fair. It really isn’t. So, I had to take that too. Wait a minute…where was I? Oh yeah. You need some exposure to it all.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +64

      Bro number one no kickboxers going to come in low. They're fighting styles totally different.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +50

      Cool story bro!

    • @andrewfisher1051
      @andrewfisher1051 Год назад +5

      Very nice!

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +11

      @Bruce D then he said he got into kickboxing so he could kick them in the head when they went low. No kickboxers going to go low. To get kicked in the head. It's a more upright fighting style

    • @mr.pompodill1485
      @mr.pompodill1485 Год назад +53

      @@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Yeah. As in he could kick the boxers in the head. The boxers would go low, so he learned kickboxing to punish the boxer. Learn to read.

  • @kbeadle23
    @kbeadle23 Год назад +339

    Martial Arts doesn't Make you a fighter. Fighting makes you a fighter. I don't have any delusions about what lane my sport bjj puts me in.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +14

      Number one. There is no such thing as BJJ there is only Pankration.

    • @AsymmetricalAce
      @AsymmetricalAce Год назад

      @@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed sod off troll. Bjj. Brazilian Ju Jitsu. Ju Jitsu is Japanese, stupid. Pankration is not

    • @brogrammer593
      @brogrammer593 Год назад +23

      @@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed What?

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +2

      @@brogrammer593 what?

    • @brogrammer593
      @brogrammer593 Год назад +2

      @@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed What do you mean there's no such thing as BJJ?

  • @davethebrahman9870
    @davethebrahman9870 Год назад +107

    I boxed and studied a bit of Shotokan as a youth. The plain fact is that boxing accustoms you to real fights, with the taking punches and adrenaline surge. Your capacity to slip and avoid punches only comes after getting hit. Your body adapts. It isn’t just the actual fights, it’s the wars in the gym where no one wants to back down and there’s no referee.

    • @danield7789
      @danield7789 3 месяца назад +6

      This. As boxer I can tell you that people is not used to be punched in the face. This is very important in fighting. Being able to take a punch

  • @Cryptic0013
    @Cryptic0013 Год назад +33

    Having done karate and TKD as a kid, then boxing and later muay thai as an adult... the major difference isn't even technical. There was a very good 'karate' guy training MMA at the same gym, and his striking style worked quite well even in that context (adapted to incorporate and defend wrestling and BJJ).
    The difference is that, when you spar at a pure karate dojo, they have the mindset that "if I hit you hard enough that it hurts, then I won a point, and if I get enough points then I win the game" and boxers have the mindset of "If you hit me hard enough that it hurts, I hit you back even harder. The game is over when one of us can't stand up anymore."

    • @xeno18ufo34
      @xeno18ufo34 5 месяцев назад +2

      Because most karate are not full contact. Why u even compare them. Unless you compare kyokushin and kyokushin derived styles (asihara, byakuren, etc).
      Ofc the traditional karate practitioners can't compare with athletes from full contact sports..because they never train full contact...
      I also want to see a boxer who is not allowed to hit the head with the hands vs a kyokushin practitioner at the same lvl just body hits..really doubt boxer will win.

    • @thunderkatz4219
      @thunderkatz4219 5 месяцев назад

      @@xeno18ufo34well it’s not just Kyokushin Goju ryu and Okinawan and kenpo have the same ideals as Kyokushin

    • @Hff19927
      @Hff19927 3 месяца назад +2

      Yeah boxing gave me that kill or be killed mentality. Karate didn’t

  • @RobDegraves
    @RobDegraves Год назад +582

    Shortly after I got my black belt in Karate, I moved to another University in a different town and got involved in full-contact kickboxing. It was considerably different from what I had learned in Karate and I had to start over almost from scratch. Since then I have started over a number of times in various martial arts. This was the 80s and martial arts styles didn't cross over, and it was a serious problem. It still is an issue but thankfully people are starting to understand that in order to win every time, you need to know everything, not just one thing.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +18

      In the past it was about respect. Now it's about money

    • @chrispoggi1726
      @chrispoggi1726 Год назад +6

      Tactfully said.

    • @guillermo9140
      @guillermo9140 Год назад +26

      I don’t think you started over almost from scratch, because I think they have cardio in karate and that’s more than 50% of a fight in my opinion

    • @mcpartridgeboy
      @mcpartridgeboy Год назад +8

      To win every time is probably impossible unless your rocky marciano or whatever his name is, and even he had to retire !

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +8

      @@jonathanmora8208 You're absolutely right but not in Europe. Asia, absolutely.
      The Greeks did not believe in such things.
      They were all about Max efficiency. A. Science-based society

  • @gatolf2
    @gatolf2 Год назад +259

    Here’s something to consider. Boxers not only spar often but they also train only in punching pretty much. If you spend 100 hours learning 30 different techniques, you will often lose to the guy that’s been training 100 hours on 10 techniques because more of their hours are going into each technique they train.

    • @RoboBreaker
      @RoboBreaker Год назад +10

      This.

    • @jayclearmen411
      @jayclearmen411 Год назад +15

      Not to mention.. it’s different styles southpaw & switch hitters will F*ck you up if you havent ever encountered them plus it’s the mental aspects of it which are often forgotten with boxing every good boxer has a thinking mind full with instincts tips trick an tactics learned and earned from sparring..an u know what they say experience is often the best teacher. this goes double if they’ve been in a few street fights an brawls

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад +12

      That's typical theoretical fantasy football.
      The guy who can knock out someone with 1 punch and can absorb a few himself, wins

    • @The_Custos
      @The_Custos Год назад +6

      The left hook always has a place.

    • @stubley3432
      @stubley3432 Год назад +2

      @@siddified Yeah and learning the defensive habits to take, catch, block and roll more punches drastically makes ur chances better

  • @craigleonard9243
    @craigleonard9243 Год назад +120

    I agree with you. I studied old style karate(pre-sport) in Okinawa for ten years. I fought a lot and found the most challenging opponents were boxers. Modern karate is well removed from the original combat oriented karate of old.

    • @Supermomo2007
      @Supermomo2007 10 месяцев назад +2

      Which okinawa style? Can you recommend shorin ryu?

    • @thunderkatz4219
      @thunderkatz4219 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@Supermomo2007I do Okinawan kenpo but I’m guessing he does shojin myagi I forgot his name style

    • @ijansk
      @ijansk 7 месяцев назад +5

      Probably because actual karate can be lethal? Probably karate got softened up for that reason ir order to avoid creating murderers...

    • @robertbeaulieu2999
      @robertbeaulieu2999 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@thunderkatz4219Goju Ryu

    • @Manomed3
      @Manomed3 6 месяцев назад

      ashihara and kyokushin karate are tougher can harder than box.@@ijansk

  • @justinfreeman4614
    @justinfreeman4614 Год назад +29

    Before the video starts, my first thought is that most karate practitioners don't train against a fully resisting opponent in a fairly open ended environment. While a boxing environment is inherently limited, they typically train against legitimately resisting opponents AND a lot of boxing gyms have a very small gap between fighting and sparring.

  • @Malt454
    @Malt454 Год назад +352

    Competitive boxers train, and fight, full-out to win, even in a sports environment while, in karate the first rule, even in competition, is "don't seriously hurt anyone". Mindsets, particularly reinforced mindsets, matter a lot. Like John Wayne says in The Shootist - "it isn't always being fast, or even accurate, that counts... it's being willing". The guy who is willing to mess up the other guy and then worry about it later is more apt to win than the guy who isn't.
    Boxing, as a martial art, is often very underrated in terms of difficulty, complexity and effectiveness... but it has a killer mindset really not seen in other arts/sports - and that's why a lot of people have been killed doing it. Nobody "plays" boxing.

    • @turtlesage28
      @turtlesage28 Год назад +24

      This is the best comment on martial arts I've seen in awhile. Salute.

    • @fitveganathleteintegrateda1695
      @fitveganathleteintegrateda1695 Год назад +19

      Absolute truth.

    • @Malt454
      @Malt454 Год назад +7

      @@turtlesage28 - Thank you very much.

    • @Jordanthecool7
      @Jordanthecool7 Год назад +13

      I agree with everything that you said, besides boxing being underrated. A lot of people even if they don’t understand the skill of it , they at least know that it is a very hard sport, and it is very very affective in real situations

    • @Malt454
      @Malt454 Год назад +11

      @MMA Expert - Sorry "expert" - boxing deaths don't happen primarily because of mismatches (although this sometime does happen); they happen because boxers can afford to punch all-out without risk of hand damage, because that's what the hand wrapping and heavy gloves are for. Boxers hit harder, because that's what they're trained, and able, to do. Boxing is fundamentally more dangerous than UFC.
      When it comes to hand striking, the UFC has FAR from the best fighters in the world. Conor Mcgregor was the punching terror of the UFC, but he was nothing special as a boxer.
      Put the top UFC fighters in a boxing ring against the world's top boxers and the UFC fighters are in deep trouble - although you're right... the UFC guys probably won't have to worry about killing anyone.

  • @Oldschooldan1
    @Oldschooldan1 Год назад +156

    My first Karate instructor, back in the early 1980's, used to have a saying. He would say, "Kick for show, punch for dough". I was lucky to have an instructor that wasn't in it for the money. He always encouraged cross training. This led to me getting into kickboxing and now at 50 I'm doing BJJ. Well, more trying to survive than doing...

    • @iblockpuncheswithmyface1490
      @iblockpuncheswithmyface1490 Год назад +12

      My martial arts instructor (Shotokan) was pretty much the same. Kata's, one steps, and fancy kicks were for sport. They were the "art" in martial arts. In real street combat. Punches, and basic front kicks. Another good thing, training wise. He was a bouncer at the roughest bar in the city. He had about 100 knockdown, drag 'em out street/bar fights. He taught us what works, and what doesn't work, from personal experience, and he's an itty bitty guy. Five foot five, and about 150 pounds.

    • @dr.dylansgame5583
      @dr.dylansgame5583 Год назад +2

      @@iblockpuncheswithmyface1490 Damn dude sounds like the adult version of me just with a different base and way more experience. I'm jealous and would kill to learn from someone with that kind of experience since experience is the ultimate teacher in my opinion.

    • @ehrenthompson7891
      @ehrenthompson7891 Год назад

      Good point

    • @Meatisfood
      @Meatisfood Год назад

      Weird thing to say to a child.

    • @hippy1002
      @hippy1002 Год назад +3

      Awesome training at age fifty. but if you stayed fit, 50 aint old, but you are a tad slower.. .. savvy makes up for speed

  • @droganovic6879
    @droganovic6879 Год назад +61

    "Every man already thinks he knows how to fight"
    Yes. And "everyone has a plan till they get punched in the mouth" is my counter argument to that. A great quote by a great man 😀

    • @lloydwhite3198
      @lloydwhite3198 Год назад +4

      Iron mike

    • @droganovic6879
      @droganovic6879 Год назад +3

      @@lloydwhite3198 indeed 😀

    • @marricksinon2057
      @marricksinon2057 Год назад +16

      Its not a counter, Both mean the same thing.

    • @bigzGillett
      @bigzGillett Год назад +9

      But you're just validating what he said by saying that

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 5 месяцев назад +3

      A shitty quote that gets endlessly parroted in the youtube comments.
      Mike prepared a lot. He didn't just sit around waiting for the next fight, because plans don't work. Also it's precisely when you a rocked that plans and preparation are particularly important.
      I think wannabe tough guys online like that quote so much, because it makes them believe that their lack of preparedness is just as good as other men's training.
      Moreover I'm convinced that training 2 times per week and actively thinking about what you're doing before and after is better than training 4 times a week with your brain turned off.

  • @hellfrozen9971
    @hellfrozen9971 5 месяцев назад +46

    Kicks are longer,stronger,less precise and 3 times slower,you lose balance and defence as well

    • @nicholasgreen339
      @nicholasgreen339 4 месяца назад +3

      Depends on the skill of the person kicking
      ..to be good at martial arts
      A person should be training 5-6 days a week
      5 hours plus per day
      That's how it used to be..
      But it got changed into classes at set times and days
      Even in China
      You could knock on your instructors
      Door anytime of the day or night...
      ..
      Learning how to kick is easy but
      Most people r not taught how to stretch
      Or even to practice horse stance
      ..
      Lack of stance training
      And cardiovascular training
      Is why most martial arts lack power
      Boxing covers what martial arts used to cover..
      Iv been doing martial arts 27
      ..
      Met the top guys on the planet.
      ..
      It comes down to basic training
      Then over time stepping up endurance and fitness
      ..
      Pushing your skill levels.
      Let's face it boxers spend years learning to punch
      .martial artists
      R not encourged
      To develop each individual technique to the best of its ability...
      ..
      Doing kata and forms takes up a lot of time.
      ..to be good at kata means one must train each kata for hours on end
      ..
      But most don't spend much time on them..
      .
      Hence y they can't get power from tbe kata
      It's like a boxer training once a month
      Won't get tbe results as someone who trains 3 times a day 7 days a week ..
      Year in year out.

    • @smokedcheese6431
      @smokedcheese6431 3 месяца назад +9

      ​@@nicholasgreen339This was infuriating to read, why do you write like this? Not trying to offend, just genuinely curious what the thought process of typing like that is

    • @comicsmaster7809
      @comicsmaster7809 3 месяца назад +7

      If you lose balance and defence by kicking, you are doing it wrong

    • @arenuzzle6282
      @arenuzzle6282 3 месяца назад +4

      You lose balance because you don't train

    • @BlackRose369.
      @BlackRose369. 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@smokedcheese6431it looks like he's trying to make some points
      ..

  • @ronaldhuss8915
    @ronaldhuss8915 Год назад +64

    Your spot on RD
    It's more about actual, real sparring and real fights. Boxing, far above most other fighting style, uses advanced footwork, feints, traps, angles and combinations. Plus a boxer is trained to adapt to the situation at hand practicing combinations rather than a set of katas that probably don't fit the actual fight

    • @conmcgrath7174
      @conmcgrath7174 Год назад +5

      Absolutely, total respect to traditional martial artists (as opposed to mac-dojo 'belts for sale here') but you are right. It's the fluid movement of your entire body and (a fault of mine from well, guess where?) not every punch has to be full power; fast percussive, whipping hooks can totally take someone down. Timing, distancing and angling with body conditioning and hard sparring can make an effective fighter. I can't deny that a good kick, delivered by a pro won't be effective but the danger of throwing any kick is that you no longer have perfect balance on two feet (dah?) and if a boxer actually steps into your space whilst it's being thrown then you're in all kinds of trouble. If you have 'conditioned' hands, boxing outside the ring can be devastating.
      As is Ju Jitsu.
      Pax Ronald.

  • @perceivedvelocity9914
    @perceivedvelocity9914 Год назад +250

    I was almost always the smallest boy in class when I was growing up. Some of the other boys would pick on me because my size. My family taught me a little dirty boxing for self defense. I'll be honest I probably learned more from fighting and wrestling with my brother. One day a taller boy who had been taking Karate wanted to show off his skills to his friends. He picked me as his example. Well what happened did not go the way that he wanted. My dirty boxing was superior to his white belt Karate. He went home with a couple of bruises to his body and his ego. On the bright side, I never got picked on again after that.

    • @garynaccarato4606
      @garynaccarato4606 Год назад +5

      I heard someone tell me of an incident some kid who knew karate who thought that it was a good idea to bully some other kid and call him R-word and what wound up happening is that kid who knew karate and called the other kid the R-word got beaten up by the kid who was called the R-word and didn't know any martial art by the way.Part of the reason why I think this might have happened was because this kid was probably rather large or around the same size as the bully and that the bully who probably had very minimal experience in a style of karate which was posibly not even one of the better styles of karate out there got really over confident and had a false sense of security and just wound up getting beat up and made to look stupid by someone who had no experience in fighting.Which by the way if I studied something like Aikido or a crappy martial art for fighting particularly if I had a high degree of a belt I would sort of rather keep the fact that I can't really fight or I am incapable of kicking somebodies butt a secret as opposed to making myself look stupid by trying to convince somebody to try to kick my butt and then getting my butt kicked in the process.

    • @varanid9
      @varanid9 Год назад +2

      @@garynaccarato4606 What's the "R word"?

    • @gigachad6885
      @gigachad6885 Год назад +17

      @@varanid9 Ronald McDonald

    • @varanid9
      @varanid9 Год назад +8

      @@gigachad6885 well no wonder these guys are getting beat

    • @jakeledger2819
      @jakeledger2819 Год назад +1

      Any resources to learn dirty boxing

  • @SoulConstruct
    @SoulConstruct Год назад +47

    Boxing is not just about using the hands, the feet and legs are also a part of boxing. Your stance, how well you can move, overall speed, and how you position yourself are just some of the ways legs contribute to boxing.

    • @ComeOnPelican91
      @ComeOnPelican91 Год назад +9

      If your legs give out during sparring you're basically a dead man.

  • @tekki2060
    @tekki2060 Год назад +83

    I'm ranked in two style of karate and have extensive experience as an amateur and professional boxer. The karate made my boxing much more balanced and powerful and the boxing taught me much better reflexes and movement. The two can compliment each other if one is well grounded in the basics of both. Unfortunately, very few people know how to properly teach either properly these days. One must also be careful about the concepts of power in each because if one doesn't it can ruin you for both.

    • @christophercallinan
      @christophercallinan Год назад +1

      this is the best comment

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад +8

      Boxing is combined with karate in several styles.
      Karate is not a centuries old rigid archaic system. It incorporated boxing and for example muay thai and judo/jujutsu techniques as well as others.

    • @saqibhabib5576
      @saqibhabib5576 Год назад

      What an answer👌

    • @tekki2060
      @tekki2060 Год назад +2

      @@siddified Well, maybe the much more current variations of martial arts, ie; MMA, but not the older stuff. I'm speaking of traditional Shotokan and the Okinawan styles from which it was derived. One must also understand that Tae Kwon Do is NOT taught here like it is in Korea. Most Americans could never handle the rigid discipline and the long workouts.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад +1

      @@tekki2060 originally all karate is from Okinawa and mixed a lot with Chinese martial arts. So it was already a mixed martial art from the start. Western boxing was incorporated over a period of time and depending on the style, and muay thai a while later, mainly in kyokushin. Even savate has had a strong influence on early karate, without it we wouldn't have had high kicks for example.
      When karate was popularized in mainland Japan, throws and locks and most grappling was taken out or rather, ignored, so as not to compete or be confused too much with judo and jujutsu. Some later styles reincorporated that again. The popularity of MMA has double sparked that particular facet of karate again also more recently.
      Taekwondo is a derivative of shotokan. Through lineage it's based on incense shop kung fu, which is the 'soft' style part of karate, hence the bouncing and such. The problem with America is that most of karate based training is Very watered down and commercialism has had a great impact on quality. Nevertheless, TKD dojangs in Korea aren't particularly different. Training intensity varies between dojangs and there's a more realistic TKD style besides the point stop sport version, also in America. That one, like hapkido, has some elements of jujutsu in it. Although hapkido made it a specialty as it is more directly related to aikido.

  • @DeeBeeScribe
    @DeeBeeScribe Год назад +19

    Boxers have better footwork, rhythm, conditioning and they're more fluid.
    Also, Boxers spar more.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +1

      In reality it all matters to the individual. If the individual is just better at fighting. They are going to win the fight karate or boxer

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад

      Let me give you an example. DB
      Even if you went and learned 10 different styles of fighting and came to fight me, I would rag doll you

    • @evanmcclure67
      @evanmcclure67 Год назад +3

      Truth, I went from Karate to boxing, and the training is different overall. They can go for ALOT of time. when I started judo we'd randori for an hour.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад

      You understand now. Bozo?
      You thought you put some kind of smart ass answer mr. Footwork again conditioning

    • @neinbruderja7519
      @neinbruderja7519 Год назад +3

      Harry the type of guy mentioned in the beginning of the video. An absolute archetypal prototype, by any means.

  • @PhantomSavage
    @PhantomSavage Год назад +27

    Because of icons like Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, and wushu cinema in general, people tend to think of Martial Arts as this ancient form of hand-to-hand combat that once mastered makes you close to super human in just about any fight you can imagine, when the reality is nothing could be further from the truth.
    Most marital arts, eastern martial arts in particular, do indeed have ancient roots, but those roots are tied into much more than just "combat".
    In the Eastern world where the likes of kung-fu and karate were created, philosophy was just as important as the movements themselves, it was spiritually significant in the way one should live one's life. Sometimes a Martial Art was about achieving harmony between mind and body, sometimes a Martial art was about self discipline and willpower, Martial Arts could be about any number of things but the common theme through most of them is they have a focus on life and spiritual improvement of one's self. This is the primary purpose for Martial Arts in the east, historically speaking, particularly those that were taught and practiced by common people.
    Boxing is not based or designed around a life philosophy in mind, because its not a Martial Art... its a form of hand-to-hand combat, and its purpose is purely about dishing out and managing damage. Hand-to-hand combat and Martial Arts are not the same thing. One is a means of enlightenment, health, and fitness, and the other has a basis in war.
    That's not to say Martial Arts, even eastern martial arts, can't be dangerous or deadly, quite the opposite in fact. There's a lot of techniques in many different "Martial Art" styles that are very effective means of real combat, but many of these styles were based in a form of combat that was typically taught to military of the time, not common people. Judo and Jiu-Jitsu for example were disciplines taught by Samurai to kill other Samurai in combat, and most of the moves are originally intended to be used in conjunction with actual weapons of war. Judo hip throws originally came from a technique designed to ground an armored opponent quickly so they could be finished off at the neck or eyes with a Tanto that, like modern soldiers and their KBARs, all or most Samurai carried with them into combat.
    The problem is, even an effective hand-to-hand combat system is no use if you don't put it into actual practice, and putting a hand-to-hand combat system that was designed to kill people into actual use isn't exactly practical or... ethical. Boxing and Kick-Boxing are somewhat special in the fact they focus entirely on strikes, and with proper padding and endurance training two fighters can go at it at relatively full force and have limited risk of actually killing each other. This is not universally true of all hand-to-hand combat systems, and in fact, most have very little means of sparring at full force that would not result in terrible or fatal injury.
    If you don't fight for real then you won't know how when you actually have to, plain and simple. No amount of sparring compares to the real thing, now matter how hard you think you're going at it, and even if you think the way you're training is pretty intense, sparring in a bubble is of no use to you. If the only people you fight are other people who know the same moves you do, you're not fighting, you're playing a very physical form of chess, which is a game. If a combat system has any worth, it has to be used on people who fight completely differently than you do, and that simply doesn't happen in a bubble, even to the really skilled and experienced. This is why 80 year old dojo masters who should by all rights be absolute beasts of their field often find themselves on the ground with a bloody nose when they get challenged by someone as simple as an amateur boxer... fighting and sparring are not the same, and its a rude wake-up call.

    • @psychkick666
      @psychkick666 Год назад +3

      nice essay... i think, dont have time to read thou

    • @SpazzMatticusTheGreat
      @SpazzMatticusTheGreat Год назад +3

      Ok but a martial art is any sport/activity that revolves around a martial skill. Boxing is a martial art. MMA is a martial art. Wrestling, Judo, Sambo, and BJJ are all martial arts.
      I think a better differentiation would be between a practical martial art and a traditional martial art.

    • @joeschmoe9154
      @joeschmoe9154 Год назад +3

      Martial literally means combat or war....

    • @pullupsarefun
      @pullupsarefun Год назад +4

      Bad take tbh

    • @fanofgodjimindiva2497
      @fanofgodjimindiva2497 Год назад +2

      No 80yo martial arts master can be ¨a beast¨ in combat, he's 80yo ffs. Maybe if he's 30 years younger..

  • @richardmorgan8407
    @richardmorgan8407 Год назад +85

    For me the biggest difference between the two is definitely the training. In boxing everything revolves around preparing you for a match so the training constantly builds towards a central goal. In karate unfortunately everything revolves around either staying true to historical/ traditional training methods or just being good at the aspect of training.

    • @manuelarizzato666
      @manuelarizzato666 Год назад +2

      Well, i can't talk about boxing since i don't practice it, but i can tell you that in karate, once the warm-up is done, everything else is sparring; and yes, it's not full contact: while you can hit the hardest you can on the body, you can't touch your opponent's head, just brush it, that doesn't change that in my karate training i have to spar against someone about 5-10 times per lesson.

    • @makokx7063
      @makokx7063 Год назад +11

      @@manuelarizzato666 It's a hit and a stop though, right? Being pushed in a corner as a dude blasts your whole body until the round ends or you drop is an entirely different animal. Full force to the head too.

    • @manuelarizzato666
      @manuelarizzato666 Год назад +2

      @@makokx7063 yes, the basic is: when someone hits you the referee stops the fight (or the two guys just stop on their own, if it's just sparring with no referee) he gets a point and then it restarts, however sometimes a hit goes under the belt, or to the shoulders and does no longer count. In therms of durability, stamina and resistance, the boxer overshadows a karate fighter, but in this video it seemed like someone practicing karate is unskilled, doesn't know footwork techniques and how to deal with flurry of punches.. But that's not true. Shure, if a boxer and a karate fighter fought in a boxing-stile match, where the strongest wins, then the tank-like boxer would probably come out on top (unless the karate guy makes a really good training camp focused on endurance), but if the fight is set like karate's kumite, where it's about strategy, mind versatility and faints, then i'm giving it to karate. In conclusion, whit boxing being focused on dealing more damage possible and karate being about who's the more skilled and sharper tactician, those two diciplines are just too different to say "ho, but this is superior in every conceivable way!" instead we should respect one another as athletes.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад +5

      @@makokx7063 not all karate styles are point stop styles. In fact those are a travesty.

    • @rikpeol3612
      @rikpeol3612 Год назад

      I don't think you can pin it down to any particular martial art. But it is clear that it always depends on the individual, their skills and their mindset. In fact, a good boxer is a dangerous challenge for any rather static martial artist.

  • @moz5831
    @moz5831 Год назад +11

    ”If you don’t know how to win the fight with just your hands, you don’t know how how to box - and you don’t know how to fight”. Well put Sir, indeed! Thank you!

  • @jangrajewski1017
    @jangrajewski1017 Год назад +47

    I've been training Taekwondo WTF for 4 years as a kid. No guard, only kicks. When I started doing Muay Thai, my every sparring partner asks me if I trained TKD, because my kicks are pretty decent. However it was in the begginers group. When I went for advanced group, the guys started picking me apart with thise punches. I really don't know how to keep my guard up and how to defend, I most often just lean backwards or take a step back. It really sucks, because relearning new habit of keeping your hands up is very difficult.

    • @jw-nz2vx
      @jw-nz2vx Год назад +13

      Leaning straight back is a good way to get knocked out. Back away at angles, preferably with your hands up. Your opponent can close distance in a straight line much faster than you can create distance. Don't get discouraged. Try sparring some rounds with only boxing techniques to get you used to relying on your hands for offense and defense.

    • @hippy1002
      @hippy1002 Год назад

      guys I do not want to mix it up with. MU THAI fighters, and the ground and pound guys.

    • @kalreynolds5829
      @kalreynolds5829 Год назад

      That's the big weakness of TKD. You either try to strike and return to your position or land inside their guard. If you land inside their guard you have to know that you're doing with your boxing or you'll be slaughtered, and if you try to return to position you're already retreating and anyone who knows what they're doing will push in while you're moving backwards.
      Kicks are nice, but they're niche and you'll overrely on them in TKD. The most common kicks actual fighters throw out are leg kicks, and they're often less committed-TKD has you throw your hip for maximum power, but watch an MMA fighter throw a roundhouse or a front kick to the leg, it's stiff, often impacts with their shin not their foot, but it maintains their stance and their guard-minimising the risk that it will let their opponent damage them with their boxing.
      Save your good TKD kicks for when you have the right range for them, and focus on keeping your guard up and boxing in close. Just learning how to hold your hands to avoid getting punched and keeping a good distance will help, and if they open that up too much, you still have kicking.
      But you're going to have to learn some boxing, because TKD just gives you some basic punches and a lot of blocking and those just don't work unless you're planning to convert them. it's not worthwhile to expend the same amount of energy that someone does punching you diverting that punch. You gotta learn to take that punch, find a guard to mitigate them, and punch back.
      And yeah, you have to keep your hands up. Your instructors let you down big time with that. A big part of my TKD experience was landing a kick and then being corrected on the guard because they knew full well you should expect to be punched after a kick. Your hands have to be up, they're not doing you good anywhere else.

    • @dirtyandnasty9011
      @dirtyandnasty9011 Год назад

      My trainer had a good technique that was to put a headgear on us, bearpaws (how is it called in english ?) on his hands, and he hitted head only with it for 3mn straight. You're not allowed to go out of the corner, nor hit, you can only block or avoid with bust movements. Once you get hit with that paw you learn fast to keep your gloves in front of those cheeks and move 😂 I miss this good guy.

  • @scottstout6836
    @scottstout6836 Год назад +106

    Currently training TKD in my mid 50s. In teens I trained gym contact amateur kickboxing. You're one hundred percent correct about kickers. I've had the wind knocked out of me in kickboxing, but the fight didn't end. You just keep going and events you start to breathe again. Kicking is good to close the distance. But Olympic TKD guys I train with more think that TKD is complete and that they're fight ready, despite never sparring full contact let alone punching to the head.

    • @austinsavage
      @austinsavage Год назад +7

      Olympic TKD is WTF TKD, and we always sparred full contact with gear of course, just without punching to the head. There were also occasional KOs in sparring which is expected when everyone is allowed to kick as hard as they want. But that was my school, not sure about other TKD schools though. Olympic athletes definitely sparred full contact, but they are just not street-ready though

    • @moustachio334
      @moustachio334 Год назад +5

      I’ve gone pretty hard in Thai boxing sparring but we have enough control to not knock each other out with our kicks. Sounds like low level fighters with no control.

    • @monkeyboy275bobo8
      @monkeyboy275bobo8 Год назад +1

      @@austinsavage Why is it that you would knock each other out with crazy kicks to the head but not throw punches? Is it just to keep TKD its own thing? Like allowing punches to the head would result in people not throwing all those fancy kicks which TKD is all about because you would just get punched in the face for trying? Is there some other reason too? I mean thats fair enough, people do TKD for kicking and there are other combat sports to throw hands or mix things up. Im just curious, would allowing punches to the head render most TKD techniques useless, would it make sense to train to still use those techniques efficently against someone whos trying to punch you in the face or would it just be to simulare to other sports and therefor its more about keeping TKD pure? As far is i know kickboxing had a simulare problem, people would just throw hands so they specificly made a rule that forced people to kick a certain number of times each round.

    • @mynameismynameis666
      @mynameismynameis666 Год назад

      ​@@monkeyboy275bobo8 imho for a very simple reason: to make it more accessible and distinct at the same time and to better integrate it into schools and youth-activity . old school tkd definitely had strikes to the head (and elbows, hand edge techniques, palm strikes, knees, throws, all sorts of grappling...) and they can be found in some of the older technique compendium books (and boy oh boy, that is quite a revelation about what would theoretically be found under the surface of things - but unfortunately swept under the rug in order to create modern sports taekwondo)
      then again: you don't want kids to strike each others brain anyway (see: long term effects of repeated strikes to the head). and until they develop the athleticism for proper dangerous kicks to the head, you will at least have gotten them somewhat fit disciplined enough and mostly slippery like little eels due to the focus on dexterity... And even if you can't fight, the idea that you can reduces the probability that you will, just because of the postural change... (at least if you are not out looking for trouble). so even if i don't think it is a viable base for a fighting sport, it is the best entry level martial arts in my opinon. If you don't send your kids to some McDojo for grandmas, then not a minute of their lives will be wasted doing it.

    • @kalreynolds5829
      @kalreynolds5829 Год назад

      ​@@monkeyboy275bobo8 It's because a) TKD is a kicking art. You use roundhouse kicks, sidekicks, back kicks, crescent kicks, axe kicks, spinning heel kicks in TKD, and often in combination for grading. Comparatively for strikes you grade on jabs, crosses, knifehands, spear fingers, palm shots 2 out of 5 of those are dangerously useless. At least my school also included knees and 3 elbow strikes. The most common strike in olympic and sport TKD is the front foot roundhouse, which is probably the weakest strike in TKD kicking, but it is the quickest to fire, and will get the "pop" from the guard the refs are after. You aren't fighting for the KO or the points over a round, you're fighting to the point of a good strike.
      b) a punch is less effective at scoring a point than a roundhouse off the front foot.
      c) because taekwondo is a kicking art, you are expected to be able to aim your kicks at the body and the head, with the head being more difficult and impressive.
      Allowing punches to the head would not make TKD useless, because the sport of TKD favours low risk quick strikes at range. However, most TKD practitioners will freely admit that they''re not prepared for close in fights, punch ups or grapples. We had the Judo guys come in for a day once a year, and at camp, we'd look at other martial arts especially grappling. But a big problem with TKD or Karate as it's taught for people who are often looking at sport is that it just doesn't prepare people for a fight, where they'll get punched in the head, the liver, where kicks will get them thrown down if they're careless, and where you need to have experience being beaten to keep your head.

  • @bournechupacabra
    @bournechupacabra Год назад +17

    Going from karate to kickboxing was an interesting transition. I certainly had some things to learn but a fair amount of my karate practice carried over. Point sparring is pretty good at teaching realistic timing and speed of real sparring, and hitting bags can give you real power on your techniques so putting them together for kickboxing wasn't super hard. However, I was also lucky to have had a karate sensei who taught us more practical sparring tips rather than just pure controlled drills. I also practiced sparring with my friends.
    At the end of the day, there is nothing inherently wrong with traditional martial arts as long as you find ways to pressure test your abilities in realistic scenarios. In fact, American kickboxing is partially derived from karate. The problem is that most traditional practitioners don't ever do that.

  • @jCrItCh5
    @jCrItCh5 Год назад +1

    Love your Stuff Ramsey..
    You have a brilliant way of putting the basics across...

  • @charlesreed5839
    @charlesreed5839 Год назад +10

    You shared such a basic truth about every guy knowing how to fight... until he fights. Great video, like always.

  • @IccyTheOne
    @IccyTheOne Год назад +34

    This has always been something I've noticed. Taking karate in my younger years and then becoming a boxer later on, I realized it's because of they way they spar. Kyokushin guys are tough as nails but they aren't used to getting hit in the face. We would punch and kick to the body all day but getting hit in the face is different. The hand skills are different, don't be surprised if Gabriel Varga dominates Karate Combat for this reason.

    • @Leinja
      @Leinja Год назад +11

      I think the guys from Kyokushin or from it's many offshoots could fight boxers and have a fair chance of winning. Even if they are not used to getting punched to the face, they are used to hard physical contact and they can actually punch and kick with power. But I might be biased since I used to train Ashihara Karate.

    • @rezlogan4787
      @rezlogan4787 Год назад +9

      Not to mention Kyokushin guys stand a chance of growing old without progressive brain problems from constant concussions.

    • @IccyTheOne
      @IccyTheOne Год назад +7

      @@Leinja Kyokushin guys are no doubt the toughest Karatekas I've seen, but they still get beat out by guys with superior hand skills, i.e. Thai fighters, boxers.

    • @Leinja
      @Leinja Год назад +7

      @@IccyTheOne If the boxer isn't used to leg kicks, I would actually bet on the Kyokushin guy, given that they both have trained similar amount of time and are around same weight and height. If he is, then it might be a different story but still I don't think boxers would just steamroll Kyokushin guys. Same with Muay Thai guys, they might have an advantage but I don't think they would just steamroll Kyokushin guys.
      I believe that Kyokushin and its offshoot styles can hold their own against any other stand up fighting style. But again, I might have a bias. As a sidenote, I did some Sanda too so I know little bit about fighting with punches to the head allowed.

    • @honigdachs.
      @honigdachs. Год назад +1

      Varga is getting that belt 100%.

  • @davidthomas9190
    @davidthomas9190 Год назад +1

    Absolutely spot on and all with the vocal talent of a top level voice over guy.
    You got my sub brother 👊🏻

  • @DeputyChiefWhip
    @DeputyChiefWhip Год назад +24

    It depends on your story and your experiences. Im a 80's/90's Shotokan 2nd dan, ex doorman with training under Geoff Thompson. Using his method it was pretty easy to adapt to a shorter way of using karate more directly. Not only that, our sparring was supposed to be points sparring but it was way heavier if you compared to today's point sparring.
    I have sparred at boxing clubs and as long as they had a ring that wasn't a phone booth, I was a look ways ok.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад +1

      You had me at 'Geoff Thompson'

    • @italpeel
      @italpeel Год назад +2

      I've read loads of Geoff's books and still have some of his animal day videos. Watch my back was a great read. What happened to Geoff. He just dropped off the radar

    • @eamonwilkinson2333
      @eamonwilkinson2333 3 месяца назад

      ​@@italpeelhe does healing podcasts now. On RUclips. Don't think he's doing the self defence anymore plus gotten older. Those self defence videos he done were in the 90s.

  • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
    @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +34

    Everyone tries to beat everyone else in their own game. And by beating someone else in their own game, proves that your style and skill is better even in their game.

    • @merkins87
      @merkins87 Год назад +7

      Never bring scissors to the rock party!

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +1

      @@stanclark3992 The point to my comment is the karate fighter wants to prove to the boxer that his hand striking is superior.

  • @pyronicdesign
    @pyronicdesign Год назад +63

    Omg this is so true! I'm not trained in karate, but Chinese Kung Fu and when I was in basic training we had lots of martial artists who would spar on Sundays in the barracks. One of them was a golden glove boxer, and when we sparred at first he was dominant. Then we started talking martial arts and he showed us lots of stuff that he did differently than us. We all learned head movement. And spacing from him, and we got loads of experience actually pressure testing our technique, and by far the most common weakness thenother martial arts had was that we just did not have as much actual fight experience as him. Sure, my master sparred with me for hours a day, and we trained 4 hours a day every day, bit sparring is not an actual fight. We were all outclassed my him until we got used to the pressure.

    • @BatCaveOz
      @BatCaveOz Год назад

      The last time someone won a fight using Kung Fu was in the 1970's.

    • @dr.dylansgame5583
      @dr.dylansgame5583 Год назад +1

      @@BatCaveOz To be fair that's usually because a system has a flaw or weakness that can be capitlized on this is true for all martial arts including Boxing. Yet you don't see people picking on boxers for getting crumpled by a few good Oblique Kicks. For instance I see Wing Chun constantly get torn a new one because the so called "Masters" of it train the shit like Tai Chi. Yet old school Bare Knuckle boxing techniques share many similarities and would knock any average Joe into next week.
      Simply put it's not the style it's the user also mixing arts helps deal with there weaknesses once I added Boxing and Muay Thai to it the few weaknesses I had from the style were all but gone. It was just Missing stuff like good Head Movement, Footwork, Angles, and a Solid Guard.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      Of course, because you practiced kung fu.
      There's no realistic pressure testing in kung fu and probably it wouldn't even help much

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      @@BatCaveOz in a movie.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      @@dr.dylansgame5583 you mean, just about everything that's important?

  • @rickkarcher7475
    @rickkarcher7475 Год назад +3

    I’m not a huge mma fan, but I do like to watch on occasion. I’m not really familiar with Ramsey, but I am impressed with his honesty on this question. I will be looking forward to hearing more from him...

  • @lsporter88
    @lsporter88 Месяц назад

    Absolutely right. Wise Man, great video.

  • @HeiniSauerkraut
    @HeiniSauerkraut Год назад +64

    True. I was lucky enough to figure that out for myself, without getting smashed. I was a quite good traditional Karate practitioner in kumite point fighting in my younger years. We did much more randori (sparring) than the average karateka, and also included included simple throws out of the clinch and falling (Judo), because it was the time Raphael Agayev had his first successes. We also used also extensively handpads in our training. At one time we did a demonstration, and at the same event some young amateur boxers also took part. We talked to each other, and they showed us their work with the handpads. At this point with my own experience, I knew that my chances in a full contact fight with one of them would have been very slim! :-D The guys were quite nice, and they said they were very impressed with our fast high kicks. But all in all, I think we on the other side were much more impressed with their fast combinations and the power of their strikes.

    • @crisalcantara7671
      @crisalcantara7671 Год назад

      Point fighting is the weakest form of karate sport , funakushi would be ashamed of what his style has become

    • @HeiniSauerkraut
      @HeiniSauerkraut Год назад

      @@crisalcantara7671 Yes that Funakoshi who didn´t fight at all, and who was against competition! I think his version of Kata only is the "weakest" form of Karate, if you look only from a fighters perspective. I didn´t only practice point fighting, I also sparred with many practioners of many striking arts, including Thai Boxers, and I know my limitations. I also sparred with Kata Dancers, and no matter how good their technique and their speed was, they all couldn´t fight. 😉
      They don´t had to, as long as they wouldn´t delusion themselfes about their fighting abilities. Martial arts has many aspects and benefits. It don´t have to be focused on fighting .

  • @samjohnson5680
    @samjohnson5680 Год назад +15

    Nice video coach. Last time I sparred Kickboxing with my friend who later became pro boxer, he told me I needed to work on my boxing more cause I focused more on the kicking

    • @redbullwithoutapause7835
      @redbullwithoutapause7835 Год назад +3

      sounds like a true good friend.
      think back to a big MT or K1 head kick win.
      9 times out of ten i bet the guy who won, dominated the punches.

    • @crisalcantara7671
      @crisalcantara7671 Год назад +1

      Kicking is for long to medium range , short or close range is for hands

  • @edwardfranklin4152
    @edwardfranklin4152 Год назад

    as usual ramsey great video allways worth listining two my friend

  • @nickcellini5609
    @nickcellini5609 4 месяца назад +2

    Great video. Honest man telling the truth and not boasting about his exploits.

  • @bradlwykfulbright
    @bradlwykfulbright Год назад +15

    Well said. I have been following you for a year or so. Having an online coach has helped me up my boxing amd kickboxing a great deal, thank you, Ramsey! I tend to stick to focusing on boxing technique during my workouts, I work on legs and some kicks; you have to keep ALL of your core nice and strong! My dad was a golden gloves in the 60's, showed us a few things, works in street fights. I got bullied ALOT. Im a skinny guy. Then i learned to box. Wanna know the secret to quickly gettong your eye hand cooridination, together, fast? Stack pennies on yer elbow, as yer hand is resting on your neck muscle, palm up is wayyyy harder, and try to fling yer hand down to catch them ALL. You do this until you can catch 2 stacks of 10. ALL OF THEM. pops told us this is how you box, do this and you will not get beat up anymore. He was right! I have started learning some prating mantis, just for the forms; I STILL box my heavy bag, every day. For hours! Bless ya'll, COACH!

  • @Devi_Shammuramat
    @Devi_Shammuramat Год назад +12

    Kickboxing originated from and is often described as 'full contact Karate'; kickboxers generally being quite effective, and usually / certainly know how to fight.

  • @matthewzito6130
    @matthewzito6130 Год назад +13

    I think this applies to more than just karate fighters. If you're used to one style of fighting, with training partners who fight the same way you do, it can leave you unprepared for someone who uses different tactics and techniques. ... Also, I would argue that it's inherently easier to press forward and crowd an opponent than it is to be evasive and create distance. That's one reason why pure grapplers with little or no striking ability did well in the early days of MMA. A wrestler can close with a boxer as easily as a boxer can crowd a kicker.

  • @mak19801980
    @mak19801980 Год назад +3

    Great video as always. Just for fun, I'd like to add my own thoughts on this subject as I've often pondered this exact topic. I have about a decade (in total) of Judo training and about six years of Karate training (Shotokan specifically, so I can't speak for other schools). The obvious answer to most of these questions is the lack of pressure testing in Karate, but I want to dig a bit deeper than that. In Judo, the techniques we practice are later used in fighting (i.e., randori and shiai); i.e., there is congruence between the techniques and the fights. Even the Kata, for the most part (with the exception of a few more 'colourful' Kata like Ju no), are fighting Katas. In Karate, this is not the case at all (at least not in any of the schools I've seen). The techniques practiced are for the most part incongruent to the more 'pressure tested' kumite part. The blocks, the punches, and so on are done almost religiously in a certain way, then once applied most of it goes out the window. The stance changes, the guard position changes, the movements change, techniques are no longer allowed, etc. In fact, Karate turns into a game of fencing with your hands and legs (which is what it should be, honestly). On top of that the Kata, which are interesting, but pretty much useless for a fight, are often sold as something that will somehow unlock your fighting potential. This has been debunked, but is still repeated (for me, the Kata in Karate are great stretching exercises and good for fitness, especially as we age, nothing more). These are just my humble thoughts, I'm not trying to make anyone angry, it's just an observation.

  • @hailhydreigon2700
    @hailhydreigon2700 Год назад +27

    I left my Karate class after I heard the instructor say "All you need is one good punch and you can finish the fight. You don't need to go to the ground or do any of that Jiu Jitsu bullshit."
    I love Karate, but if these modern, boxer-fighting Karateka want it to keep up with modern times, they need to evolve (or devolve, depending who you ask) it.

    • @Wingzero90939
      @Wingzero90939 Год назад +4

      Same for me it was taekwondo but I kind of figured that out the hard way when I went to my friend’s gym and he was training to compete in the golden gloves competition for boxing…
      A punch to the nose/mouth really puts things in perspective. My hand fighting sucked so bad. So the way I look at it is if it’s a specific skill that you want to get good at just go train with someone who’s the best at that.
      I mean a hockey player can skate but they would suck at figure skating and vice versa. Every karate or Taekwondo person learns how to punch but not like a boxer...

    • @BWater-yq3jx
      @BWater-yq3jx Год назад +1

      I mean that's actually pretty much true for most streetfights against untrained opponents.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад +1

      He was right though.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      @@southtxguitarist8926 the early UFC was fixed. Gracie marketing stunt. Read up on it.
      Karate does have takedown defenses as well as takedowns (and throws, locks, chokes... )

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      @@southtxguitarist8926 okay I should have elaborated on the 'fixed' comment.
      I didn't say or mean that people were paid somehow to 'take a dive' or to throw the game.
      What I meant by fixed was the pairing. The Gracies were formidable grapplers indeed, BUT the opponents they faced were handpicked by themselves, so that they could be certain enough of being able to defeat them. Yes they beat world-class grapplers at their own game, because grappling was and is their forté. They however did the same with the strikers and that's where they were not strong. So they intentionally didn't face world class strikers or strikers who could deal with takedowns and grappling well.
      Nowadays the balance between grapplers and strikers in terms of wins has shifted, because more strike oriented fighters have learned how to deal with grappling oriented fighters. This is the more realistic conclusion, as opposed to the early UFC.
      You may say you're a karate practitioner but what makes all the difference here is what style you practice.
      I think I know which styles you do not practice from your answer, because you should have known what I was talking about when I described the curriculum.
      Or maybe your school just doesn't teach those things at your level, which is just not great to say the least.
      Oh btw, I myself have also trained judo, BJJ and even sumo for years, besides (lifelong) karate and many other striking styles. I don't speak out of ignorance but out of experience. I'm getting drawn into a sort of strawman here it seems but I'll go along this far.
      I'll just state that you cannot categorically say that grapplers beat strikers (or the other way around). It depends on the striking style and it depends on the person. What I can specifically say is that certain karate styles absolutely do have tactics for dealing with grapplers, as it is meant to be a complete fighting system and in fact, the whole origin of karate is very close to grappling (without drawn out ground games). What people perceive karate to be these days, a long range point striking sport without any grappling at all, is not at all what karate was meant to be and it is a very poor perversion of the original. This is because some, or even most styles have drifted too far from their origins, for certain non practical reasons.
      Also I'd like to mention Ali vs Inoki, where a world class boxer humiliated a world class grappler/shoot fighter. Just to show what can happen when a good striker is properly prepared for 'the better grappler'.

  • @privatekarateka3745
    @privatekarateka3745 Год назад +12

    I'm so glad that I watched Baki the grappler as a kid and learned the importance of not being tied down by style, tradition or martial arts dogma.🤣

    • @kenshirosama7227
      @kenshirosama7227 Год назад +7

      Baki is so goofy yet so binge worthy it is one of my favorite guilty pleasures and I can't wait for the new season

  • @metrfulton9708
    @metrfulton9708 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the honesty😁

  • @amrisyafari3946
    @amrisyafari3946 Год назад +10

    I remember my first live sparring match with a real boxer. Threw everything i had for the first 1 minute, while he just kept dodging and defending. Then he said, “my turn” ... turned out i didn’t know how to defend against his attacks. 🤦🏻‍♂️🤦🏾‍♂️🤦🏼‍♂️

    • @kichmadev
      @kichmadev Год назад +4

      Lol great story! Reminds me of a time I had to put my friend in his place, he started boxing for a couple of months and he's a strong guy, so he was bullying some weaker beginners. He kept challenging me for sparring (because I was 5yrs more experienced) but I refused until I heard he's beating people up... So then we sparred.. He rushed me and I stood my ground defending shots, first opening I saw I blasted him with a hook so hard that even I was surprised by the sound of impact. One shot - sparring challenges over, bullying beginners over, smarter friend now with a black eye, all around a good day I guess.

    • @The_Custos
      @The_Custos Год назад +4

      One of Boxers' greatest strengths is their patience. Kickers are often too eager and flashy (been there, done that), boxers can be used to fighting for many minutes with all that involves.

    • @kalreynolds5829
      @kalreynolds5829 Год назад +1

      @@The_Custos And it uses so much energy, and can be dodged and deflected so easily. Traditional martial arts isn't really ready for the flurry.
      A big one I remember a lot is my knife defenses. And the fact that one of my instructors demonstrated that it would be useless against a "sewing machine attack"-you are going to get stabbed, multiple times, and probably slashed up and down the arms too: give them your wallet.
      Same thinking applies to someone coming at you with a flurry. Unless you train day in and day out to block that you're getting hit. And if you do block it you're retreating and wasting similar energy to striking on blocks. Whereas some of the most effective techniques I have learned are the basic bullrush or to duck under hands, get behind, sweep the hand up to lock one arm and their head off side and move backwards so their feet are off ground. So much more effective than any amount of striking, you can shrug off unsupported back elbows. Or the bullrush? If you're big enough and can get inside the guy's guard and knock him down it's over. The fancy kicks do nothing there, even the boxing does nothing there.
      Patience is good too, but once someone has gassed themselves kicking or blocking waiting to kick, knocking them down is a great option.

  • @danielhounshell2526
    @danielhounshell2526 Год назад +17

    I really think it comes down to how restrictive the combat sport you train for is. Sport Karate is an extremely restrictive sport, and it's what most karate schools base their sparring around as well. You can still develop extremely impressive skills within that framework, and those skills can even serve you well in full contact fights, provided that the person takes the time to prepare for that transition. Machida is probably the best example of what the sport Karate framework can do for a fighter when they actually adjust it to full contact fighting. However, if you just drop a sport Karate guy, even an extremely good one, into a full contact bout, they're going to get picked apart because they've never prepared for that context. Boxing is much less restrictive even though it has fewer permitted striking techniques.

  • @pittsguy7
    @pittsguy7 Год назад +1

    Nicely stated. Very astute observations. One additional thing I might offer is that kicks are most effective at long range, but once the opponent is in close, like a boxer, the kicks are ineffective. Again, I think you made some excellent points and have a really practical and pragmatic outlook on the viewer's question.

  • @Acelespaul
    @Acelespaul 5 месяцев назад

    Great answer with real world insight. Thank you 🙏

  • @vicedpowers1750
    @vicedpowers1750 Год назад +3

    I’m glad my dad put me in boxing instead of karate

  • @yoursexualizedgrandparents6929
    @yoursexualizedgrandparents6929 Год назад +4

    2:53 I like that instead of saying something longer, you just said it as it is, "Guy who has experience fighting versus guy who doesn't. Who wins?"
    Because that's all that really matters.

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    That was so great!!! I loved the idea of your experiment.

  • @hone9838
    @hone9838 Год назад

    I'm smiling, and thank you for discussing this topic

  • @sumacdude
    @sumacdude 4 месяца назад +3

    After a couple decades of taking any fight I could get and training my ass off (out of love for prize fighting), I found myself amazed at how tough other people were. It’s VERY important to know that.

  • @horaceholloway
    @horaceholloway Год назад +6

    "There's really no excuse not to be a well rounded fighter these days". Yes. 1000% this.

  • @josephtucciarone6878
    @josephtucciarone6878 Год назад

    Thank you for you insights & experiences.

  • @Coffeeanddonuts
    @Coffeeanddonuts Год назад +4

    I know a boxer who got whooped on the streets by a Karate dude. It's not the style it's the individual. Both styles are good. they both have advantages and disadvantages.

    • @bongothom
      @bongothom 2 месяца назад

      The key, I believe, is because it was in the streets.
      In the ring, with a bunch of safety rules, referrees and judges, my money is on the boxer.

  • @mattmiller7345
    @mattmiller7345 Год назад +3

    I made the same mistake when I lived in Huizhou City, Guangdong Province. I was a Taekwondo instructor. Got into a sparring match with one of the guys from the Sanda school next door. Thought I could finish it with my kicks, and I got punished hard. Hands, low kicks, standing grapples and throws. Still taught Taekwondo after that and still do in Australia, but with added elements. I’m actually grateful now, 15 years after the fact, that I got thrashed. It showed me some of what I was lacking.

  • @jamesstewart3505
    @jamesstewart3505 Год назад +15

    In the 70s I and my brother studied karate from James Harris in KC, a champion and of a claim. Excellent instructor but always was honest to his students when explained learning karate will keep you out of fights from the confidence it instilled in you. He stated at that time a skilled boxer would defeat a skilled karate trained because most were not used to being hit,hurt and continuing to fight! I appreciated his honesty from the man you were paying to learn karate from!

    • @ehisey
      @ehisey Год назад +3

      Folks really underestimate the effect of getting punched in the face, and just how much work it takes to actually hit some one for effect.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      He should have taught you better karate instead.

    • @jamesstewart3505
      @jamesstewart3505 Год назад +3

      @@siddified Hardly worth a reply but look at the comments and Caine have you ever squared of with a trained boxer? .....

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      @@jamesstewart3505 yes, plenty. have you ever squared off with a real kyokushin black belt?
      My point was, if your teacher had that attitude I immediately doubt his fundamental understanding of the origins of karate. Even generally good teachers often do not know much about it. Especially in some of the commercialized styles.

    • @kalreynolds5829
      @kalreynolds5829 Год назад

      @@jamesstewart3505 Dude's never been in a fight and projects the fact he's obsessed with lame 80s action films onto everyone else talking the details of the ins and outs of martial arts, because at some point he studied karate and thinks it has made him a fighter.
      McDojo wannabe. He's got no clue. He'd take one real hit and cry.

  • @keithquarles3864
    @keithquarles3864 Год назад

    Thanks for the analogy . You do good work .

  • @alexandervilla9580
    @alexandervilla9580 5 месяцев назад

    At last , I found some one worth the respect of a fighting martial artist like. I learned a lot from you. Keep up the good work s

  • @Demonizer5134
    @Demonizer5134 Год назад +51

    I became a third degree black belt in TaeKwonDo and I must say that there's almost nothing I learned in the process that would actually prepare me for a real fight. In the 15 years of doing TaeKwonDo I never once took any actual shots. I'm not saying it's a waste of time, but it most certainly is not something that I would rely on for self-defense.
    For the last 5 years I've trained boxing and Muay Thai and there is no comparison. We are pushing ourselves to the limit non-stop for an hour per session. In TKD our session would typically involve 15 minutes of stretching, 20 minutes of forms, 15 minutes of punch/kick drills, and maybe only 10 minutes of light sparring. We had 60 year old women getting through the class.
    I wish I would have started boxing at a younger age.

    • @CoG30
      @CoG30 Год назад

      Boxing or muay thai for a street fight?

    • @KiKiChamp123
      @KiKiChamp123 Год назад

      @@CoG30 I don’t do either boxing or Muay Thai but I believe win a street fight it’s only as good as you can apply them. Boxing would be easier to throw more attacks since Muay Thai relies on elbows, knees and kicks. Again, I don’t have experience in either of these martial arts. Only effective as you can apply them

    • @jonasstahl9826
      @jonasstahl9826 Год назад +5

      @@CoG30 In Streetfights always boxing, kicks are difficult or impossible in regular clothes. On top of the risk of slipping and falling with your shoes on the wet street. Kicks are way to risky because you can fall easy and knock you self out or get stuck in the clothes of your oponment.
      Without kicks boxing is clearly at an advantage.

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Год назад +3

      @@jonasstahl9826 especially in colder days, against e.g. overweight opponent in thick winter clothing - boxer's instict is hit to the head, which is usually still exposed.

    • @Han-nk3io
      @Han-nk3io Год назад +5

      I got a 3rd Dan TKD too. I have knock a guy out with my roundhouse irl but i get what you are saying. Modern TKD is lacking head defense which is the basic of fighting. Keep TKD as a complimental martial art add in some boxing and grappling then you are good.

  • @asiansensation622
    @asiansensation622 Год назад +4

    Back in Highschool I had my second degree blackbelt in Tang Soo Do. I got together with some buddies to spar with people who had other training, or in some cases no training at all. One of my friends was a boxer, and that was the day my ribcage learned what a "swarmer" was. He ate a kick with his guard coming in, and as soon as we were toe to toe my mind went blank. I had to relearn a bunch of things that day.

  • @josephtucciarone6878
    @josephtucciarone6878 Год назад

    Thank you for your long learned insights.

  • @elihernandez1552
    @elihernandez1552 Год назад +1

    Bro,testify, facts, I box an do muay thai,wrestling an jujitsu and boxing is a core fundamental to me, good shit brother great video

  • @MajinBLJ
    @MajinBLJ Год назад +27

    They never sweep our legs

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Год назад +10

      Well with gloves on it's not easy to hold the broom

    • @MajinBLJ
      @MajinBLJ Год назад

      @@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed ruclips.net/video/8X_Ot0k4XJc/видео.html

  • @chrisnameless8325
    @chrisnameless8325 Год назад +10

    I'm a karate guy and love traditional marital arts and honestly all marital arts. This question can be boiled down to why do point fighters lose to contact fighters. Honestly I think that it is leading question considering the growth of MMA and how many people do great in it with a back ground in traditional marital arts and yes karate. Marital arts is a tool bag you still need to learn how to use the tools.

  • @Basaltmbl
    @Basaltmbl Год назад

    Dang, I like you and your frank honesty. It's obvious you have a large well of experience. What a great teacher you must be in person. Hope to meet you some day....outside China, mi amigo.

  • @240fxst
    @240fxst Год назад +2

    I didnt even have to watch the video. The most obvious reasons is boxers are use to getting hit in the face and body continuously and still maintain their composure due to repetitive training everytime they go in the ring.

  • @AmityvilleFan
    @AmityvilleFan Год назад +6

    Oh, yeah, absolutely true. I'll never forget when during practice (as a teen) I was put together with a person one head taller, so I felt like zero chance. Decided to move within the person's range, body-to-body distance. I got "slapped like half a dozen times with zero effectiveness (it was bothering, but I shrugeed it off), landed a full-body-force punch on the person's stomach. I won so fast...

  • @Whosyourdaddy21
    @Whosyourdaddy21 Год назад +4

    One thing I’ve always seen as a problem with TMA is they are so focused on big powerful “fight ending” moves but ignore the weaker a quicker shots that are IMO more important. Power shots don’t mean a thing with out setups.

  • @danr5462
    @danr5462 5 месяцев назад +1

    If you don't know how to win a fight with just your hands... then you don't know how to fight. THAT is f-ing gold. Thanks for being my newest subscription!

  • @DoggosAndJiuJitsu
    @DoggosAndJiuJitsu 9 месяцев назад +1

    Solid logic. I've had 30 competition matches and it's very different now vs my first 5-10. And I've been the first for a few competitors, and I've seen the panic in their eyes. If you've seen real panic, you know the look. This is especially true for dance arts like karate vs combat arts like boxing.

  • @merkins87
    @merkins87 Год назад +4

    1 more comprehensive conditioning regimen
    2 punches to the face
    3 full-contact sparring

    • @merkins87
      @merkins87 Год назад +2

      4 commercialisation/watering down of martial arts

  • @donaldatkinson7937
    @donaldatkinson7937 Год назад +21

    My father was a boxing coach, we had amateurs and pros, we use to destroy karate guys. We sparred very hard, they were not use to the pressure, or getting hit hard.

  • @larry6795
    @larry6795 Год назад

    Good analysis 👍🏽

  • @SssshhhhTv
    @SssshhhhTv 6 месяцев назад

    Very well thought out and reasonable take on this. I think it has a lot to do with what you said towards the end about closing distances and not having answers for that once that has happened. Most fighters tend to start grappling a lot when they're inexperienced on what to do after getting lambasted by punches. There's not much else you can do once the distance has been eroded for landing kicks. It's all about not letting boxers close that gap of space and getting into your guard. Which is very difficult. Like you said, there's no reason not to be well rounded in this day and age. I'm going at this the other way around. Trying to improve my limberness for higher kicks, coming from a boxing background.

  • @Wingzero90939
    @Wingzero90939 Год назад +12

    Coach Ramsey, you have mentioned previously that you had some of Donnie Yen’s stunt team guys train at your gym. Just out of curiosity how do you think they would do against the average person who knows how to box would they fair better than your average karate guy?
    Obviously they’re not professional fighters but they are incredibly athletic and I’m assuming know how to fight to some extent given that to be a stunt person they usually do know various kinds of martial arts... The most common for them I would assume Wushu, Boxing and Sanda maybe...

  • @red-clad-vlad
    @red-clad-vlad Год назад +6

    I've told the story a few times, but, gonna go ahead and repeat it anyway. I'm a really bad boxer, I can't even call myself that to be honest, I literally just hit the sandbag somewhat regularly. I don't like violence since I've had way too much if it back in middle to highschool. I've only spared for fun with a few friends.
    I was picking up a friend's brother from Karate practice. And one of his teacher's assistants thought he could use me for a demonstration in front of the kids. Gave some weird half glove things, and told me to come at him and hit him however I wanted, and that he would defend himself. Now, despite my fighting skills being barely existent, and the fact that he was training in fighting daily... I was over 10kg heavier. It made no sense to me, i didn't know what was the point of it. I practically just jabbed his chin and he was down. After he got up, he wanted a repeat and he came on the offense. I don't know what's allowed in Karate, I don't know the rules. But, when he got all up in by business actually striking, I elbowed him pretty hard because that was all that I could really do. He cursed at me pretty bad afterwards.

  • @jims512
    @jims512 Год назад +1

    Good analysis. Another way to look at it is that sometimes “less is more,” especially if the boxer is good.

  • @sirius212ify
    @sirius212ify Год назад

    Great explanation - what you said is on point with what Paul Vunak was saying in the 80s about newly minted black belts getting owned by street fighters. There's a gap between knowing techniques and being able to fight with them.

  • @BigDaddySwingingMeat
    @BigDaddySwingingMeat 6 месяцев назад +3

    I created my own fighting style that uses a combination of elbows, knees, head butts, thrust kicks and targeted punches. It's very difficult to counter and works perfectly for me. My advice is for everyone to develop their own unique fighting style and throw the rehearsed moves out the window.

  • @alinvid6098
    @alinvid6098 Год назад +3

    Great video and great explanation 😊 I was an amateur boxer and I still train at an amateur level but I don't compete anymore and I certainly can relate to the stress of full contact matches and the emotions you are going through before and after a match.. and it is indeed damn hard... most people don't know how it feels but once you have you definately don't forget it. You hit the nail on the head perfectly my frend 😊 I enjoy your videos and one can tell you have a lot of fighting and competing experience and you are a humble guy too 🙂 ! Keep up the good work !

  • @tomyoung8563
    @tomyoung8563 5 месяцев назад

    This dude is awesome and I’m glad he’s back in my feed

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks! Consider subscribing and checking your subscription tab instead of the homepage, then you get to see what you want instead of what the robots want you to watch.

  • @alia.moazzami2983
    @alia.moazzami2983 Год назад

    Thanks Ramsey for the great video. I have been practicing shotokan karate for a long time. A few years ago I changed to BJJ and recently started boxing as well. My question from you is that how you compare boxing techniques of muay thai vesus boxing? For me boxing manifests more of evading, foot work and fluent combination of body movement and punching.

  • @AppliedMathematician
    @AppliedMathematician Год назад +4

    Well, my first judo sensei was also a karate sensei, but with the little sparring I did in freestyle I found the de-ashi-barai of most utility - once you learn how to perform it without needing to look where your adversaries foots are. The objective is not to finish the throw, but to break balance. The de-ashi-barai has the advantage that it does not to be telegraphed - it does not to be strong, just correctly timed. Very few adversaries can move in a way that does not telegraph their foot positions. Original Karate also includes throws so I think Boxers are on average in advantage because of more sparring with seriously resisting partners.

  • @garysmith2983
    @garysmith2983 Год назад +6

    Being a black belt in karate and a purple belt in Japanese Ju Jitsu, training in BJJ has been a very humbling experience for the last year. The level of physicality, especially during sparring is very different to traditional martial arts and suspect if you don’t spar in the style you do you won’t be prepared for a real fight situation. I remember my Sensei in karate telling us that if we ever had a confrontation with someone you know who boxed, the best thing you could do was get away. This struck me as very surprising as we were constantly being told karate is the best all round martial art and to stick with it. I’m proud of my black belt, but wish BJJ had been more available here in the U.K. 20 years ago.

    • @TheMixedPlateFrequency
      @TheMixedPlateFrequency Год назад +1

      I always felt like out of all the styles of striking. I always felt that Boxing felt more versatile in terms of defense, offense, balance, and movement. Not sure how to explain it but when boxers strike they always seem to never stay on the center line constantly, even when they go for a punch, they always have these back up defense checks and they are most proficient with their hands. Since you only need a particular amount of force and accuracy to knock someone out, i feel boxers have a wide range of options when attacking in generating knock out power an accuracy. Most other styles it seems when they do something, the technique they do commits really hard, and when they miss, the anyone can pretty much punish them for it, but a boxer can take much more advantage in creating opportunities for any type of miss or block. I also felt that Muay Thai boxers is great against Boxers, as i felt that their techniques interrupts boxers movements and range, and muay thai boxers are also still really good with their hands, not as good as boxers, but probably 2nd best to boxers. I also feel Muay Thai boxers wide range of leg kicks give boxers trouble, that and most times if they keep taking free powerful leg kicks, that will most likely slow the boxer down and probably stunt his movement more, thus probably making the boxers techniques became less efficient and not working as it would if they had their movement. But I feel that boxers and muay thai fighters would have an extremely difficult time against grapplers, bjj practitioners and wrestlers, due to them only having 1 type of defense against them, which would be keeping away or keeping them at the farthest striking range to not get too close. But I feel Karate would probably do better against grapplers, wrestlers and bjj practitioners, compared to boxers and muay thai boxers. Since I think Karate does have a some defenses against take downs, and grappling. But anyways that's just what i always thought.

    • @siddified
      @siddified Год назад

      Why didn't your teacher teach you some boxing then?
      It's a central part of the most realistic styles of karate.
      Think about this.

  • @snakey934Snakeybakey
    @snakey934Snakeybakey 3 месяца назад

    Without saying anything about the actual content of the video; absolutely love this guy's way of talking and delivery. Measured and deliberate. He doesn't waste words, he explains his points simply and in a way that's easy to follow and hard to refute! It's rare that I have such a good first impression of a RUclipsr

  • @marcludwick5941
    @marcludwick5941 Год назад +4

    As a man who has trained in western style boxing, and also trains in judo, I'll share my opinion why I believe western boxing is the best hand to hand defense. First off foot stance width. In boxing, a shoulder width foot stance allows for better lateral movement which keeps you from absorbing damage. Then it's shorter punch angles. I've sparred against muay Thai practitioners and I can see their punches from a mile away. Also my high hands and parries kept me from eating damage. Now a good stiff jab which I think all boxers should utilize came in handy against a kickboxer that I sparred on occasion. I would spam the jab relentlessly which kept him off guard and would keep him from being able to load up any effective kicks. A boxer is also taught to use his shoulders as well to deflect incoming blows simply by turning in slightly. Which brings me to another point. I feel as karate, Kung fu etc have very exaggerated movements where as in boxing everything is very compact, head movement is short and precise which allows you to stay in the pocket. Lateral movement allows you to create an angle and doesn't take you out of the fight for a reset.
    Boxers in my opinion are also able to generate power which much shorter punches. And my main reason for believing boxing is better is because I believe that many eastern martial arts are way to restricted by form and tradition. There's not enough street fighter mentality. In the movies it's ok to have super respect for your opponent, but in the real world. Tradition needs to take a back seat to survival. And boxing allows for that. Dirty boxing, clinching, using the crown of ur head under an opponents chin when up close. Subtle head butts to cut an opponent, short elbows when in close, punching low on purpose once or twice to let your opponent know you're here to demolish them. Eastern martial arts there's too much bowing and respect. Which has its purpose but not in a survival situation.

  • @joelsalminen5309
    @joelsalminen5309 Год назад +13

    Started my martial art career with karate and taido, then struggled against a smaller boxer. Started doing boxing, then I struggled against a smaller jujitsu guy. That's when I picked up jujitsu, but then I struggled against a wrestler of the same size, so I started doing wrestling too and to this day I mix all of them into my workouts and sparring, hahaha.

    • @xenochrist15
      @xenochrist15 Год назад

      What a wild, mixed martial arts ride lol

    • @joelsalminen5309
      @joelsalminen5309 Год назад

      @@xenochrist15 Worth every bruise, loss, cut and tear of sweat, martial arts have become a way of life for me. :)

    • @xenochrist15
      @xenochrist15 Год назад

      @@joelsalminen5309 That's awesome. Sounds like it's pushed you to improve yourself as a person. That's the point of martial arts - defense, discernment, and personal growth.

    • @joelsalminen5309
      @joelsalminen5309 Год назад

      @@xenochrist15 Oh yeah, absolutely, they helped me conquer my teenage depression, angst and grow into far more confident, relaxed and well mannered man.
      It's like they say, everyone needs a hobby that is just right for them.

  • @cowlico
    @cowlico Год назад +4

    I’m very glad I learned to box, it was very humbling and educational. I teach it in my class and even invite other boxers to come in and teach. As far as kicking I train my guy to use all tools. Boxers got hands!! You do too learn to use them. You never know who you’re fight so expand your horizons and train hard.

  • @Mark-yb1sp
    @Mark-yb1sp Год назад

    Excellent narration and video.

  • @mcroadracer1
    @mcroadracer1 Год назад

    It’s good to you again. I hope you and your family are well. 🇺🇸

  • @wkanost
    @wkanost Год назад +3

    One of the first conditioning drills I did as boxer was taking punches to the body and head. The ability to take punches gives a fighter the advantage over someone who hasn’t.

    • @k1dn1ce76
      @k1dn1ce76 Год назад

      Yeah,I remember seeing footage of Rooney hitting Tyson in the body with a medicine ball. It's gotta help you take shots better when you're used to feeling strikes land.

  • @moustachio334
    @moustachio334 Год назад +5

    I took TKD when Tyson and Holyfield were making headlines so I had a sense of reality. My dad would teach me how to move like Ali after TKD classes and he made sure I had a good punch. I was also big into Bruce Lee and sparred strong side forward. I plowed through other kids my age and paired with teens and adults after. We had a rule about kicking below the belt and I remember being paired with the tallest most talented teenager. He went easy on me and let me practice hitting above his hips which as tall me! But without my dad, I would not have been the best in my age group and I moved up very quickly. Unfortunately I got pissed off when I didn’t make black belt and instead of continuing to train, I quit to do something else. It was probably a good thing. I still have the same flexibility and do Thai boxing now. I can’t fight strong side forward in that though. It took me 20 years until I found a gym where I lived that I liked. I wish I could have started kickboxing at 18. I remember begging my dad to let me join the local boxing gym and he wouldn’t let me do it. He wanted me to focus on going to college. So I put martial arts on the backburner and coincidentally spent many years depressed, reckless, and suicidal.

  • @josephsalazar3817
    @josephsalazar3817 Год назад

    I agree with u 100 percent through personal experience.

  • @user-ux5nv9sz9f
    @user-ux5nv9sz9f 3 месяца назад

    Its good to see that your still going strong its been a while since I sor this channel just subscribed again hope to see more of it.
    Sorry im stoned.

  • @uktenatsila9168
    @uktenatsila9168 Год назад

    Thank you for speaking my mind Lol!
    Best wishes brother Ramsey.