i love peoples first reaction to the Dempsey roll, they normally think “oh hes bobbing and weaving and hes gonna punch him like once or twice” In reality its successive blows to the cranium nonstop until the opponent is down shifting the weight from ur foot left to right using the momentum. at number 9, ippo actually broke a part of the eyesocket in sawamura’s skull so his eye was sunken in after that.
Part of the Dempsey can also be used to force aside the gloves of your opponent. Funnily enough, the two styles I like use in my boxing are flicker jabs or the peekaboo. I'm a little taller than average, so I'll there's a little more than a 50/50 chance that I'll have the reach advantage. But if I don't, I'm crawling in like a dirty little goblin.
@@SwordTune fuck i thought i was one of the few people out here combining different styles that have complete different game plans to throw people off i love flicker jabs but sadly i was born medium short height with short arms my opponents would usually have half a arms length over me so flicker jabs can only really be used as a starter when my opponent isnt expecting them and even if it works i cant sustain them since i practically have to almost hyper extend my arm over and over to even get them to connect and fuck stepping in with them that would turn them into flicker straights and put me at easy range for a counter punch since i cant start a flurry unless a person is stunned in pain since somehow they always seem to just get out of distance of my punches which is really damn annoying
@@SwordTune well i more meant in a sport boxing scenario not a street fight but even then that advice isn't that great. I mean don't get me wrong wrestling works damn well if your good at it. But requires a good strength and physique type at that point why wouldn't I do judo which can teach me to ragdoll a opponent three times my size without breaking a sweat. Or bjj to wrangle them in and take control of the entire fight which are both highly proven disciples. Or hell at that point learning something like krav maga silat or muay thai clenches. Its pretty hard to get into someones reach without other tools besides shooting for a takedown. Which is all wrestling really seems to teach since they don't have stuff like arm bars and what not to control the flow of a fight. Especially if its say 1v3 or something since the only time you can shoot is right after someone extends there arm for a punch. and you only have the time it takes to pull a arm back into position. This would not be the case if wrestling as a sport had other tools but sport wrestling has too many rules to be truly practical. At that point greek pankration which was boxing and wrestling basically would be something more akin and useful. Reason being it combines both skill sets and actually makes openings to grapple. A sport wrestling gym isn't gonna teach me how to flow strikes and grapples together. This wouldn't be a issue but its hard to put two disciples together and make them work well. Hell even Muay thai has multiple setups to help you get into stuff like clenches for knees and such like say posting your leg behind you opponent as they step back to trip them. Heck even wing chun which has very little to no ground game and next to no grappling has better setups for clenches holds and locks to break someones arms and legs then wrestling does. And its not at the fault of wrestling as a concept but because it was turned from self defense into a watered down sport. At that point you would just be better off in a mma gym sure it has rules but at least a lot of those rules would be justifiable for the most part in a real world situation. Since a lot of banned moves are overkill on a average person.
I'm a boxer and it's not that bad lol some people just have warrior spirits.. i always were intrigued by ancient warriors so i wanted to feel like them and boxing gives me that feeling lol yea its a brutal sport but it builds confidence and you know your very capable of defending yourself
this is very true however i tell a lot of boxers to also go try something like muay thai or kick boxing so they can learn more holds then clenching and can even turn a defensive clench into a offensive knee and mainly so you dont get you butt handed to you by a amateur who just happens to know a couple of sweeps or low kicks seen great boxers get beat up in the street cause they didn't know how to kick or at least stop the kick dead in its tracks/baiting them into a counter from there kicks which is no easy feat since a leg has more reach and power then a arm ever will but on the plus side most kick windups at least powerful kicks are slow and easy to dodge however i only really recommend boxers learn muay thai to utilize there whole body as a weapon and mainly so in a street fight a clench can actually protect them since normally a clench is only to catch your breath but throw five knees to there stomach ribs and internal organs and a overhead elbow and suddenly the fight is immediately in your favor most likely
@@dr.dylansgame5583 thanks and yea I did a little of muay thai its cool, kicking is cool to add to your arsenal,but I ain't never viewed it as essential since in most street fights you'll be wearing restrictive clothing that might affect the mobility of your kicks,its definitely needed in the cage or ring though.
@@zachariasjames819 you make a valid argument but never understood how people have problems i dont wear exactly slack jeans and can still kick above my shoulder pretty effortlessly with no formal training
@@dr.dylansgame5583 True, but speaking as someone who trained in both boxng & Taekwondo (I actually taught tkd for a little while), kicking above the shoulder for most people requires at least a bit of stretching. Otherwise, you'd risk spraining or tearing something, and most people just don't do a lot of stretching outside of most physical sports. Plus, using high kicks in a street fight, even by someone trained, is highly risky. Which is why most people tend to use push (front) kicks, or kicks/sweeps to the legs, if they do use kicks at all.
The show's definitely got some brutality, but there's also a lot of beauty to it, just like the sport itself. It's an old school anime, which doesn't appeal to most people, but I can't recommend it enough. It's one of those rare gems that'll change your taste in anime altogether. If nothing else, the first twenty or so episodes are pretty tame, and they give you a good idea of what the rest of the show is like. PLEASE give it a try and put a few hours into first season.
@@DarkKnight2037 yeah when i dodge fast jabs i feel like im in the matrix and everything is going in slow motion unless the guy has fly weight speed jabs then it makes it hard to dodge
"Ippo's an underdog who want's to become a world champion." Not exactly, he's a great boxer out of the gate and starts boxing for the sake of it and doesn't decide to go for the Championship until quite a while into the show. His journey's more a show about learning the science and techniques and balancing his life with boxing.
i dont know if we watched the same anime but all he had from the start was the born ability to punch hard and that was it he didnt even know how to throw a hard punch or even a jab until takamura taught him and it took him a whole week just to learn how to throw a fast single jab and even though he keeps on adding and building up techniques and strength a majority of his fights were struggles where he had to get beaten to near half death just to start getting some good hard combinations in
@@dr.dylansgame5583 Yeah it seems like he was gifted near the start, learned some combinations, then solely relied on said combinations until it become his only move. Ippo needsto reach out more into the realm of boxing if he even wants to take a shot at the world.
Some shows ain't for everyone. Alls you gotta know though is that this one hell of an anime, even if you're not a boxing fan. It's definitely a sports anime, though, NOT a shonen. So, no romantic subplot, no shonen hero cliches, and no filler episodes. There aren't even any real villains. All the characters have their own reasons and stories, and even the unlikable ones have a decent motivation for how they act and fight. It's weirdly unique in that respect. Most of the comedy is centered around dirty jokes and sailor humor, considering it was written by a guy who grew up around that stuff. If you're okay with that, then I can't recommend this show enough, as it's one of the best there's ever been. But, if harsh realism, toilet humor, and technical boxing jargon are major turn offs for you, then you might be better off with Top 10/Highlight videos like these.
i watch the fight.. after the match sawamura ended up with 3 broken rib and broke all his front teeth plus a skull fracture to his eye socket from the dempsey roll
"they put so much ephasis on movement, boxing is not that intense" It is called spectacle. It is to emphasize blows and movement and im sorry have you been in a boxing match before? a title fight is pretty intense and this anime adds spectacle to make it more exciting for the viewer.
At 15:44 that's the better quality version of that fight, it sounded like broken glass because in the original that punch broke the entire right side of his rib cage
over a year late but ippo had to hit sawamura like that to win he had no other tools that could get in on him since sawamuras jab was the equivalent of trying to dodge a bullet it stuck hard insanely fast and would just eat right through blocks which made it nearly impossible to get in close to land some punches and even if he got in he still had to worry about sawamuras right hand which one punch nearly knocked him unconscious multiple times throughout the fight and just to pull those stops off from the dempsey roll he had to damn near tear his muscles apart if he didnt do that he would have 100 percent lost that fight so it defiantly wasn't overkill also if it was any conciliation he deserved it sawamura kept trying to provoke him before the fight and even hit kumi his love interest who is the girl you saw in the stands in the mashiba fight who is his sister
There are men in the world that simply love to fight. Whether it’s picking fights out in the street (something I wouldn’t recommend since everyone these days are carrying guns and knives), or getting into combat sports like boxing, MMA, BJJ, Tae Kwon Do, etc. They’re hungry for that adrenaline, the competition, the satisfaction in knowing you can physically dominate another human being.
He can't lift his arms to block. It was pretty obvious he expended his strength so even if he did his guard would be weak and he doesn't want to hurt his arms so jus take the punch
i love peoples first reaction to the Dempsey roll, they normally think “oh hes bobbing and weaving and hes gonna punch him like once or twice”
In reality its successive blows to the cranium nonstop until the opponent is down shifting the weight from ur foot left to right using the momentum.
at number 9, ippo actually broke a part of the eyesocket in sawamura’s skull so his eye was sunken in after that.
Part of the Dempsey can also be used to force aside the gloves of your opponent. Funnily enough, the two styles I like use in my boxing are flicker jabs or the peekaboo. I'm a little taller than average, so I'll there's a little more than a 50/50 chance that I'll have the reach advantage. But if I don't, I'm crawling in like a dirty little goblin.
@@SwordTune lol
@@SwordTune fuck i thought i was one of the few people out here combining different styles that have complete different game plans to throw people off i love flicker jabs but sadly i was born medium short height with short arms my opponents would usually have half a arms length over me so flicker jabs can only really be used as a starter when my opponent isnt expecting them and even if it works i cant sustain them since i practically have to almost hyper extend my arm over and over to even get them to connect and fuck stepping in with them that would turn them into flicker straights and put me at easy range for a counter punch since i cant start a flurry unless a person is stunned in pain since somehow they always seem to just get out of distance of my punches which is really damn annoying
@@dr.dylansgame5583 Dude, just wrestle. Reach matters less when you yeehaw yeet your whole body at them.
@@SwordTune well i more meant in a sport boxing scenario not a street fight but even then that advice isn't that great. I mean don't get me wrong wrestling works damn well if your good at it. But requires a good strength and physique type at that point why wouldn't I do judo which can teach me to ragdoll a opponent three times my size without breaking a sweat. Or bjj to wrangle them in and take control of the entire fight which are both highly proven disciples.
Or hell at that point learning something like krav maga silat or muay thai clenches. Its pretty hard to get into someones reach without other tools besides shooting for a takedown. Which is all wrestling really seems to teach since they don't have stuff like arm bars and what not to control the flow of a fight. Especially if its say 1v3 or something since the only time you can shoot is right after someone extends there arm for a punch. and you only have the time it takes to pull a arm back into position.
This would not be the case if wrestling as a sport had other tools but sport wrestling has too many rules to be truly practical. At that point greek pankration which was boxing and wrestling basically would be something more akin and useful. Reason being it combines both skill sets and actually makes openings to grapple. A sport wrestling gym isn't gonna teach me how to flow strikes and grapples together. This wouldn't be a issue but its hard to put two disciples together and make them work well.
Hell even Muay thai has multiple setups to help you get into stuff like clenches for knees and such like say posting your leg behind you opponent as they step back to trip them.
Heck even wing chun which has very little to no ground game and next to no grappling has better setups for clenches holds and locks to break someones arms and legs then wrestling does. And its not at the fault of wrestling as a concept but because it was turned from self defense into a watered down sport. At that point you would just be better off in a mma gym sure it has rules but at least a lot of those rules would be justifiable for the most part in a real world situation. Since a lot of banned moves are overkill on a average person.
We need this adrenaline...its a thing for us men...i see this and I want to work out.
"boxing's not that intense"
I am offended smh
LegendOfSonic same
Forreal I almost snapped 😂😂
Same here man, this show makes me so happy and she goes and says that 😭
I'm a boxer and it's not that bad lol some people just have warrior spirits.. i always were intrigued by ancient warriors so i wanted to feel like them and boxing gives me that feeling lol yea its a brutal sport but it builds confidence and you know your very capable of defending yourself
this is very true however i tell a lot of boxers to also go try something like muay thai or kick boxing so they can learn more holds then clenching and can even turn a defensive clench into a offensive knee and mainly so you dont get you butt handed to you by a amateur who just happens to know a couple of sweeps or low kicks seen great boxers get beat up in the street cause they didn't know how to kick or at least stop the kick dead in its tracks/baiting them into a counter from there kicks which is no easy feat since a leg has more reach and power then a arm ever will but on the plus side most kick windups at least powerful kicks are slow and easy to dodge however i only really recommend boxers learn muay thai to utilize there whole body as a weapon and mainly so in a street fight a clench can actually protect them since normally a clench is only to catch your breath but throw five knees to there stomach ribs and internal organs and a overhead elbow and suddenly the fight is immediately in your favor most likely
@@dr.dylansgame5583 thanks and yea I did a little of muay thai its cool, kicking is cool to add to your arsenal,but I ain't never viewed it as essential since in most street fights you'll be wearing restrictive clothing that might affect the mobility of your kicks,its definitely needed in the cage or ring though.
@@zachariasjames819 you make a valid argument but never understood how people have problems i dont wear exactly slack jeans and can still kick above my shoulder pretty effortlessly with no formal training
@@dr.dylansgame5583 True, but speaking as someone who trained in both boxng & Taekwondo (I actually taught tkd for a little while), kicking above the shoulder for most people requires at least a bit of stretching. Otherwise, you'd risk spraining or tearing something, and most people just don't do a lot of stretching outside of most physical sports. Plus, using high kicks in a street fight, even by someone trained, is highly risky. Which is why most people tend to use push (front) kicks, or kicks/sweeps to the legs, if they do use kicks at all.
I like boxing with Russians. they are very technical.
The show's definitely got some brutality, but there's also a lot of beauty to it, just like the sport itself. It's an old school anime, which doesn't appeal to most people, but I can't recommend it enough. It's one of those rare gems that'll change your taste in anime altogether. If nothing else, the first twenty or so episodes are pretty tame, and they give you a good idea of what the rest of the show is like. PLEASE give it a try and put a few hours into first season.
When you're actually in a fight, i would say it feels like you're going through and doing what you see in the anime
I box and I can tell you that everything goes so fast!! When you get hit hard you literally see blurry less for a second before snapping out of it
@@william0429 personally, i get a mix of both, some things feel in slow motion, other things feel quick, and sometimes real time as well
@@DarkKnight2037 yeah when i dodge fast jabs i feel like im in the matrix and everything is going in slow motion unless the guy has fly weight speed jabs then it makes it hard to dodge
That's right! and the feeling of being able to pull counters and dodging punches for the first time are also the greatest!
“Boxing is not that intense” get in a ring and let’s watch every bone of hers get broken lmao
"Ippo's an underdog who want's to become a world champion."
Not exactly, he's a great boxer out of the gate and starts boxing for the sake of it and doesn't decide to go for the Championship until quite a while into the show.
His journey's more a show about learning the science and techniques and balancing his life with boxing.
i dont know if we watched the same anime but all he had from the start was the born ability to punch hard and that was it he didnt even know how to throw a hard punch or even a jab until takamura taught him and it took him a whole week just to learn how to throw a fast single jab and even though he keeps on adding and building up techniques and strength a majority of his fights were struggles where he had to get beaten to near half death just to start getting some good hard combinations in
@@dr.dylansgame5583 Yeah it seems like he was gifted near the start, learned some combinations, then solely relied on said combinations until it become his only move. Ippo needsto reach out more into the realm of boxing if he even wants to take a shot at the world.
Some shows ain't for everyone. Alls you gotta know though is that this one hell of an anime, even if you're not a boxing fan. It's definitely a sports anime, though, NOT a shonen. So, no romantic subplot, no shonen hero cliches, and no filler episodes. There aren't even any real villains. All the characters have their own reasons and stories, and even the unlikable ones have a decent motivation for how they act and fight. It's weirdly unique in that respect. Most of the comedy is centered around dirty jokes and sailor humor, considering it was written by a guy who grew up around that stuff. If you're okay with that, then I can't recommend this show enough, as it's one of the best there's ever been. But, if harsh realism, toilet humor, and technical boxing jargon are major turn offs for you, then you might be better off with Top 10/Highlight videos like these.
This show hits all the checkboxes for me and it started with just a anime review recommendation. This show is everything to me ever since.
i watch the fight.. after the match sawamura ended up with 3 broken rib and broke all his front teeth plus a skull fracture to his eye socket from the dempsey roll
😱I knew it. smh
"they put so much ephasis on movement, boxing is not that intense" It is called spectacle. It is to emphasize blows and movement and im sorry have you been in a boxing match before? a title fight is pretty intense and this anime adds spectacle to make it more exciting for the viewer.
Sawamura ippo was most destructive fight of hole series. They both break each other to bones
Lol no brutal anime while wearing a Tokyo ghoul shirt love it
Lol I mean it’s Tokyo Ghoul that’s my shit though
It is this intense in real life, dont speak if you have no idea
I´m really happy for this reaction! THX
your welcome ☺ I am happy you liked it
Volg did try, his gloves were coming up to intercept but he was to gassed to pull it off fast enough.
At 15:44 that's the better quality version of that fight, it sounded like broken glass because in the original that punch broke the entire right side of his rib cage
Really? I guess I need to watch the fight
over a year late but ippo had to hit sawamura like that to win he had no other tools that could get in on him since sawamuras jab was the equivalent of trying to dodge a bullet it stuck hard insanely fast and would just eat right through blocks which made it nearly impossible to get in close to land some punches and even if he got in he still had to worry about sawamuras right hand which one punch nearly knocked him unconscious multiple times throughout the fight and just to pull those stops off from the dempsey roll he had to damn near tear his muscles apart if he didnt do that he would have 100 percent lost that fight so it defiantly wasn't overkill also if it was any conciliation he deserved it sawamura kept trying to provoke him before the fight and even hit kumi his love interest who is the girl you saw in the stands in the mashiba fight who is his sister
there is nothing underdog about ichiro miyata ( the first one )
There are men in the world that simply love to fight. Whether it’s picking fights out in the street (something I wouldn’t recommend since everyone these days are carrying guns and knives), or getting into combat sports like boxing, MMA, BJJ, Tae Kwon Do, etc. They’re hungry for that adrenaline, the competition, the satisfaction in knowing you can physically dominate another human being.
He can't lift his arms to block. It was pretty obvious he expended his strength so even if he did his guard would be weak and he doesn't want to hurt his arms so jus take the punch
I really loves takamura scene🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
maybe... you could try to watch hajime no ippo anime :D if you want to
when I watch this... I know it's brutal, but for some reason I'm enjoying it
I can’t do it 🤦🏾♀️🙅🏾♀️ that’s a big no for me I wouldn’t be able to enjoy it
@@anime-uncovered7205 it's okay :D you don't have to. Because I know it's not for everyone
It's all about the thrill and plus it's not as brutal as the video made it out to be
7th fight is literaly the worst fight in series...just pure plot armor
A brownie that likes anime huh..
Ain’t nothin wrong with that😉😋
@@anime-uncovered7205 😍
Why did it sound kinda racist and cute at the same time?
@@PepsiCR7 it’s Uk lingo plus I’m black myself
@@ronzo95 Oh well that makes it less racist
"boxing in not that intense"
You should go to a real boxing match best time of my life 😈
I don’t think I could sit through the whole match
You’re hot and like anime so imma just sub
Lol thank you 😊 don’t forget to tell your friends