He worked harder than his opponent and still lost. When hard work doesn’t pay off

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • When hard work doesn’t pay off. Or does it?
    ---
    Ramsey Dewey is an MMA coach and fight commentator, and occasional musician based in Shanghai, China.
    Thanks to my channel sponsor:
    Xmartial: catering to all kinds of combat sports athletes from BJJ, MMA, Muay Thai etc. find rash guards, fight shorts, grappling spats, boxing gloves and other training gear. Use my code RAMSEY10 for a 10% discount on everything at
    www.xmartial.c...
    This video features original music by Ramsey Dewey
    Follow me on Instagram at: / ramseydewey

Комментарии • 199

  • @Stu939
    @Stu939 2 года назад +149

    If the movies have taught us anything, it's that the only way to truly improve at things is to experience an extended training montage while inspiring music plays in the background

    • @GuitarsRockForever
      @GuitarsRockForever 2 года назад +2

      that only works if you are the main character.

    • @izmirurla35
      @izmirurla35 2 года назад +2

      @@GuitarsRockForever you must make yourself the main character

  • @qowkerf
    @qowkerf 2 года назад +59

    A weight of 58kg at a supposed 6'5 is heavily anorexic. I'd be surprised if a guy like that could even lift his spider arms beyond the first round. How they let that kid into a cage in that shape, no idea. I'm 6'4, 211 (96kg) and I look thin. 58 kilograms is 127 lbs lol.

    • @jubbalubby
      @jubbalubby 2 года назад +20

      exactly what I was thinking, 6'5 is monstrously tall. I'm 5'7 myself and I look lean an 69kg, that man is either anorexic or has super low bone density.

    • @heem8814
      @heem8814 2 года назад

      for real bro

    • @ashtar3876
      @ashtar3876 2 года назад +1

      Fr, 5 6 and 58kg here

    • @lbbolr5146
      @lbbolr5146 2 года назад +33

      I’m the one who sent in the question and Ramsey made a mistake I’m 5”6 and 58kg not 6”5 lol I wish I was 6”5

    • @heem8814
      @heem8814 2 года назад +4

      @@lbbolr5146 lmao

  • @hailhydreigon2700
    @hailhydreigon2700 2 года назад +92

    "It is possible to commit no mistakes and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." - Capt. Jean-Luc Picard
    Such a great quote.

    • @katarinatibai8396
      @katarinatibai8396 2 года назад

      💯🎯 life - Jean - Luc Picard was the best Capt. aniway 🥰🖖

  • @lbbolr5146
    @lbbolr5146 2 года назад +47

    I’m the one who sent in the question & I would like to thank you coach Ramsey Dewey for answering the question and giving me constructive advice and insight on how to develop and win my next boxing fight. I will take into deep consideration that questions you asked , what can I do different in terms of training for the next fight etc , maybe even change gyms. Thank you

    • @CowCommando
      @CowCommando 2 года назад +10

      And any time you need a pick me up you can pop back into the comments section and find all of the people cheering you on and wishing they have your dedication and experience.

    • @lbbolr5146
      @lbbolr5146 2 года назад +3

      @@CowCommando Thank you , I appreciate it 💪🏻

    • @yahyawiab1423
      @yahyawiab1423 2 года назад +4

      I wish you the best, your question help me too , I wish if i can quit smoking and you already did it, you already a winner 🏆💪💪

    • @arigumora
      @arigumora 2 года назад +3

      I was also thinking like when u start to go hard at something you tend to have diminishing returns at first. Like when u start training rele hard at first it might be to hard on ur body, or when your tryna dive into deeper concepts in a game like chess or sometin u often get worse before u get better because to get better you are actually re learning things and deciding what to discard/use and when. So since u recently decided to dedicate harder to your fighting with a lot more going on in your head that’s going to take time to internalize and actually see the results. But if u keep ur same mindset you will eventually create a gap between you and ur peers bro

    • @izmirurla35
      @izmirurla35 2 года назад +1

      If you're 6"5 and 58kg I'd say, put on some muscle and develop some strength and power

  • @AlexanderLayko
    @AlexanderLayko 2 года назад +21

    People want to pretend everything in life is the result of "merit" and "hard work" and refuse to accept there are any factors outside your control that can determine the outcome because that would be "making excuses". It's freakin toxic.

    • @sovvrong
      @sovvrong 6 месяцев назад

      This🙌 also I've come to find with certain things in life the harder you chase them the more likely you are to trip over your feet, I feel that can be applied to a lot of things in life.

  • @SJ-ze1qk
    @SJ-ze1qk 2 года назад +40

    Thank you for this video. I’m not an MMA fighter. I’m not really even a martial artist, but I failed the bar exam - and your message is exactly what I needed to hear today. Much love brother. 💕

    • @Tymeb0mb
      @Tymeb0mb 2 года назад +4

      I failed it the first time too (by .5 points- literally came down to the difference of one question). Funny thing is that when I was preparing for it for the first time, I did all the paid in-person prep courses, getting up at 630 AM, showing up every day at 8 AM to class, then doing all the homework, and put in lots of hours. I studied really hard for it. I was devastated when I found out I didn't pass. So I tried to figure out what I did wrong. And I figured it out- I wasn't studying in a way that naturally worked for me. I am a night owl. Have been my whole life. I've always studied best in the afternoon/evenings, and never took early morning classes in college or law school because it just didn't work form me. The second time I studied for the exam, I decided to go with my normal sleep schedule. I'd wake up in the late morning and go through the course materials in the late afternoon/evening. I crushed the bar exam on the second attempt. So moral of the story is don't let it get you down- try to figure out what you could do better and then go crush the exam the second time around.

    • @SJ-ze1qk
      @SJ-ze1qk 2 года назад +1

      @@Tymeb0mb thanks man - similar facts: failed by one point.

    • @Tymeb0mb
      @Tymeb0mb 2 года назад +1

      @@SJ-ze1qk No problem. And I should add- what may look like a negative could turn out to the best thing that ever happened to you. I had a attorney job in a small-medium law firm all lined up. Everyone I knew who worked there hated it and said the hours were brutal, they had no life outside work, but it paid well so they dealt with it. I figured that's just part of being a lawyer, I was going to have to make peace with the fact that I was going to be miserable for a few years. Didn't get the job because I didn't pass the exam. Felt like a loser. Studied the next few months, took the exam and crushed it, but then ended up landing a non-lawyer job that was far more interesting, took me all around the world, and paid nearly as well. Met my wife while traveling. I rarely worked more than a 40 hr work week and life has been terrific. If I hadn't failed the first time, I would have ended up wasting a few years of my life at a job I probably would have hated. So keep your mind open to the possibility that better things can come out of failure.

    • @hypnoticskull6342
      @hypnoticskull6342 Год назад

      Those exams are so stupid

  • @Emperor_x8
    @Emperor_x8 2 года назад +9

    Honestly though don't be lazy but recovery is the most important part of training that few ever take seriously

  • @paulpolito2001
    @paulpolito2001 2 года назад +24

    This one hit home - I try to keep the perspective that “A loss is only a *defeat* if you learn nothing constructive from it.”; but really, so much easier to state than to practice…

  • @The_Humble_Hurricane
    @The_Humble_Hurricane 2 года назад +35

    Your reasoning in your breakdowns continue to be legendary. I remember you saying that you practiced speaking for a long time in order to overcome fear of public speaking in front of a camera while also becoming a better speaker in general. It's largely paid off, as your delivery, pacing and tonality is awesome in conjunction with your explanations.
    Keep up the great work my brother

    • @thefirmamentalist9922
      @thefirmamentalist9922 2 года назад

      I couldn’t have said it better myself. He’s on the Mt Rushmore of RUclipsr Shifus (like Matt Furey)!

  • @Dale_The_Space_Wizard
    @Dale_The_Space_Wizard 2 года назад +10

    Elon Musk recently challenged Vladamir Putin to a fight. If this was to actually happen and conducted under MMA rules, how would you see this fighting playing itself out?
    Joe Rogan has offered to train Elon for the fight. To my knowledge he has one match where he threw a sumo out of the ring, but suffered a neck injury in the process. He is a fairy big guy at 6ft 2" and 5o years old.
    Vladimir is a lot smaller at an estimated 5ft 7" and older at 69. He has an honorary 8th dan in Judo, however, such a high rank is probably awarded more for political reasons, rather than skill. However, he is genuinly highly skilled in Judo. He also has a honorary black belt in Taekwondo, however, again, this is issued for political rather than any skill level based in reality. So his actual skill level in Taekwondo is unknown. Presumably he would of gone through some form of unarmed combat training when he was in the KGB.
    If Joe Rogen was given a month to train Elon, who would win this fight?

    • @Methodius7
      @Methodius7 2 года назад +5

      Putin is too old now. He would loose. If it happened 10 years ago I would go with Putin

    • @WisKidUnity
      @WisKidUnity 2 года назад +1

      It’d be a fair fight, but only because Putin is much older and smaller. Putin was KGB plus a lifetime of combat sports. Musk is way bigger and younger. I’d watch it.

  • @amazed2341
    @amazed2341 2 года назад +7

    58kg 6’5??? What? How?

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад +3

      5’6” . Did I read it backwards?

  • @kez_the_reaper2657
    @kez_the_reaper2657 2 года назад +6

    LbooR was this at the Chester event? I was in that event are you one of my training partners?
    You got out there trained and worked hard then you stepped into the cage and your going to do it again.
    Your putting in the work your going to go far with that work ethic
    win lose or draw I can guarantee your getting drastically better than you were when you started

    • @lbbolr5146
      @lbbolr5146 2 года назад +1

      Yeah you’re right I’ve definitely improved so much I went from throwing a punch for the sake of it , to actually understanding why I’m throwing it & no it was the Watford event.
      Thank you for your comment you should participate in the next ultra also

  • @juliansanderson839
    @juliansanderson839 2 года назад +14

    I’ve had this happen at work before, frustrates me a lot. Someone says “i tried my hardest!” You suggest, “you can improve and do better next time” and they think you’re saying their not good enough.
    It’s a thought process I’ve gone through before, taking criticism as an insult - and I relate to it but man, why do so many people I know do it? I thought y’all were supposed to be more responsible than me! Where is that accountability when you need it?

  • @alexanderringler5747
    @alexanderringler5747 2 года назад +4

    I think Picard said not "That's human" - but "That's life". And this was said to Data, who was an Android.
    But in the Core of things you are right. It's just in star trek we have not only humans, who struggle with life. ;-)

  • @Aitonomouss
    @Aitonomouss 2 года назад +2

    Not all humans are created nor develop equally, that's the beautiful truth

  • @desmondstephen9942
    @desmondstephen9942 2 года назад +4

    Ramsey you're built kind of like me (long bones). I think this is is why neither of us could arm wrestle because of a leverage disadvantage.

  • @mr.le-capibar
    @mr.le-capibar 2 года назад +5

    Coach, pienso que el valor mas importante de su canal es su filosofía y conversaciones prestan conocimiento de su cabeza para nutrir la de uno.
    Hope your channel keeps growing,
    Now I'll get out there and train

  • @Fiebi95
    @Fiebi95 2 года назад +4

    Thank you so much for this video 🙏🙏 I'm going into my next K1 fight in 7 days after losing my first one through points to a more experienced girl. I also dedicated my life to training, even with my last Semester in university and starting a full time job afterwards. I trained in private training with my first coach for half a year during lockdown and had lots of private training afterwards. Before then I only trained a little but not that serious.
    When starting working my Office Job the days I could work from home I would go run in the morning and having class in the evening. I knew I was stronger and fitter than my opponent, but still lost. I'm not bitter in the slightest, but I'm a little bit "scared" to go into my next fight. I would love to see all my hard work to pay off in a win!
    But your words helped me to see that I already won for myself. I kept disciplined and never considered giving up or lowering my work ethic. I know my strengths and weeknesses now

  • @mclarenemmonsmma4968
    @mclarenemmonsmma4968 2 года назад +5

    Hey Ramsey any tips to help improve coachability

    • @cahallo5964
      @cahallo5964 2 года назад

      don't be an asshole? lol

  • @doktormalifiko5488
    @doktormalifiko5488 2 года назад +1

    There are 7.9 billion people in the world. How many have the guts and the discipline to step into a cage and face another trained fighter? Dude is already in an elite crowd. One that you can’t buy your way into. One you can’t lie your way into. One you can’t use family connections to get into. He earned it in blood, sweat and pain. He lost a decision. To quote The Dude, “That’s just like, their opinion man.”

  • @AlexanderLayko
    @AlexanderLayko 2 года назад +2

    "I run every single day. How come that guy who sits down all day beat me in a race. Reeeee!!! That's not how it's supposed to work. We're supposed to live in a capitalist meritocracy!!!!"

  • @andrewbennett1176
    @andrewbennett1176 2 года назад +4

    one of your best videos to date. Dan Gable lost his final NCAA wrestling match after being undefeated in middle school, high school, and college....he credits that loss with making him realize he needed to improve his technique as just working harder than everyone wasn't enough.
    Did it work....well, he did win an Olympic gold, and nobody scored a point against him.

  • @paulmitchell5349
    @paulmitchell5349 2 года назад +1

    If he's concerned about winning or losing he has not grasped the essence of martial arts.

  • @pascalxus
    @pascalxus 2 года назад +1

    it's really cool how we can all learn some life lessons from these pep talks!

  • @St8rGene
    @St8rGene 2 года назад +2

    I want to share another POV about how losing or winning could mean nothing about how good is a fighter:
    Leaving several others factors aside that also matters (not overtraining,good genes,discipline,diet, injuries,even luck) lets pretend you enter a tournament with 1000 fighters and you need to win a few 1vs1 fights to make to the allegedly "best 100 fighters". Let's also pretend you feel like you are easily one of the best and could reach top 5 easily.
    Now, you need to win first 3 times but your 3 opponents destroy you in seconds. You feel like you are the worst, but at the end of the tournament those 3 guys end up at the top 3 somehow while you get 990th place. Does that mean you are worst than those other 990 guys? Heck no! You just got unlucky with the matches,but at the end of the day what matters the most is that you are doing what you enjoy while exercising and even if you decide to stop fighting ,if you keep training you'll have a better life anywhere (more stamina,strenght,better mood,etc) and you'll live longer.
    Is that important enought to you? That's the real question,not being "the best at fightning forever".

  • @enriquecerradamartos2893
    @enriquecerradamartos2893 2 года назад +3

    Inspiring stuff Ramsey and the guy who asked, feel motivated now!

  • @amazed2341
    @amazed2341 2 года назад +16

    I’m a bit like this guy, I trained pretty hard for a karate tournament recently, all I got was a massive bruise on my leg. It was my first every tournament but the journey was great, everything I did with my sensei and the guys I train with was great fun, and I would do it all again even if I meet the same black belt at the next tournament and he kicks my leg off again I’ll still have had a great time and I’ll still keep training karate because I know it’s good for me, and I know it’s made me stronger, and I know it’ll keep making me stronger.

    • @theyoungfool.1895
      @theyoungfool.1895 2 года назад +3

      Good on you man, some people taste defeat a few times and just can’t bear it, I’ve had similar experiences were I met a few failures and just quit or shut down but I’ve grown now and I’ve been learning instead of just failing and by the sounds of it even though you’ve tasted defeat and not just defeat but a sore to remind you but hearing what I’ve heard of your comment your going to use that sore as a way to get at it again and I can bet, all your teammates, your coach are so proud of you having a go so keep it up, grow your way of martial arts, go out and train. Cheers to your journey!

    • @mintybidness6614
      @mintybidness6614 2 года назад

      Throw some thai in, boxing footwork, and tae Kwon do and see if has a chance

    • @mintybidness6614
      @mintybidness6614 2 года назад

      @@theyoungfool.1895 I love fighters. Now get out and train haha much love

    • @mistermister1366
      @mistermister1366 2 года назад +2

      Was the tournament called: "The All Valley" ?

  • @itchykami
    @itchykami 2 года назад +2

    That's a hard thing to teach anyone to accept: We don't train so that we win, we train so that we are more likely to win. In all things.

  • @dogfacedponysoldier1692
    @dogfacedponysoldier1692 2 года назад +5

  • @ericdale4641
    @ericdale4641 2 года назад +3

    Respect to everyone out there picking themselves up and getting right back at it.

  • @asperger97
    @asperger97 2 года назад +2

    Hello Ramsey! I wanted to know if a scrum cap would be a good substitute for gloves in bare knuckle boxing/MMA. They are way smaller and more flexible than the standard fighting headgear but are way better at protecting the skin and ears from cuts.

    • @ChateauLonLon
      @ChateauLonLon 2 года назад +1

      I think you'd still have to really worry about cutting your hands on the other guy's teeth. Maybe a mouthguard would mitigate this? I dunno

  • @viggotannhauser7251
    @viggotannhauser7251 2 года назад +1

    A friend of mine won the 400 m regional championship at 18 without ever training for it, simply due to his natural athleticism. He signed up on a whim and left all the competitive runners in the dust, having never run a single mile in his life! He also holds multiple records in long jump etc. at his school to this day, also without training for it.
    Now 25 years later he's overweight with serious back problems, never having done any regular exercise in his life, and puzzled about why he of all people is so out of shape. Being so gifted, he never learned the value of hard work and training.

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад +2

      That kind of thing happens all the time: gifted people who take it for granted. I see it with people who smoked and drank all their lives and lived to a ripe old age- imagine how much better their quality of life could have been all those years of they had lived clean.
      Or in the case of your friend, if he had dedicated himself to training, he might have become one of the best athletes in the world instead of just beating the regional competition.
      That’s the trouble with gifts, they are all too often wasted on the gifted.

  • @stephenm3470
    @stephenm3470 2 года назад +2

    I'm not a ninja, but trying your best really is a super power. If you obviously tried your best no one can say shit, either in love or life. Win, lose or draw trying your best is the only thing you have power over. It's never failed me yet and I'm half a moron.

  • @PHATT_TV
    @PHATT_TV 2 года назад +2

    Loved this vid, wish I had Coach like Ramsey before I “One & Doned” my fight years ago

  • @pillowhands3617
    @pillowhands3617 2 года назад +2

    6,5 and 58 kilos? that's not possible lmao. This is clearly untrue

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад +2

      5 feet 6 inches. Not the other way around.

    • @conservat1vepatr1ot
      @conservat1vepatr1ot 2 года назад +1

      1:55 honest mistake broski, I think it was a misread.

    • @pillowhands3617
      @pillowhands3617 2 года назад +1

      @@RamseyDewey That makes more sense

  • @painuchiha2694
    @painuchiha2694 2 года назад +2

    This is also why fat people don’t lose weight
    The shortcut doesn’t exist,working extra hard everyday won’t transform you tomorrow.
    Rather than burning yourself out it takes patience,time and consistency

    • @cahallo5964
      @cahallo5964 2 года назад

      There is a shortcut actually, fasting and literally just not having any temptation at home. I threw away a lot of "food"

    • @painuchiha2694
      @painuchiha2694 2 года назад

      @@cahallo5964
      Yes there’s shortcuts but tell me how many times these “shortcuts” actually becomes permanent lifestyle changes
      People bounce back from shortcuts and return to zero cause these lifestyle changes are mostly unsustainable for most people.
      Gradually making changes to your diet or anything you wanna do is best cause you know for sure you won’t eventually crash into a wall going too fast.
      Tho Some people can do it I’m just speaking for the vast majority

  • @wolfsesthenighteye499
    @wolfsesthenighteye499 2 года назад +1

    The true competition and the true victory is doing better than our former self

  • @cadcc
    @cadcc 2 года назад +1

    Wow this has struck a cord. I've felt like everything i've put into the sport has just put me further away from my goals instead of closer. But no, this is a learning opportunity for me. I must be grateful for my trials.

  • @jtkachlmeier
    @jtkachlmeier 2 года назад +1

    AWESOME message man. So much gravity to what you are saying.

  • @BMO_Creative
    @BMO_Creative 2 года назад +1

    The way to win the fight is to NOT LEAVE IT TO THE JUDGES...

  • @jacksmith4460
    @jacksmith4460 2 года назад +1

    This is one of the best "How do I get good" videos I have seen, and this applies to literally anything from Martial Arts, through sport, even being a Musician and many other things (maybe all things?)
    The point about the sleep being as if not more important than the hours put in...is brilliant (and true)
    I am not a Martial Arts master (I done some Judo when I was younger and done some striking sparring)
    I have however, played Football(Soccer) since I was 4 years old, and have good ability there, and also I am a Musician. Both Football and Music require this "lots of little steps" approach. Of course Martial Arts does too, its about muscle memory and training the technique/movements like instinct, and its the same in Football and Music, its all about building up that Muscle memory,and that takes time..and sleep

  • @Zohard104
    @Zohard104 2 года назад +2

    His tip for the speed bag is 100% true it’s also how I learned one of the more complicated guitar songs when I was first starting out I struggled the first day in the second day and I woke up the third day I was just able to play it I didn’t understand why until years later

  • @var7877
    @var7877 2 года назад +1

    Time to hang up your glove an say forget about it

  • @rodgerbane3825
    @rodgerbane3825 2 года назад +1

    Maybe the newb is a blue collar laborer. If so... they tend to be tough in fights because they are very strong.

  • @chopsueykungfu
    @chopsueykungfu Год назад

    good advice

  • @Druid_Ignacy
    @Druid_Ignacy 2 месяца назад

    There is more to it. If the guy was sleep deprived, this was very damaging to his learning, training, conditioning, muscle development and focus.

  • @Goval400
    @Goval400 2 года назад +2

    Thats facts coach, when I go against bigger men in training, specially Grappling I always have to accept the fact that they can out power me from certain positions so I have developed nice transitions and sweeps, also the cardio to gas them out. Same applies in MMA, when trying to wrestle them I have to chain wrestle and go for their backs or somehow take it to the ground and reverse it. Size does matter and even when they go light I still get a little beat up because of their weight and Im not a small man (avg), im 5’9 and weight 165lbs.
    Always looking forward to your videos!

  • @bigbat443
    @bigbat443 2 года назад +3

    Hello coach, I hope everything is going good for you and your family over there in Shanghai with the recent events. I've been enjoying your content for quite awhile now, and I while watching this video I started reflecting a bit on my own training and martial arts experience. You see, I've been training for many years now (started off as a kid with judo, but not seriously training. Just some after school activity). I started to take it seriously about 6 years ago, when I was 16 (21 currently).
    I never wanted to fight, and just trained for fun (although I did train very hard, as if I was actually going to fight), but last year I suddenly decided I wanted to try fighting, and I loved it. I had 2 K1 fights on the same day in a tournament, and won both; although I've been extremely critical with myself while watching the tape. I've tried not to drink my own kool-aid, not giving the fights much importance and training even harder to improve those areas I felt I lacked, but alas I couldn't help but feel some lurking sense of pride. This drove me to double up on the hardness of the training, to try and flush that out. To break me over and over again, until I realized I was not that great for winning some small tournament. I even went as far as to find myself an invitation to go to another gym in town, to train with people who were for the most part better than me, so that I could get a propper beating.
    Long story short, I was unable to do so, and that feeling is still there. The only other thing I've got left to do, is another fight, which I wanted to do sooner, but nothing came up during this year up until june. I've been training hard, I think, but I still stress not having fought again yet, and for not training even harder. I'm a full time student, and I tried to train 2 times a day for 2h each session, and also go to class and study. Also, I've been dealing with some very rought and personal emotional trauma, which has had a significant effect on my sleep and overall physical condition, which made it hard to maintain that training regime on the long run.
    Now I'm at a point in which I either train until I feel like I'm not a functional human being anymore (which to be fair, does not bother me that much since martial arts is something I love so much I could kill myself doing it and be fine with it), or slow down training and stress over it. I chose the latter, because I know there's more to life than just training, but it sometimes pains me to know I'm not working for my upcoming fight as hard as I feel I should be.
    Is it because of that underlying pride that I have too high of an expectation of myself? I do want a healthy relationship with martial arts, but I'm having some trouble finding it because I'm either overworking myself, or stressing myself over not working enough; while at the same time almost dreading to win my next fight, due to me being afraid of growing that seed of overconfidence to a point at which my problem with overtraining either becomes unbearable, and/or I end up becoming a jerk that thinks himself invincible, even if only for a short time until I get my butt kicked.
    Thank you for reading it and again, have a good day to all who read this far. Greetings from Spain.

  • @poorboybmx2511
    @poorboybmx2511 2 года назад +2

    Thoughly enjoyed listening to your words of wisdom, as always. 👍

  • @louisupton3740
    @louisupton3740 2 года назад +4

    2

  • @mrunknwn1151
    @mrunknwn1151 2 года назад +1

    Talking about 1st fight us being really aggressive fighter help you? Or you should be more strategic ?

  • @mdcruz
    @mdcruz 2 года назад +1

    IMO, thinking of things as a win or a loss misses the mark. I have often thought that the person who claims they have never lost a fight has never really been in a fight. Great fighters seek to challenge themselves progressively- be it a different weight class, a harder mountain (to climb), going from a marathon to a triathlon…it’s “the way” of the Warrior. IMO…

  • @saparapatepete
    @saparapatepete Год назад

    Another aspect to consider is quality of work. Did the person rests properly?. Was the person nervous during the match?. Is the training method efficient?. How are their personal life going on?.

  • @douglasdreigh5083
    @douglasdreigh5083 Год назад

    @Ramsey Dewey you mentioned juggling here. Aha! That is in fact one thing I do pretty well. Rather than talking about all my tricks, I would like to humbly say that the reaction speed that builds up when you start learning complex tricks is amazing: it makes you realise just how much faster reactions can be when you don't have to think about them. I'm not sure that would help any martial artists, as you train to control objects in the air around you, on the other hand, if you feel your hand speed is a little sluggish, give it a go. It may help. If any martial artists out their have juggling or other circus skills in their background, I would be fascinated to hear if it actually helps with their martial arts. (Sorry Ramsey, last comment today.) Now I'm kinda curious whether speed bag would improve my juggling...

  • @richardv.2475
    @richardv.2475 Год назад

    If you want to be competitive in any game at the top level, it's probably good to know that 65% is about natural talent, and if and only if you are truly talented then 20% is about the right education before age 10, 10% is about the right education between age 10 and 20 and there is a 5% room for good daily athletic habits. I can name people for different kind of games who started to play in their 30s and 40s and could snap well trained amateurs instantly and achieve a good semi-professional level, and I can list many many people who got nowhere with this "train hard, be Rocky Balboa" bullshit. If you ever see how little education matters in the light of a true talent, it makes pretty hard to understand why the crowd denies this so heavily.

  • @fireeaglefitnessmartialart935
    @fireeaglefitnessmartialart935 2 года назад

    "Don't think. FEEL! It is like a finger pointing away to the moon.
    Don't concentrate on the finger, or you'll miss all that heavenly glory" -Bruce Lee (enter the dragon)

  • @brucetsai7732
    @brucetsai7732 2 года назад

    Your views are amazing. They apply to many other disciplines. My interpreting teacher also said, work hard but also work smart. It's very true that we can fail even if we do everything right. That's life, we have to accept this. Thank you for your great videos.

  • @canceresbunny
    @canceresbunny Год назад

    I like how gentle and polite is the awnser. I would've said "you being a bitch bro", and moved on.

  • @katarinatibai8396
    @katarinatibai8396 2 года назад

    We need to be also realistic - you have to find what you good at - I am 1,63m and 54 kg - I will suck at pole vault.
    Basicaly no sport is good suited for smal framed people.
    Maybe karate or muay thay - also there we are at disadvantage but there we have better possibility to even it aut with effort.

  • @jacksmith4460
    @jacksmith4460 2 года назад

    11:30 That was the first thing I thought "hmm this sounds like a bit of a miss match" giving up 5/6 inches in height and reach and 10KG or so weight, no wonder they lost. To be honest kind of sounds like a Moral victory seeing that , based on their words, were clearly in the fight at all times and despite giving a serious size advantage too the opponent, managed to pretty much match them, even if they lost.

  • @TrueSighted
    @TrueSighted 2 года назад

    There's more than one type of victory. You can't train away unfortunate bad luck. Only work to minimize its effects when it does happen. Even then, like all things in martial arts; there are no guarentees.

  • @BionicBurke
    @BionicBurke 2 года назад

    I always hated that saying "Work smarter, not harder"... as you said it.. the proper way to think about it is "Work smarter so you can work harder"... meaning find efficient ways to do things better so you can get even more work done with the mentality of working harder.

  • @katarinatibai8396
    @katarinatibai8396 2 года назад

    Size maters, weight maters - talent maters - not "only" work.
    Everyone has a limit.
    When you make body building - you are on a platoe every 3 months - a platoe san be 3- 6 or even 8 weeks of zero progress the body needs to adapt - I think a platoe can be a thing also in other sports.
    Just ceep on train - only the time will show you how far you are able to go.

  • @jonathanscott907
    @jonathanscott907 2 года назад

    I feel like too much training stifles the creative reactive mind. Not training and just watching other people fight plus fighting video games I feel like help the creative and reactive mind alot.

  • @manuferreri
    @manuferreri 2 года назад

    For the japanese proverb haters, at some point we were all babies, and we stood up, without having fallen down previously, that's +1 to standing up for ever until well we die :p

  • @chadzard4
    @chadzard4 2 года назад

    2 months of training is nothing. In a live situation you won't be able to apply most of what you were learning after only 2 months.

  • @omarkusturica3174
    @omarkusturica3174 2 года назад

    Of course that you need rest days when you are doing intense exercise. ANd good nutrition

  • @pbennett13
    @pbennett13 5 месяцев назад

    Well said... thanks for the message!

  • @Randy12346
    @Randy12346 2 года назад

    I think you nailed it but you did not know how to explain Ramsey

  • @chrisswanson2378
    @chrisswanson2378 2 года назад +1

    You gave me insights and you get my upvote. I am glad I watched. I had two training partners, one was a newb and one experienced. I watched them train just as hard. One excelled one stagnated. The one who stagnated believed he knew how the tech worked. He wouldn't "waste" his time trying "wrong" things. He never got a tech that only took us a week with 45 minutes a day to get decent at. I think this might be the problem with the person who posed the question. I can't whistle with my fingers probably for this reason.

  • @catnip-it8rx
    @catnip-it8rx 2 года назад +3

    3

  • @anthonyjuarez706
    @anthonyjuarez706 2 года назад

    Love your channel good conversation and lessons

  • @357-swagnumultramagax9
    @357-swagnumultramagax9 2 года назад

    Coach I want to fight tough men boxing matches .

  • @basteagui
    @basteagui 2 года назад +1

    how do you manage to be 6 feet 3 inches tall but only weight 58 kilograms.
    is that a real thing?????

  • @iammrsnesbit9729
    @iammrsnesbit9729 2 года назад

    6'5 58 kilos bro go eat something.

  • @Mattythebassman
    @Mattythebassman 2 года назад +1

    There's always the next fight, take time to meditate and reflect and jump right back on that horse! I think the viewer who posed the question is a classic case of over training. Your point about spacing out training is spot on and can be applied to many disciplines other than fighting. I do the same for practicing guitar for example. I'll work on nailing a specific technique for weeks but never let myself get too frustrated and linger on it for too long in any one day. More often than not if you go on for too long you end up picking up bad habits through sheer frustration.

  • @MartialArtsTutorialsFighttips
    @MartialArtsTutorialsFighttips 2 года назад +1

    I am happy for your content

  • @jeffreywright2294
    @jeffreywright2294 2 года назад

    Very disciplined you must persevere

  • @richardhumbert9553
    @richardhumbert9553 2 года назад +1

    Sir thank you as I've been following you for awhile. But off and on but yet you started showing up again when you talked about whats going on with the kicks down again. Ok I'm thankful and glad for this video because this really refreshed my spirit. I'm still training and in combat sports who 37. And your right yes the results even when you put the work in yet what else have you got going on with you. That where the true victory is. Yes getting your hand raised is awesome but the journey the moment the best reward. Plus not everyone can do combat sports. Thank you for the story and break down sir 🤜🤛.

  • @MrTimRS
    @MrTimRS 2 года назад

    Love you Ramsey keep up the great work

  • @sovvrong
    @sovvrong 6 месяцев назад

    "You lost on the score cards"

  • @julian-gen
    @julian-gen 2 года назад

    You can't put in what god left out.

  • @tozakzero6789
    @tozakzero6789 2 года назад +3

    4

  • @jacksmith4460
    @jacksmith4460 2 года назад

    16:24 great words here, you are a Gem Sir

  • @crypto2frens
    @crypto2frens 2 года назад +1

    This is called the loser mindset. Some people are just not going to make it. You hit the nail on the head - this guy has made massive progress across the board, and still is upset and blind to it.

  • @RCfilm_productions
    @RCfilm_productions Год назад

    Ramsey thank you for this video. I'd forgotten this at my core. Stronger, faster, smarter everyday has been my life motto, to honour what God has given me(ie. A functional body and mind). I've struggled to keep motivated in this but what you said here is a lecture I would give myself, just needed someone to word it out for me.

    • @RCfilm_productions
      @RCfilm_productions Год назад

      I'll be sharing this with my students to inspire them as well.

  • @mdcruz
    @mdcruz 2 года назад

    Hey, Ramsey- do you know Jake from Las Vegas? He is a great Chiropractor and Mormon and excellent martial artist. Just curious, you kinda remind me of him for some reason.

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад +1

      I don’t think I know Jake from Las Vegas, sorry. He sounds like a cool dude.

  • @remib2320
    @remib2320 2 года назад +1

    Hi Ramsey,
    You often say that speed bag is designed to train hand fighting, but I cannot visualise how to make it real during a fight (except for a few techniques)
    Could you talk more about this ?
    Hope you are fine, really.
    Thanks !

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад

      Check out my speedbag playlist on my channel.

    • @remib2320
      @remib2320 2 года назад

      @@RamseyDewey thank you Ramsey !

  • @johnhendricks8140
    @johnhendricks8140 2 года назад

    My friends were lifting heavier weights than me we starting back working out and I was lifting these small weights everyday for an hour, with in six months i was lifting close to or more than what my friends were lifting, tranformation it has to be a lifestyle.

  • @janjedynak7652
    @janjedynak7652 2 года назад

    lot's of wisdom, good episode!

  • @underrideproductions
    @underrideproductions 2 года назад

    You gotta sleep on it.

  • @RRTNZ
    @RRTNZ 2 года назад +1

    Cheers Coach, this has to be one of your best videos yet - and yes, in part because of the Star Trek references. Great advice for that young guy - the positive life changes he made are much more of a victory than beating a guy in the ring, hope he comes to see that. On a similar note, I remember getting advice from a Sensei that "thinking about winning, gets in the way of doing it" which is certainly what my experience has been.
    Now, a while back you told me that Mike Tyson could beat Bruce Lee in a fight "under any set of rules" which got me thinking, what about Olympic Taekwondo rules ? That would eliminate pretty much all of Tyson's offence and maximise the kicking skills and foot speed advantage of Lee....of course its not really a "fight" per se, but my other suggestion was shuffleboard, so let's stick with Taekwondo. Cheers.

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад +1

      What footspeed advantage? Mike Tyson was objectively faster than Bruce Lee by every possible metric.

    • @RRTNZ
      @RRTNZ 2 года назад

      @@RamseyDewey Come on Coach, you have to concede that Bruce Lee's kicks would be a lot faster than Mike's - I mean other than curb stomping people in his rough street hoodlum days, I doubt he ever kicked a moving opponent - and he's not going to score any points with that. Bruce, on the other hand, trained kicks quite a bit. All he needs to do is land 1 or 2 to score a point and win the match- sure its not much of a "fight" but
      it's one set of rules under which Bruce might prevail....and remain conscious. Mike is fast on his feet, but his footwork is all around closing quickly and striking with his powerful hands - and even though those punches might be devastating they're probably not going to meet judges' scoring criteria ( which is the crazy thing about Olympic Taekwondo and WKF Karate) . Well, if we can't agree on this....I'm still going with Bruce destroying Tyson at shuffleboard ! Cheers

  • @Gyrodyssey
    @Gyrodyssey 2 года назад +1

    Awesome Video Ramsey Dewey

  • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
    @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed 2 года назад +2

    just another example that not everybody's made for this. And if you have to work three times as hard and still lose. then you just have to think of yourself as a casual. can everybody play basketball and be good at it? The answer is no.
    can everybody play baseball and be good at it. The answer is no
    can everybody Play golf and be good at it. The answer is no
    what makes everyone think that they can be the best in fighting?
    it's better to tell them the truth than to lead them on thinking that they can ever become a very good fighter.
    I understand they want to have this title as a fighter so they can be cool and stuff but if you don't got it you don't got it.

    • @gutsbadguy50
      @gutsbadguy50 2 года назад

      One fight is not a good sample size. Obviously this guy is not super talented but people do grow and become stronger. So there is no reason to give up at such an early stage, especially if you enjoy training and fighting.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed 2 года назад +1

      @@gutsbadguy50 if you enjoy training and fighting, it doesn't mean that you're good at it. All that it means is it's a way of exercising
      Women are fighting
      Does that make them tough?
      Do you think that they can actually protect themselves?
      It's a delusion.
      And the problem is these fake masters in these schools Don't tell them the truth. They give them this false empowerment and confidence that is probably more dangerous than anything.
      There's different people on this planet and you have to realize what you are and if you were born to be a pushy then act like the pushy you were born to be.
      Are you going to tell me that a woman can just walk around beating up people because she went to a mixed martial arts school?

    • @gutsbadguy50
      @gutsbadguy50 2 года назад

      @@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Obviously women arent physically the same as men, but thats not the point. Anyone can develop themselves. You may not be able to beat mike tyson in a fight but at the same time, you shouldnt give up your dream after one setback. Thats a weak mentality.

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed 2 года назад +1

      @@gutsbadguy50 okay, let me give you another analogy
      If there's a mentally challenged person and they wanted to be a doctor, would you tell them that they can't?
      Or would you put them to the schooling and take their money and then they won't be able to find a job as a doctor.
      But you took their money.
      Now if a person is physically handicapped meaning that they're mind and body coordination is just not there. Why would you take this person's money given them false hope?

    • @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
      @HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed 2 года назад +1

      @@gutsbadguy50 if you go to a mixed martial arts, school or boxing, anything you know exactly what I'm talking about because you know that there's tons of those people in there that shouldn't even be in there.
      Why is mixed martial arts treated differently than other sports is my question?
      Everyone thinks they can do it and their mother.
      Like I said, if you want to take it up as an exercise you can do that. But to think that you can actually be good at it and compete. The only person you're fooling is yourself

  • @lukeandresen9856
    @lukeandresen9856 2 года назад

    What’s going on in Shanghai? I see a lot of videos and reports - horrific stuff. Lots of pet murder, robot dogs ordering people to stay inside, wailing and gnashing of teeth.

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад

      Watch one of my videos on the subject.

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад

      Try this one: ruclips.net/video/9PqVCvZRLq4/видео.html

  • @richwun1057
    @richwun1057 2 года назад

    I can relate to this, at 34 I had been practicing Kung Fu for 10 years and I felt at that time I could not fight to win if my life depended on it. So I switched direction one day when I met an ex-prize fighter who offered to train me and some friends of mine in boxing. This was an eye opener for all of us, sparring was the number one thing we all did in the training and we all sucked big time. And still after 2 years of this I still wasn't getting it, so then the guy that was training me told why don't I go train with his trainer, which I did. Well 5 years and 3 boxing gym later I finally got it. And then another 20 years later I became proficient at it, all because I got involved in teaching kids and adults everything I had gone through. So it's not a matter of when, it's a matter of will. The Way Is The Training

  • @streamingnowstreamingnow2568
    @streamingnowstreamingnow2568 2 года назад

    There’s this thing called ‘Instinct’ and you either have it or you don’t.
    All the training/sparing in the world won’t prepare you for the Adrenaline Fuelled rush or Wrestling someone on the ground who is Resisting while you’re trying to tap em out.

    • @RamseyDewey
      @RamseyDewey  2 года назад +2

      Human instincts are absolutely terrible for cage fighting, man. Everyone’s!

  • @louisodendaal6200
    @louisodendaal6200 2 года назад

    Ok so after watching the video I have a real question. You're the first big (tall & strong) guy that actually acknowledges that weight strength and size make a difference vs technique and that even the best technical guy will fail once the opponent becomes too big or strong. I'm not talking about a 5'9" black belt beating a 6'2" "bigger" bodybuilder. I'm talking 5'2"vs 6'4"and double the weight - and I know the big guys will IMMEDIATELY go technique beats size but small guys know that that's just not realistically possible. Sure I can hold my own and make it hard for them but we know how it's going to end 9 out of 10 times. So now my question. How do I diplomatically explain this to big guys without sounding like I'm looking for an excuse ? Personally I don't mind getting tapped because I'm too old to take it too seriously. I sort of just want to lift the veil from their eyes

  • @Revrii
    @Revrii 2 года назад +5

    1

    • @jojostar7973
      @jojostar7973 2 года назад +2

      Is that the highest number you can count to?

  • @CallMeO08
    @CallMeO08 2 года назад

    I’m almost wanting to tear up watching this. No pity needed as I’ve accepted my upbringing but I’ve accepted my mistakes also. Growing up though I gave up on my accept.
    Mom wasn’t being a mom, father was too busy making families. But fast forward to 2022 though.
    Three kids, a torn acl and meniscus, bow legged (was told this can hinder any sports future growing up, never fact checked but don’t believe also don’t know lol). Im 32 and Ive always been a casual fan of fighting rather boxing or mma.
    But in 2021 I discovered a couple of things. I love boxing and fighting, getting hit, watching Silva and going to try it while getting hit lol I love it though.
    I wish I had you, icy Mike, Jeff Chan and co growing up. I love fighting. I wish I can spar all day everyday.
    Because of decisions I made, going to the gym and/or sparring is out the question. I live with a 18 who is lazy. I sparred him twice, killed me both times. I’m 5’4’ and he’s knocking 6 ft doors down. I know I can beat him though.
    Thing is, he’s lazy! Doesn’t want to spar anymore even though I was the one getting hit. Had I seen this video in my teens (didn’t exist lol) but I would hope I would drop it all and hit a gym. I’ve learned so much through your videos.
    Anyways, I really feel inspired watching your videos. You keep me going everyday to continue fighting. As I believe one day, everything will be settled and I can hit a gym to get better.
    If you’re a high schooler watching this. Start now. The tools are there. If time is there, than take it. As a father times limited, but if you have it, then fight and train and fight and train. I love it. When I’m not throwing punches or working on my jab, depression and my mental problems creep. When I’m throwing punches, everything gets better.
    Thank you Ramsey for keeping me pushing. Just brought Jack Dempseys book because of you! Will study it. I’ll have the best jab in the neighborhood lol