Grading for my black belt soon in a combatives system that encompasses Jiujitsu, Wrestling, Kali, JKD, and a big bulk of Krav Maga curriculum. These videos are always a nice quick reference.
At 0:27, why would he let go of the gun? He could just hold on to the gun as you grab and tackle him, in fact his reflex would be to do so. When you are attacked, do you instinctively throw away what you are holding, or instinctively hold it tighter? Thought so.
@@KravMagaDesoto He would hold the weapon to his chest as he falls. The only face in danger is the one of the victim once the attacker uses the stock of the weapon, still in his hands, to bash it in. When disarming you prioritize control of the weapon, not the body.
@@Jorge-np3tq Well, all I can tell you is I have been teaching Krav Maga since 2004. If there is a training injury to be had, I’ve probably seen it. I’ve seen a tooth knocked out from this technique with a plastic blue gun. I’m law enforcement and we train first responders. We will always put safety before making technical training LOOK cooler.
@@Jorge-np3tq also, the context of that particular defense is a harnessed weapon where the regular disarm is not applicable. You can see the standard weapon defense elsewhere in the curriculum video.
I wish we had a Krav school with this kind of curriculum up here. From what I’ve seen in the videos, it combines aspects of Muay Thai, boxing, BJJ, Judo and wrestling with weapons disarming. I train BJJ with some boxing and Muay Thai, I love it but it’s still sport based. I seen other Krav stuff but it’s mostly hitting pads and other drills which is cool, but I really like live sparring aspects of BJJ/MMA.
I did KM for almost 7 years around 2 till 3 times a week. And I can tell you, its better to do parallel some Kick Boxing, Thai Boxing or another Martial Art, because unfortunately KM is more a business model, rather a real self defence system. One problem is, that mostly groups are weak, or like we see in this video, the opponent is just standing still. This might be working, if your opponent is a moron and doesn't know what he is doing, but if you try the same techniques on a guy, who is not standing still, or knowing his stuff, you will have a problem with KM.
@@vladimirtschelowski6792 I train Jiu Jitsu, submission wrestling and some Boxing. I want to start kick boxing again. I get what you’re saying about resisting opponents. A real attacker is gonna be violent, fast and very hard to control, much like when rolling live in BJJ.
@@bobbydabutcha yes and of course every Martial Art has positive and negative aspects. And I think its very good, if you train several of them and take the best skills from each one.
@@cheerfuljyrwa2168 Very optimistic with an 18 month timeframe. I see guys that have been training 5-6 years with 6 classes per week that are just getting their brown belt.
All I saw was a mixture of BJJ, Judo, and Aikido techniques. No groin strikes, no Krav Maga! Really though, loved the series of videos! Except, have to disagree with the knife disarms. Think prison type shankings. They will stab and stab and stab as hard as they can, feinting and pulling back. Those grabs look nice, but they won't work on someone who really wants to stick you.
The reality is no techinique will ever work against someone who really wants to stick you. Even if they dont you're still gonna get cut and this is all delusional thinking. I fear anyone who takes this martial art will die on the street.
@@societybelike Both points are valid. On one hand, there has to be more grounding in reality. On the other hand, these are just demonstrations and nobody wants to go 100%. The key is to find a balance. Wherein lies that balance is up for debate and we should note that no matter where you find it, there will always be people on either extreme who will not be pleased. Train hard, train smart, and always remember, Epstein didn't kill himself.
Bounced for years, instructed members of various government agencies...krav is choreography at its best. Could this guy move any slower. So much wrong....
Krav Maga is an evolving system. I started training is 2003 under those with the founders’ diploma. I would love to see your ancient variation where you also don’t exhale when you strike. Not breathing sounds like a cool trick you could utilize more.
@@KravMagaDesoto You know the answear, because everybody in the world of krav maga know the truth. But very few people who tell the truth to the rest of the people
But very few people who teach kra maga tell the truth to their students. Because they are stupid instructors and they don't want it to be known that there are also instructors who teach the true martial art, UNMODIFIED. It is a great disrespect to claim that krav maga is the evolving systems. Is judo an evolving system? Aikido is..? No. Traditional martial arts are not like that. They are as their founders left them.
I am subscribing, thank you guys for staying objective and real.
This is great...this intructor obviously has a real solid base and background and these videos are very helpfull for Krav students
Almost the same as World Wide !!!! Krav gives you a solid base but its not enough you need MT and BJJ
Actually krav maga doesn't have belts
@@angelsky1285 Krav Maga has belt system. I have been training Krav for 8 years and I know.
@@44556613able but some place in krav maga they are not giving belt I have been also training this much years
@@angelsky1285 well, in my school we dont wear the belts but we test for them and actually named levels, but they are belts
Grading for my black belt soon in a combatives system that encompasses Jiujitsu, Wrestling, Kali, JKD, and a big bulk of Krav Maga curriculum. These videos are always a nice quick reference.
What state are you in??
@@MBryy Utah. Defiance martial arts.
Great job he looked like he passed the test
At 0:27, why would he let go of the gun? He could just hold on to the gun as you grab and tackle him, in fact his reflex would be to do so. When you are attacked, do you instinctively throw away what you are holding, or instinctively hold it tighter? Thought so.
Because having a wooden training weapon slammed into your face as you hit the mat is asking a lot of a training partner.
@@KravMagaDesoto He would hold the weapon to his chest as he falls. The only face in danger is the one of the victim once the attacker uses the stock of the weapon, still in his hands, to bash it in. When disarming you prioritize control of the weapon, not the body.
@@Jorge-np3tq Well, all I can tell you is I have been teaching Krav Maga since 2004. If there is a training injury to be had, I’ve probably seen it. I’ve seen a tooth knocked out from this technique with a plastic blue gun. I’m law enforcement and we train first responders. We will always put safety before making technical training LOOK cooler.
@@Jorge-np3tq also, the context of that particular defense is a harnessed weapon where the regular disarm is not applicable. You can see the standard weapon defense elsewhere in the curriculum video.
I wish we had a Krav school with this kind of curriculum up here. From what I’ve seen in the videos, it combines aspects of Muay Thai, boxing, BJJ, Judo and wrestling with weapons disarming. I train BJJ with some boxing and Muay Thai, I love it but it’s still sport based. I seen other Krav stuff but it’s mostly hitting pads and other drills which is cool, but I really like live sparring aspects of BJJ/MMA.
I did KM for almost 7 years around 2 till 3 times a week. And I can tell you, its better to do parallel some Kick Boxing, Thai Boxing or another Martial Art, because unfortunately KM is more a business model, rather a real self defence system. One problem is, that mostly groups are weak, or like we see in this video, the opponent is just standing still. This might be working, if your opponent is a moron and doesn't know what he is doing, but if you try the same techniques on a guy, who is not standing still, or knowing his stuff, you will have a problem with KM.
@@vladimirtschelowski6792 I train Jiu Jitsu, submission wrestling and some Boxing. I want to start kick boxing again. I get what you’re saying about resisting opponents. A real attacker is gonna be violent, fast and very hard to control, much like when rolling live in BJJ.
@@bobbydabutcha yes and of course every Martial Art has positive and negative aspects. And I think its very good, if you train several of them and take the best skills from each one.
just not sure why any attacker w a gun would be that close..
Some of gun disarmements i see are not correct in my humble opinion.
Good summari of the Curriculum.!!
Where are the ax exercises?
How much time does it usually takes to get to brown belt?
It depends on your training times per week. If you train four times a week it will take about one and a half year.
@@cheerfuljyrwa2168 Very optimistic with an 18 month timeframe. I see guys that have been training 5-6 years with 6 classes per week that are just getting their brown belt.
In real school of krav maga, minimum 6-7 years...
All I saw was a mixture of BJJ, Judo, and Aikido techniques. No groin strikes, no Krav Maga!
Really though, loved the series of videos! Except, have to disagree with the knife disarms. Think prison type shankings. They will stab and stab and stab as hard as they can, feinting and pulling back. Those grabs look nice, but they won't work on someone who really wants to stick you.
The reality is no techinique will ever work against someone who really wants to stick you. Even if they dont you're still gonna get cut and this is all delusional thinking. I fear anyone who takes this martial art will die on the street.
Well I guess a better option is to just stand there.
@@daxisperry7644 Yeah, probably. Or run away maybe.
Test 20 Sept
I don't much resistance in these demonstrations, just saying.
Danny Thorne Don’t be that guy.
@@williamcraig6178 What do u mean "Don't be that guy"? It's a legitimate concern that is the difference between life and death in real life.
@@societybelike Both points are valid. On one hand, there has to be more grounding in reality. On the other hand, these are just demonstrations and nobody wants to go 100%.
The key is to find a balance. Wherein lies that balance is up for debate and we should note that no matter where you find it, there will always be people on either extreme who will not be pleased.
Train hard, train smart, and always remember, Epstein didn't kill himself.
@@protiromorelia3534 couldn't agree more fam
If there was resistance it wouldn’t Krav Maga !
Bounced for years, instructed members of various government agencies...krav is choreography at its best. Could this guy move any slower. So much wrong....
its an instuctional video bud.
Some of gun disarmements were incorrect in my opinion.
This is no original krav maga, no correct tehnique, its much..pfff,pffff,pffff (sound of the man)...
Krav Maga is an evolving system. I started training is 2003 under those with the founders’ diploma. I would love to see your ancient variation where you also don’t exhale when you strike. Not breathing sounds like a cool trick you could utilize more.
@@KravMagaDesoto Who is your instructor?
@@NuMaCertro you can find our full staff’s lineage on our website. Who do you consider the authority on present day Krav Maga?
@@KravMagaDesoto You know the answear, because everybody in the world of krav maga know the truth. But very few people who tell the truth to the rest of the people
But very few people who teach kra maga tell the truth to their students. Because they are stupid instructors and they don't want it to be known that there are also instructors who teach the true martial art, UNMODIFIED. It is a great disrespect to claim that krav maga is the evolving systems. Is judo an evolving system? Aikido is..? No. Traditional martial arts are not like that. They are as their founders left them.