2:45 reminds me of what my former neigbour was infamous: he had a bad habit of dodging school, walking up to people, distract them, then slap both their ears, headbutt them in the face, pull the ears and thus the head down into a knee-strike and once the victim was on the ground, he kicked him a few times and then robbed them... This disfigured quite a lot of people permanently and traumatized even more and all he got out of it were a couple of coins or small notes... (back then there were no smartphones and in my neighbourhood no-one would run around with much bling, or money anyway). When he got 13, his parents were scared of him and he was still too young to get arrested according to German law. By that time, he had already an entire shelf reserved for him full of reports of his criminal activities. He loved robbing people, crashing parties with his cronies, doing random acts of vandalism (including a vegetable shop I knew, which was run by a kick-boxer at the start of his career and thus one of the few times, where he actually got punished for being this D-bag...). He lived for years just two houses from me and I would have never known that this baby face was this much of a threat. Fortunately for me and many others, he didn´t commit any crimes in direct proximity to his home. Mabe, he feared that his neighbours would otherwise smoke him out (we had a few cases of arson about 5-10 years before he got famous). He never harmed me in any way and I never even noticed him. I only found out that this celebrity was living next door after he finally got of legal age and did one crime too many so that he was removed... It´s really a weird feeling having feared many other people so much more and walking past such a walking calamity without ever noticing him... BTW: you can look him up: he went by the name Mehmet, but his real name was Muhlis Ari. He has a Wikipedia entry as Fall Mehmet and he was the most famous _jugendlicher Intensivstraftäter_ (roughly translated: young high-intensity criminal) in all of Germany.
It’s pretty simple. Same as a Muay Thai clinch except you’re twisting. I used it all the time when I was a bouncer. In training you need to do it softly but the key is to keep them off balance during every phase. Some people like to use a low line knee as a set up but we get a lot of snow here in the winter so if you were working outside I favoured staying rooted and just focusing on a hard push to get them on one foot before the twist. In a tight space you can also use that to drive them into the wall for a hit first. If you add this into your sparring with control you’ll see it comes out very easily.
THIS LOOK VERY FUN !!
This is stuff you never get in high school wrestling class. :-)
2:45 reminds me of what my former neigbour was infamous:
he had a bad habit of dodging school, walking up to people, distract them, then slap both their ears, headbutt them in the face, pull the ears and thus the head down into a knee-strike and once the victim was on the ground, he kicked him a few times and then robbed them...
This disfigured quite a lot of people permanently and traumatized even more and all he got out of it were a couple of coins or small notes... (back then there were no smartphones and in my neighbourhood no-one would run around with much bling, or money anyway).
When he got 13, his parents were scared of him and he was still too young to get arrested according to German law. By that time, he had already an entire shelf reserved for him full of reports of his criminal activities. He loved robbing people, crashing parties with his cronies, doing random acts of vandalism (including a vegetable shop I knew, which was run by a kick-boxer at the start of his career and thus one of the few times, where he actually got punished for being this D-bag...).
He lived for years just two houses from me and I would have never known that this baby face was this much of a threat. Fortunately for me and many others, he didn´t commit any crimes in direct proximity to his home. Mabe, he feared that his neighbours would otherwise smoke him out (we had a few cases of arson about 5-10 years before he got famous). He never harmed me in any way and I never even noticed him. I only found out that this celebrity was living next door after he finally got of legal age and did one crime too many so that he was removed... It´s really a weird feeling having feared many other people so much more and walking past such a walking calamity without ever noticing him...
BTW: you can look him up: he went by the name Mehmet, but his real name was Muhlis Ari. He has a Wikipedia entry as Fall Mehmet and he was the most famous _jugendlicher Intensivstraftäter_ (roughly translated: young high-intensity criminal) in all of Germany.
Love the new intro, very slick!
Adam Kim thanks
love this! all of this.
Thank you as always. All the best :)
Very useful video. Thanks!
Thanks Robert.
Really great your Videos, Kevin. Looking forward to a seminar in Germany!?
Hansen Pansen I hope to be back soon
Amazing....thanks for sharing this great content
Emad Darawsheh thanks for watching
I mean is those guy tied up ?
I mean. How's that side hug gonna work when his free hand etc gotcha
It’s pretty simple. Same as a Muay Thai clinch except you’re twisting. I used it all the time when I was a bouncer. In training you need to do it softly but the key is to keep them off balance during every phase. Some people like to use a low line knee as a set up but we get a lot of snow here in the winter so if you were working outside I favoured staying rooted and just focusing on a hard push to get them on one foot before the twist. In a tight space you can also use that to drive them into the wall for a hit first. If you add this into your sparring with control you’ll see it comes out very easily.