Why Dutch Kickboxing Dominates

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  • Опубликовано: 23 июл 2022
  • Learn from Legends: www.legendarystriking.com
    The legend of Dutch Kickboxing is as epic as it comes. Their elite fighters fight with their whole heart, giving awe to every spectator with their powerful combination striking. To understand how it became so dominant in all full contact combat sports, we need to understand the history and the way they train. This episode is a tribute to that.
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Комментарии • 913

  • @LawrenceKenshin
    @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +140

    What do you think of the Dutch Kickboxing style and how does it do against Muay Thai?
    The legend of Dutch Kickboxing is as epic as it comes.
    Their elite fighters fight with their whole heart, giving awe to every spectator with their powerful combination striking.
    To understand how it became so dominant in all full contact combat sports, we need to understand the history and the way they train.
    This episode is a tribute to that.
    Free Legendary Strategies: www.lawrencekenshin.com/

    • @PHATT_TV
      @PHATT_TV Год назад +10

      @Lawrence Kenshin Striking Breakdowns When I trained at a gym in Melbourne (Hangar 4 MMA) we trained Muay Thai & Dutch style interchangeably. Our head Coach & gym owner fought in both & found both Arts to have their pros & cons so then we would be prepared for whatever came our way in the ring.
      Primarily the way we usually trained was majority Thai techniques most days & Dutch 1-2 days a week, and each day starting from Monday onwards our sparring amped up. By Friday, Saturday etc we were having full gym wars. Great for advancing quicker than Thai’s who trained from 5-6 years old, not great for CTE though 😂.

    • @SkreltNL
      @SkreltNL Год назад +31

      Against Muay Thai? Horrible!
      Ramon Dekkers was great because he walked through everything. Example, Dekkers had 2 fights within 13 days against Thai's. Yes, 5-10 kilo weight advantage BUT he broke his ankle in the first fight. Went to hospital were the doctor gave him 2 choices. 1) normal cast, meant no fight. Ramon chose 2) well the foot to the shin. I am not kidding. The guy fought the 2nd fight, 13 days later with his foot welded to his shin and he kickd... he kicked like his life depended on it. That is Ramon Dekkers, Heart of a Lion.
      In general, and you can ask this to the Thai's, Dutch fighters are afraid off elbows, hate clinching & get swept easy. And now look at Glory's ruleset. Its tailor made to make dutch kickboxing look good.

    • @PHATT_TV
      @PHATT_TV Год назад +18

      @@SkreltNL 100% there is a lot of truth to this. Doesn’t hurt to learn your opponents style though. I still to this day use some Dutch style(aggressive) blocking towards kicks, & aggression but you are correct with less rules Thai’s dominate majority of the time. Hence why if I had to choose 1, Muay Thai all the way.

    • @SkreltNL
      @SkreltNL Год назад +5

      @@PHATT_TV 100% agreed

    • @Kzany42
      @Kzany42 Год назад +6

      @@PHATT_TV but dutch kickboxing is superior in combinations the rest muay thai is better

  • @coach_brandon1842
    @coach_brandon1842 Год назад +822

    Hard sparring the way the Dutch tend to is what caused so many injuries that ended my career when I was competing. My team hard sparred every day and after 5 years I burned out. I didn’t want to fight or compete anymore after 5-6 concussion, a torn cornea in my right eye, fracture ribs, broke nose and loss of smell, dislocated elbow and blown right knee. Not one of those injuries came from my matches. It came from bad training practices where we did full mma with small gloves and no shin guards and ALL techniques allowed at fight intensity.

    • @henryhoover3953
      @henryhoover3953 Год назад +78

      Thanks for your perspective! Mabye i will go thailand instead 👍

    • @TreyCuskey
      @TreyCuskey Год назад +6

      it's all money in the bank my friend.

    • @TreyCuskey
      @TreyCuskey Год назад +3

      @joe blogs what?

    • @TreyCuskey
      @TreyCuskey Год назад +65

      @@brandonholsather2171 a lot of “dojos” as they’re called in the us are just a money grab. But look at the Thais and the way they touch spar for timing/accuracy and conditioning. It’s phenomenal. However I don’t think there is one correct way of training champs come from all disciplines and backgrounds

    • @coach_brandon1842
      @coach_brandon1842 Год назад +130

      @@brandonholsather2171 It did toughen me up
      To a point and that carried me through life and my military time but it also killed my passion for competition. And now being older and teaching I realize there where better methods to get you to the same place without as much damage. Now my students start light and careful and we increase intensity over time as they reach milestone. I have 1 student who went firm no kickboxing experience at all. To now going 70-80 percent every session with me and higher level people and has suffer only minor injuries and no concussions. All within 2 years. He will be doing his first kickboxing competition this year with a couple others. They are just as tough and fierce as I was when I started competing but they have so much less damage and they work smarter than I ever did.

  • @ca-jf3ey
    @ca-jf3ey Год назад +58

    Part of the success story is that the Dutch kickboxing pioneers were very eclectic. As they were not bound to tradition, they just picked what worked and only kept the effective parts of different styles.

    • @owenwright4927
      @owenwright4927 Месяц назад

      Well not exactly there still pretty bad at clinching and elbows but yeah if they continue adapting like they are doing now they’ll be a huge contender for the Thais

  • @andymudhoney
    @andymudhoney Год назад +246

    I’ve trained with couple of guys who had the mentality of going all in “Dutch style” in sparring. Typically they would say “let’s go easy” and then suddenly explode. I used to hate that, it only made us wanna revenge on each other all the time. Needles to say that some bones were sacrificed for regular sparring sessions.
    Going all in is fine as long as it’s mutually agreed and doesn’t “just randomly happen”. If you’re experienced, you can naturally take it but for some it means game over for good.

    • @Maeggoel
      @Maeggoel Год назад +55

      Hard sparring is fine. But saying "let's go light", and then don't. Fuck those guys. I'm fine with going hard, but don't say we go light first. That's the sparring equivalent of a suckerpunch.

    • @ghengiskhan9308
      @ghengiskhan9308 Год назад +13

      the dutch training reminds me of the bulgarian weightlifting program lol

    • @kaizenproductions00
      @kaizenproductions00 Год назад +15

      @@ghengiskhan9308 Basically "If he dies, he dies"

    • @psychshift
      @psychshift Год назад +16

      Sparring should never be daunting, always look after your sparring partner. Train hard but smart and safe. Save hurting each other for actual fight/competition.

    • @setiarinilubis2363
      @setiarinilubis2363 Год назад +6

      @@psychshift that why Thai Sparring is way safety.

  • @ianmpena
    @ianmpena Год назад +391

    Can you guys create Comparing video about different types of kickboxing like Muay Thai and American kickboxing and dutch kickboxing and sanda like what's the difference between their kicks and stance and techniques

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +203

      yes absolutely, thanks for the great suggestion

    • @PHATT_TV
      @PHATT_TV Год назад +20

      Excellent suggestion!

    • @macacofrito
      @macacofrito Год назад +25

      Yes, Sanda would be a great topic

    • @iROChakri
      @iROChakri Год назад +12

      Pretty much all the same with Muay thai (kick boxing). All of them have Muay thai basic and they differentiate by adding other techniques. The comment above mine is pretty accurate.

    • @astonprice-lockhart7261
      @astonprice-lockhart7261 Год назад +8

      American kickboxing is very interesting as well. As from what I can see is an amalgamation of many different ways of striking influenced by boxing, karate (shotokan, goju ryu, and many others), taekwondo (hapkido, kuksool won, etc and kung-fu (northern shaolin, southern shaolin etc)

  • @TheMathPipe
    @TheMathPipe Год назад +594

    As beneficial as the hard sparring may be it’s also the styles detriment. Most Dutch kickboxers don’t have long careers and if they do they are highly susceptible to losing via KO later in their careers. Not to mention the CTE that can affect one later.

    • @funnyv6048
      @funnyv6048 Год назад +79

      This is basically Badr Hari in a nutshell, started really young, but racked up too much damage on the chin, now all his last fights even thought he dominates from the start, as soon as he gets hit with one significant strike he is done

    • @Brandovichie
      @Brandovichie Год назад +4

      @@funnyv6048 who do you think will win the upcoming badr/overeem fight

    • @funnyv6048
      @funnyv6048 Год назад +53

      @@Brandovichie Whoever gets clocked on the chin first loses I guess, they are both glass cannons

    • @unknownentity8256
      @unknownentity8256 Год назад +21

      @@funnyv6048 Yeah it's sudden death match 😂💀

    • @IceCubE4425
      @IceCubE4425 Год назад +7

      @@funnyv6048 Dont know why if they sparr that hard, they wear headgear, like a majority of boxers do for hard sparring. Not like the Dutch style is known for head kicks, it wont obscure their vision that much

  • @BlakeMcCringleberry
    @BlakeMcCringleberry Год назад +40

    Buakaw eating a spinning heel kick at the end and just shaking it off is insane.

  • @neokimchi
    @neokimchi 4 месяца назад +22

    my kyokushin gym also teaches Dutch style--but we keep the hard sparring to the kyokushin where we can go hard without as much risk of head trauma, and our kickboxing classes teach dutch style technique and drills but with a more flowy sparring style. imo it's the best of both worlds

  • @joecantrell4734
    @joecantrell4734 4 месяца назад +9

    I just came back from the Netherlands training for 2 weeks heading back in August for a month I love it

    • @Casloveskim
      @Casloveskim 3 месяца назад

      Nice, what gym you visited

    • @joecantrell4734
      @joecantrell4734 3 месяца назад

      Sb Gym Sityodtong Amsterdam El Otmani and Patrick’s Gym

  • @carlospaloma9324
    @carlospaloma9324 Год назад +18

    As a former student from Perry Ubeda I read a lot of comments that I do not confirm. "Dutch" kickboxing is of high level, but it can be executed at every level. Beginners or amateurs don't spar hard if they don't want to. I do apreciate the regognition of the hard work our Dutch fighters put in.

  • @JW-Handle
    @JW-Handle Год назад +60

    Another great video, awesome!
    I'll add my thoughts to the many already posted here. I'm Dutch, have been training mma and kickboxing for close to seven years, train mma at a gym in Amsterdam (grappling oriented) and kickboxing in another gym close to Amsterdam. The trainer is a good buddy of Ernesto Hoost, 'old school' guy.
    The kickboxing trainings are extreme in the sense of conditioning and mental toughness, the trainer is rarely satisfied and you are always pushed to the extreme. (but I guess thats sport coaches for you :-)
    Every training we practice Dutch drills as shown in the video, you pair up mostly randomly with others, it can be a dude the size of a windmill, or a teenage girl a head shorter than you.
    The combinations start simple and are gradually expanded every time, a lot of focus on countering, at least where I train.
    And yes, ending a combo with a low kick (and then backing off to create distance) is very common.
    We spar every training, especially when tired, those Dutch drills at high pace/intensity wear you down.
    We do not however, (always) spar at a 100% as shown in some of the clips!
    It's usually its hard to the body, 30-40% to the head. Also it will depend on your sparring partner, usually you spar 30-60 seconds, then switch to someone else.
    You are expected to adjust intensity based on your next sparring partner (age/sex/skill level)
    The groups consist of both competitive fighters and those who train recreational to stay fit /sharp.
    The hard sparring you see in some clips is usually guys who are training for fights, there is a difference between gyms as well, but most gyms have seperate training classes for competitive fighters.
    Here the sparring can be brutal, I've sometimes joined and was absolutely battered after.
    Of course, sparring sometimes gets a bit venomous, when someone hits you just a little too hard, tempers can flare and you counter back, and this can have a stacking effect. I'm typing this with one black eye, as just this occurred last training.
    However, this is not the norm!!
    You are expected to behave respectfully and you can expect a high lvl guy to sort you out during sparring if you keep up being a douchebag 😅
    Anyhow, this turned into a wall of text, hoping it is of interest to you.
    By all means, if you ever have the chance to train here in the Netherlands, go for it!!
    Like I said, the extreme hard sparring clips online are definitely not the norm, and we have plenty of foreigners train with us and they are always pleasantly surprised.
    Also, the NL has one the highest percentage of English speakers, so don't worry about not speaking Dutch.
    Have fun, osu! 👊

    • @east30
      @east30 Год назад

      Exactly they have a lot of urban about training here

    • @giorgiociaravolol1998
      @giorgiociaravolol1998 3 месяца назад

      I'd really like to train dutch styles, but I fear a lot these type of gyms and their notorious gym bullies. Plus I'm an engineer so I really need that brain lol

  • @GeertTheys
    @GeertTheys Год назад +17

    I was doing Thai boxing in the glory days. As Belgian we went a lot to Holland to their gyms. To come home battered and bruised after training sessions. Bloody nose, black eyes, bruised legs even had bruised ribs on occasion. Going back to high school looking like that many questions were asked ;) I was a 67kg fighter and sparred against heavy weights wo knocked my out even when I was covering up. Mental fortitude is build which still serves me in later life.

    • @lebell79
      @lebell79 10 месяцев назад

      yup, geen gewichtsklasses in sparren, gewoon gaan. is goed voor je karakter.haha.

  • @bunnyofdoom4501
    @bunnyofdoom4501 Год назад +14

    Yooo... you nailed it. Dutch style with clinch and elbows is my favorite. Way to break it down for those who need a clearer understanding.

  • @apexcroix1307
    @apexcroix1307 Год назад +50

    I'm thankful that I learned this style of striking. The combinations of this style is super effective.

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +7

      nice brother, who did you learn from?

    • @markmessi9020
      @markmessi9020 Год назад +5

      @@LawrenceKenshin From Lawrence Kenshin 😉

    • @apexcroix1307
      @apexcroix1307 Год назад +3

      @@LawrenceKenshin I learned from Mr. Stroeven, who trained at Mejiro Gym before moving to the Philippines.

    • @kermit1211
      @kermit1211 Год назад +2

      @@apexcroix1307 he’s here in the Philippines right now? Where can I find him?

    • @apexcroix1307
      @apexcroix1307 Год назад +1

      @@kermit1211 Cebu City

  • @aaronwalker9988
    @aaronwalker9988 Год назад +64

    I’m loving this series going into each styles effectiveness and history, keep it up 👍

  • @iROChakri
    @iROChakri Год назад +26

    Duct kickboxing is pretty much a combination if Muay thai, Boxing, and Karate.
    If you learn Muay thai. You can choose and adapt your style easily. For example,
    1. You focus on elbow and clinch as well as knee, you're still doing Muay thai.
    2. You focus more on boxing, you pretty much are already doing Dutch kickboxing.
    3. You fight with bare hands, you are now doing Kyukushin. Put gloves on again, and then it becomes Japanese kickboxing.
    4. You throw your opponent a lot in a kickboxing match, you already know how to do Chinese kickboxing Sanda.
    Muay thai being one of the oldest kickboxing styles with very old footage influences a lot of other kickboxing styles. Most modern kickboxings have Muay thai foundation built on it. Thats why most people cant see much differences between all kickboxings 👌

    • @combatsportsarchive7632
      @combatsportsarchive7632 Год назад +2

      Diablo, I'd recommend you to check out my second video which titled "Full Contact Karate in Early MMA" for further investigation. Back then, I thought the original version of Kyokushin Karate and other hard styles of Karate are just made of punches and kicks. It turns out that they have other stuff such as open-hand strikes, throws, takedowns, grabbing/clinch fighting with the gi uniform and even joint locks. They wrecked a bunch of competitors in that open tournament ('All Nihon Martial Arts Championship' 1995) with very few rules that allowed full-contact strikes and grappling. It was somewhat similar to old Pancrase which was a prototype format for early MMA. However, the Karate dudes in that old footage either came from a breakaway group of Kyokushin Karate or its descendant arts such as Shidokan Karate and Seidokaikan Karate. The main federations of Kyokushin Karate don't use those other methods in their standard tournaments for some reason.

    • @yongjiean9980
      @yongjiean9980 Год назад +1

      Bro good analysis but do note that Sanshou, boxing, Dutch kickboxing and Kyokushin (and Japanese kickboxing) are different sports in their own right with different techniques, skills, stances, fight strategies in themselves which are outside of Muay Thai.
      Just a word - my gym teaches Muay Thai with a strong emphasis on kickboxing. The chief instructor is Dutch trained. So this Muay Thai is not traditional but we do learn elbow striking and clinching to throw knee kicks. I am not a fan of clinching but I learn as well to clinch and to deal with the clinch coz they are useful.

    • @aym7n_10
      @aym7n_10 6 месяцев назад

      Knees are in kickboxing too

    • @owenwright4927
      @owenwright4927 3 месяца назад

      Spot on dude although I’d say Dutch kick-boxing is very similar to the muay matt style I personally am a muay matt and I think drawing from Dutch kickboxing combinations are a very lethal combination whilst training clinging and elbows

  • @bryanwcksn
    @bryanwcksn Год назад +11

    I used to train Dutch kickboxing. They almost certainly spar every class. even the drill is a warm up for an actual sparring. In the fighters classes, they spar heavy. Eventually, I couldnt take it anymore. I cant show up to work with stiff neck everyday hahaha..

  • @oguzmen5451
    @oguzmen5451 Год назад +26

    Prefer a gym that doesn't actively hunt for my head, I guess the approach makes the difference. Many failed prospects of Dutch gyms were probably diamonds in the rough, and if communicated differently could've raised the bar for the Art like a shooting star. Flow like water not clank like an engine.

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +5

      i can see why you think that

    • @1fadf23f
      @1fadf23f Год назад

      And other countries can't find their diamonds because the lack of hard training. 2 sides to it. It's clear whats more succesful though

    • @oguzmen5451
      @oguzmen5451 Год назад +3

      @@1fadf23f hard training and Dutch style is different - Thai's do it properly imo

  • @waterbuffalosick4735
    @waterbuffalosick4735 Год назад +3

    The Dutch go hard, right from the beginning in every training.

  • @batmanfan2005
    @batmanfan2005 Год назад +11

    Great video i hoped this would talk about it's history (of which i knew very little) and as usual you didn't disappoint with your information.

  • @jeffwy5164
    @jeffwy5164 Год назад +137

    It doesn’t hurt that the Dutch are the tallest people in the world. The Dutch are more dominant in the open weight than they are in other divisions, after all.
    Still, that little country punches way above its weight in producing great fighters. This video focuses on similarities but it’s crazy how diverse the styles of successful kick-boxers to come out of Holland actually are. Semmy Schilt was a classic kyokushin tank, bas ruttan a karate prodigy, Remy Bonjasky was very Thai kickboxing influenced, Hoost and Aearts were brilliant tacticians with very different styles, overeem was, well overeem… and the list goes on. You’d think a little country producing an overwhelming supply of top talent actually had a style that united them, like Thailand or Brazil, but actually, the Dutch dominate using a variety of styles.

    • @jamescooke7243
      @jamescooke7243 Год назад +2

      Perhaps it's their variety that allows them to be so good. You aren't stuck in a style you don't like just because that's the style. They have freedom to find a style that matches

    • @cloudlink2542
      @cloudlink2542 Год назад +15

      It's the style, some of these people aren't white Dutch.

    • @Zen-751
      @Zen-751 Год назад +2

      bro, it's the conditioning that they got from kyukushin. They harden their bones like the thai people do

    • @mrkrabs2153
      @mrkrabs2153 Год назад

      Nah their not the tallest if compared to some regions like where the Massai people live and the dinaric Alps are 😅
      But compared to countries their the tallest

    • @jackjohnson424
      @jackjohnson424 Год назад

      @@cloudlink2542 🤡

  • @bur3aawik141
    @bur3aawik141 Год назад +1

    As a Dutchman this is my favourite so far. 👏🤜 Kenshin you’re the man

  • @Havre_Chithra
    @Havre_Chithra Год назад +2

    This is why I tell most people to train muay thai! Their sparring is more playful and less risky.

  • @mangoMango-ck3et
    @mangoMango-ck3et Год назад +4

    I had one of Rob Kaman's training tapes,,from years ago,,,far out..he's a machine..he's one reason Dutch kickboxing is UP THERE..

  • @groenpaardje
    @groenpaardje Год назад +61

    Maybe it's the gym I went to, but even though the sparring was pretty hard, it was still very much not the idea to knock each other out. We'd definitely go pretty hard on the legs and body, but if the coach saw you going full force on somebody's head you'd for sure get a stern talking to or a time out. There is also respect between levels. If you fight a beginner you push them, but you don't overpower them, otherwise they, and you, learn nothing. You go the hardest with the people you know well, so you know what they can and cannot handle. With new people you'd try to keep it light until you understand each others level better.
    That said, I'm not planning on doing competition, I train for fun, so I prefer a bit more light and technical sparring. Luckily i'm going to Thailand soon, and am very much looking forward to learning that different perspective!

    • @TheMylittletony
      @TheMylittletony Год назад +1

      Which gym was it?

    • @bebephonesamsung7618
      @bebephonesamsung7618 Год назад

      There is only one way ....and thats the way of pain,suffering ,sweat and being exhaust after 5 rounds muay thai.

  • @josemucarselsacoto5122
    @josemucarselsacoto5122 Год назад +1

    Glorious! Thank you for your work Mr Lawrence. 🤜🤛

  • @Ibnwhitetrashabdullah
    @Ibnwhitetrashabdullah Год назад

    Always much anticipated videos

  • @joejacquesschulz8514
    @joejacquesschulz8514 Год назад +36

    I was raised close to the Netherlands and I had a former Dutch kickboxer as a colleague. I was told that Dutch trainers would even use stun guns (the same things that are used to drive catlle in the slaughterhouse) to teach their kickboxers to avoid getting hit. Also I remember the Netherlands allowed the first MMA fight. That was already in the 80ies and German journal "Karate Revue" reported it. A kickboxer (wearing gloves) fought a bigger wrestler. The wrestler just ate all kicks and blows until the kickboxer tired down. Then the wrestler caught him and eventually strangled him unconscious from behind. The kickboxer elbowed the wrestler as long as he had sufficient oxygene to keep on. However, as expected the wrestler could strangle longer with hurting ribs than the kickboxer could use his elbows without breath. It was reportedly an ugly fight and everybody who watched it agreed they didn't want to see anything like that ever again. Yeah, otherwise MMA would be a Dutch franchise.

    • @east30
      @east30 Год назад +6

      That's indian story lol. Training is tough and the level is very high because of the amount of competition. Trainers using stun guns is complete bogus, I live in the Netherlands and have been training for a long time and believe that has never happened anywhere. The trainer would have gotten arrested. This video isn't fully correct either, the sparring isnt what forged so many champions it was the amount of competition. Just like the thais back in the day there were competitions every week all over the country. So fighting a minimum of twice a month from youth was very normal. The difference between thailand and the netherlands is that the youth matches dont count on your professional record, the thais start counting from youth.

  • @nebu7612
    @nebu7612 Год назад +15

    Hard saparring = injuries. I dont say its not good, but not for every day. Maybe some champs didnt make it to the top if they went for the knockout every single day with their gym mates. Great video!

  • @rawke7279
    @rawke7279 Год назад

    This was amazing. Great history lesson. Thabkyou so much. Keep up yr great work.

  • @calvinhunt2335
    @calvinhunt2335 Год назад +1

    So glad you made this video.

  • @predwards8941
    @predwards8941 Год назад +6

    This was incredible. Some insane footage. As a “self taught” Muay Thai guy from Tennessee , this was a treat to watch and the Dutch are such legends in kickboxing!

  • @metrolinamartialarts
    @metrolinamartialarts Год назад +4

    Love this - it's why I love Dutch Kickboxing and the combos. Don't love the hard sparring but it's hard to argue against the results 😅

  • @zdenekburian-bc9hm
    @zdenekburian-bc9hm 7 месяцев назад +1

    Ernesto Hoost,Ramon Dekkers,Rob Kaman,Remy Bonjasky,Peter Aerts and more legends...

  • @dobiqwolf
    @dobiqwolf Год назад

    Another great video, you are on a roll with the videos at the moment.

  • @wumbago8910
    @wumbago8910 Год назад +42

    I live in the flemish region in Belgium and its practicially the same here. I cant lie that its not effective but only for the top guys imo. I have seen many get concussed and their careers get ruined simply because they are sparring way to brutal, many because of this also get an ego and forget that we're teammates and not enemies. If there is an agreement i see no problem in dutch style sparring but many of these fighters that got an ego will just beat on the newer guys.

    • @Felix-bx7fx
      @Felix-bx7fx Год назад

      Where do you live in Flanders exactly ? I'll be living in Gent for some time next month and I'm about to join the local MMA gym

    • @wumbago8910
      @wumbago8910 Год назад

      @@Felix-bx7fx i live in Antwerp but dont get me wrong there are alot of nice people who will help you and teach you and some even prefer the light sparring system. However we just have this kind of culture that says to go as hard as possible. If it's a good gym they wont let u get beat up tho

    • @e.e.8589
      @e.e.8589 Год назад +3

      Its just not smart to train hard all the time.

    • @RichardmpayiTnway
      @RichardmpayiTnway Год назад +1

      If you’re in Belgium come to our gym in Antwerp Run by me and Cindy Dandois ( ex ufc fighter )

    • @joffre55
      @joffre55 Год назад

      @@Felix-bx7fx You have a few but I can recommend "Team Mahanakhon", as a native from Gent.

  • @kubikiribasara3499
    @kubikiribasara3499 Год назад +219

    I read a book by Tris Dixon called "Damage: the Untold truth of Brain damage in Boxing" where he mentions that a lot of the damage that comes to boxer's brain is done in the countless hours of hard sparring that show up later in his life. A case in point is Wilfredo Benitez who became the youngest world champion at 17 and couldn't feed himself from the brain injury in his mid thirties.

    • @reetlegna9748
      @reetlegna9748 Год назад +40

      Yeah I've been thinking about these type of things.
      I've seen some of the people who done conditioning in their earlier years have uncontrollable shaking in their older years.
      Understandle to train a certain way if your environment requires you to be able to defend yourself.
      But ultimately nowdays people watch combat sports because of the entertainment factor.
      At the end of the day is a persons health and well being worth going through all the training, fighting only to end up in a situation as you mentioned.
      I think of Ronnie Coleman, he says he doesn't regret that he is in the condition he is now, but surely he wishes that he could go hiking with kids or grandchildren, and enjoy the beauty of this world.
      I slowed down on my training because I started becoming antisocial, using the gym as an excuse not to enteract with people, but I eventually came to the realisation that it wasn't good for me.
      It's an interesting aspect to Martial Arts, the discipline, fitness and mental health rewards are good, but I now I question life long consequences for the individual or those they may injure or even kill.

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +20

      Thanks for sharing

    • @LECityLECLEC
      @LECityLECLEC Год назад +2

      really important intel thanks for this! :( how is he atm?

    • @fteambjj
      @fteambjj Год назад +5

      This is why i just do bjj now days. Sore body and joints but i wont have brain damage. I do miss stand up, i might try do kyokushin just for the body conditioning training but avoid the head kick training if possible

    • @omegasquad868
      @omegasquad868 Год назад +16

      the funny thing is the Thais do not have these types of common trauma and they fight more overall but spar very light in contact other than just boxing only

  • @manus6702
    @manus6702 Год назад +28

    Awesome video as usual! Any chance you could make a video on Japanese kickboxing? I feel like they have a pretty unique style that’s not talked about enough (especially since most people only know the Dutch and Thai styles)

  • @andys1783
    @andys1783 Год назад

    Love it .. clear analysis of styles

  • @bikrambaruah7216
    @bikrambaruah7216 Год назад

    Such an in-depth but short video on the Super Analysis of Dutch Kickboxing. Really thankful for your efforts for giving so much details. 🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓👍👍👍👍👍👌👌👌👌🙏🙏🙏🙏👊👊👊👊👊

  • @NuttachaiTipprasert
    @NuttachaiTipprasert Год назад +3

    Ramon Dekker's name is still being treated with respect in Thailand even today.

  • @Justin-xd7zj
    @Justin-xd7zj Год назад +20

    Best style for self defense as well. You can quit training for a couple years but still be fairly effective even if you lose your flexibility.

  • @anandkumargopi6214
    @anandkumargopi6214 Год назад

    My Compliments to you!! A very good Documentary. Good Explanation.

  • @reinardtopperman6757
    @reinardtopperman6757 Год назад

    I don't know anything about martial arts but you have a way to help me understand. Excellent presentation

  • @andrunlowerre245
    @andrunlowerre245 Год назад +9

    "Hardens the body and mind". And calcifies the mind with the amount of brain damage allowing knockouts during daily sparring would cause. Into the trash it goes.

  • @wooptiedoo3538
    @wooptiedoo3538 Год назад +12

    I trained Dutch kickboxing and boxing and had several trainers.
    The punches as opener and then the lowkick at the end is definitely Dutch style.
    Really enjoyed the hard trainings pushing the body to the maximum. Although the truth is many times I didn't want to train, but because of the discipline you keep going. And usually you're exhausted after a training, however the fulfillment you get afterwards is definitely worth it.
    Because of the conditioning your body will be able to take more hits. And with that comes a better defense. You won't really learn fighting if you don't feel the pain.
    Sparring is not always hard, it depends on who you're against and how much skill is involved.

  • @NakMuayPhilippines
    @NakMuayPhilippines Год назад

    Always great content from Lawrence! Keep up the good work 🥊

  • @johnpittsii7524
    @johnpittsii7524 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the amazing video

  • @demogadget
    @demogadget Год назад +3

    As a Dutch I can confirm, sparring was brutal :P. But always with respect and easy on the head.

  • @dany1441
    @dany1441 Год назад +4

    Very good analysis. And thank you for mentioning Lucien Carbin, one of the most underrated fighters AND coaches we ever had. I trained under him in the early eighties, and he ran a grueling gym. I still benefit from what I learned there to this day.

  • @adrianblania5565
    @adrianblania5565 Год назад

    The wins of the users of this style says it all.
    great video.

  • @williambrown7781
    @williambrown7781 Год назад

    I love the information on your channel keep it up 👊🏾👊🏾👊🏾

  • @EricJacobusOfficial
    @EricJacobusOfficial Год назад +47

    The Dutch maritime familiarity with Asia definitely helps. It'd be interesting to compare colonial history with fighting styles.

    • @wasabi5338
      @wasabi5338 Год назад

      heyyy whats up Eric? Big fan.

  • @tomazapat8520
    @tomazapat8520 Год назад +3

    First dutch kickboxer that i saw was ernesto hoost. He beat cro cop in k1. I was for cro cop at that time but start to admire and discover others. My favoritw is ramon dekkers for sure amd ernesto second favorite

  • @danirkzundov1996
    @danirkzundov1996 Год назад

    Love the technique from P. Aerts & E. Hoost ❤ Bravo

  • @dstavs
    @dstavs Год назад

    Haven’t even watched this yet but I know it already deserves a thumbs up! Excited to watch another stellar video.

  • @ujayet
    @ujayet Год назад +4

    You should do one on letwei fighting technique..I think it is one of the most effective art as well.

  • @manjitheerratic5127
    @manjitheerratic5127 Год назад +3

    Haha, thank to you, now I know why Dutch kickboxing is so famous which many of my foreign friends often mention. I live in a country where people favor Muay Thai more.
    And accidentally the formula of striking technique of Ducth Kickboxing is what I currently train for self-defense and MMA. Well, honestly to say, it is a combination from two of Jeff Chan MMA Shredded videos.
    - The Striking part of MMA techniques for Self-Defense video on his channel: continous punching + calf kick/foot sweep.
    - Why elite strikers lose in MMA presented by Jeff on this channel: Wide stance for power punches, lowkick counter and takedown defense + More utilized head movement ... Those are focus you learn mostly from boxing training. I think those can be learn can be learned from Dutch Kickboxing too since there are aggressive boxing in the style which you mentions in this video.
    What a great video, Lawrence !!!

  • @gbruceg5138
    @gbruceg5138 Год назад

    You answered a question I’ve had been wanting to know the answer for, for a while. Thank you 🙏

  • @Zend2108
    @Zend2108 Год назад

    I can absolutely relate. My kickboxing trainer, Alex Liveti, is a Dutch style kickboxer. He emphasize hard training and hard sparring.

  • @nickrodriguez3850
    @nickrodriguez3850 Год назад +3

    I would like for kenshin to talk more about mma fighters striking

  • @tanoiminh8809
    @tanoiminh8809 Год назад +3

    Will you create a comparing video between Japanese kickboxing style and Dutch kickboxing style? The're quite similar in terms of striking but I think there are a few differences like the aggression, the speed and the use of kicks or even the rule.

    • @yongjiean9980
      @yongjiean9980 Год назад +1

      Maybe Japanese Kickboxing uses more kicking and punching combinations plus more varied kicks like side kick and spinning back kick while Dutch uses more boxing combination and mostly roundhouse kicks.

  • @luisbaroni261
    @luisbaroni261 Год назад

    Great great work. Thank You very much!

  • @isaiahkenny3544
    @isaiahkenny3544 Год назад

    Love the Videos Lawrence keep me posted

  • @njdpdv
    @njdpdv Год назад +3

    EPIC

  • @heytony4162
    @heytony4162 Год назад +4

    From what we now know about CTE it doesn’t seem like a good idea to do hard sparring but if it’s effective and that is all you care about then there isn’t an issue.

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад

      i agree with your sentiment

    • @kubikiribasara3499
      @kubikiribasara3499 Год назад +3

      I agree. I read a book by Tris Dixon called "Damage: the Untold truth of Brain damage in Boxing" where he mentions that a lot of the damage that comes to boxer's brain is done in the countless hours of hard sparring that show up later in his life. A case in point is Wilfredo Benitez who became the youngest world champion at 17 and couldn't feed himself from the brain injury in his mid thirties.

  • @Unknowncurrancy
    @Unknowncurrancy Год назад

    Best martial arts analysis channel

  • @JamesJones-ct9nm
    @JamesJones-ct9nm Год назад +1

    Awesome video. Keep up the good work.

  • @BobSaint
    @BobSaint Год назад +12

    It reminds me of the Bulgarian weightlifting program. Sure, You get olympic champions, but for how long and at what cost? What about the mountain of guys that injured them self out of competition for good? And all of the juices the survivors of the program had to intake just to get through it?
    Eventually, time caught up with them, and proved that the old Soviet system, or in this case, the Thai way of training is waaay more based in science.
    Do You need better example than Dekkers? Imagine how much more he could have accomplished if he haven't broke his body so early? Maybe he would even be alive and healthy today?

    • @1fadf23f
      @1fadf23f 3 месяца назад

      What nonsense. There was nothing more Ramon could have accomplished. He accomplished it all

    • @BobSaint
      @BobSaint 2 месяца назад

      @@1fadf23f Except maybe being healthy and alive, please read more carefully.

    • @1fadf23f
      @1fadf23f 2 месяца назад +1

      @@BobSaint I did. What else did you mean with what else could he have accomplished? Please pay more attention to what you write.

  • @trenbear4469
    @trenbear4469 Год назад +106

    I'm a Dutch guy myself, and I guess our style of sparring helped our little country to get notorious in the kickboxing world.
    Personally I don't like the culture where everyone just fights each other, and the new and or/small guys just get beat up by guys who train longer or are bigger.
    I also train for self defence (in case something ever happens) for fun, and for cardio but don't have competition plans and also need to work the next day. It can be hard to find a kickboxing gym where you can train, let's say, three times a week without getting your ribs caved in, black eyes and a broken nose on a weekly basis.
    So I don't like the culture too much, but can't say it did not help to produce a lot of champions.

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +9

      I get that bro

    • @reetlegna9748
      @reetlegna9748 Год назад +9

      Ironically it's something I always second guessed about over training, especially for self defense.
      What if you've over exerted yourself at training, that at the end of it you get onto a situation where you are to exhausted to use said self defense training.
      There are times where it is safe to do extensive strenuous training, but if you walk home by yourself after training in the evenings it's something to consider.

    • @trenbear4469
      @trenbear4469 Год назад +9

      It's not the first time I have heard that reasoning.
      For me it's more of a thing like 'as a man I want to know how to fight', I never feel unsafe on the street, or at work or at home for that matter.
      But I would be kinda ironic if I get injured in kickboxing training, then run into some crazy attacker later who beats me easily because of my injury 😅

    • @JoshAllenberg
      @JoshAllenberg Год назад

      That sounds fun though

    • @angelsjoker8190
      @angelsjoker8190 Год назад +3

      @@trenbear4469 Going all in in sparring just ask for CTE in the long run. And body-conditioning wise, it also mainly just filters the top of crop and the rest can't sustain that hard of a training and gets broken bodies.

  • @brucehillbillybarthalow3786
    @brucehillbillybarthalow3786 Год назад

    Great Video! I like going easy to learn the techniques,then kick it up some .

  • @Brad_Pittstop
    @Brad_Pittstop Год назад +2

    RIP Ramon Deckers.

  • @bobjones1537
    @bobjones1537 Год назад +2

    Salam from Casablanca, Morocco
    Great Episode as always!!!
    Dutch Moroccan fighters have taken this Style to another level, via their Live or Die attitude.
    That’s how we fight here in Morocco!!! All or nothing, with technique n flair, obviously!!!
    I hope you will do an episode about Dutch Moroccan fighters’ impact from the late and pioneer Milo El Guebli to now!!!

  • @damienthetexasian6827
    @damienthetexasian6827 Год назад +3

    Another great video!
    I always knew the Dutch hit pads light, but spar hard. While the Thai do the opposite, spar light and drill pads hard. The reasoning makes perfect sense.
    In the states, it seems to become a bit of a hybrid. Drill pads hard, spar hard for some of the same reasoning along with the American impatients.

    • @TheMylittletony
      @TheMylittletony Год назад

      Hitting the pads light is bs.

    • @east30
      @east30 Год назад +1

      The video is not entirely true and there are a lot of myths. Hard sparring is what fighters do when they get ready for competition. Most of the times and in most of the gyms sparring isnt that hard. Its very similar to the states. Hitting pads lights is completely untrue I dont know who told you that. Thais only sparring light is myth too, if you are ever able to spar there you will experience it for yourself how "light" they spar

    • @damienthetexasian6827
      @damienthetexasian6827 Год назад

      @@east30 i can't speak for the Dutch. I'm speaking from my experience as a Muay Thai coach of 15+yrs, trained by a Lumpini Champion. We learn to spar light, learn control, and touch spar everyday. "Hard spar" once a week becuz we didn't have regular competition.

    • @east30
      @east30 Год назад +2

      @@damienthetexasian6827 thats the way I like teaching too I teach kickboxing(k-1 rules) in the Netherlands. The only sparring hard myth came from a couple videos of(predominantly) Mike's gym who has a day in the week where the (competition) guys spar very hard. However this is not the truth for every gym here and its also not all the time. It is common to spar after every training but you don't bash eachothers head in during every sparring session and there is a big difference in being in competition or just doing it for fun. I think mostly the training style is kinda similar to the way you are doing it.

  • @motaman8074
    @motaman8074 Год назад +1

    Another excellent video. 👌

  • @limitnl
    @limitnl Год назад

    Awesome! From Schagen the Netherlands :)

  • @Xul
    @Xul Год назад +2

    Ahh finally some credit to Bluming :D Nice.
    Thanks for the great video! But I'm not a big fan of ultra-hard sparring. The cost/benefit ratio is just too bad. It may help the best-of-the-best to get that slight edge for a title but the vast majority of normal fighters will just end up with unnecessary injuries.

  • @joshjorissen9656
    @joshjorissen9656 Год назад +7

    I love the Dutch style. I incorporated the back on forth combinations on my muay thai classes and just call them a "dutch drill".
    Very cool.

  • @alphaomega8493
    @alphaomega8493 Год назад

    Awesome!

  • @spivadee8267
    @spivadee8267 Год назад

    Great video as always keep them coming 👍🏼

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +1

      🙏

    • @spivadee8267
      @spivadee8267 Год назад

      @@LawrenceKenshin I’m a southpaw but right footed so my lead kick is more powerful than my rear. Do you think this an advantage or disadvantage for me? I’ve been trying to strengthen & train my rear leg more as I know it’s a valuable asset in a southpaw’s arsenal. Would really like to know what your opinion on this is? & if you know of any fighters who are southpaw but lead leg dominate. Thanks again.

  • @Alekth85
    @Alekth85 Год назад +8

    Most important thing should be longevity. I cant see longevity with hard sparring. Its effective, but short. So i lean onto Thai style.

  • @jcleese9651
    @jcleese9651 Год назад +12

    The dutch fighters on the international arenas are very tough and strong because of the very hard sparring they do in the gym.
    There is however a problem or two with this approach imo.
    First, you are ging to miss out on a lot of potentially really good fighters, who don't have it in them to punch another human hard, but may get there given the correct training and a bit of time. All those are going to be beaten up badly in the gyms and they will never get a chance to grow at their own pace.
    Second, if you are a pro, you get paid to perform in the ring and staying in shape because a fight may come up in a short notice. You will howver not perform at your best if you have got beaten up in the gym a couple of days before the fight, and your career will suffer from it eventually as the injuries start to stack up.
    There is also a life after the career has ended, believe it or not, and not being able to function correctly because of the massive head trauma a career like that will inevitably produce or having your joints messed up causintg a limp could not be worth it.
    I saw Ramon Dekkers at Glory in Rome back in the days, and man, he was not in a very good shape, almost certainly due to his fighting style (and years of mercyless training sessions).

    • @amosamwig8394
      @amosamwig8394 Год назад

      thats why is good to communicate with your sparring partner. I do that aswell, when I feel im getting better we step it up.

    • @xakushonx8798
      @xakushonx8798 7 месяцев назад

      The thing is the more hits ur chin gets the faster u go knock out with the time. Dutch fighters have mostly short careers and get ko´d very often in their later years

  • @chrissommers1512
    @chrissommers1512 11 месяцев назад

    Wow those fighters are amazing.

  • @rfithawaii
    @rfithawaii Год назад

    Wonderful video. Dutch and Muaythai are both amazing.

  • @fikriasrofi5312
    @fikriasrofi5312 Год назад +3

    The Dutch took Musashi quotes "you can only fight the way you practice" Too far

    • @1fadf23f
      @1fadf23f Год назад

      Too far for succes?

    • @fikriasrofi5312
      @fikriasrofi5312 Год назад

      @@1fadf23f too far in an effective way

    • @1fadf23f
      @1fadf23f Год назад

      @@fikriasrofi5312 seems to be working extremely well, so I disagree

    • @fikriasrofi5312
      @fikriasrofi5312 Год назад

      @@1fadf23f i just joking after all

  • @STRANEV
    @STRANEV Год назад +4

    they train so hard thanks to pharmaceutical companies

  • @kenis77
    @kenis77 Год назад

    Love this vid. Absolute gold for any MA fans.

  • @stianaslaksen5799
    @stianaslaksen5799 Год назад

    Great homage to Dutch Kickboxing. We've all enjoyed so much entertainment from these fighters. Dekkers is my absolute favorite!

  • @LIONTAMER3D
    @LIONTAMER3D Год назад +5

    funny how much the Dutch flag resembles the Thai flag lol

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +4

      haha

    • @LIONTAMER3D
      @LIONTAMER3D Год назад +1

      @@LawrenceKenshin Dutch: "red, white & blue"
      Thai: "red, white, blue, white & red"
      Dutch: "we have much to learn"

  • @shanequigley7552
    @shanequigley7552 Год назад +4

    The Dutch are as hard as nails

  • @lowlowseesee
    @lowlowseesee Год назад

    what an education, thank you

  • @RickyBobby42069
    @RickyBobby42069 Год назад

    Joining a new kickboxing gym tomorrow after 6 months of Muay Thai. I'm pumped

  • @RobbertLobik
    @RobbertLobik Год назад +3

    Im Dutch, sparred twice, second guy (towering figure) made me see stars right away though I was new.. Yeah nah yeah, pass..

  • @murilocaruy
    @murilocaruy Год назад +7

    Brazilian Muay Thai champion Cosmo Alexandre said in an interview Thai boxers train 6 hours a day, while the Dutch train 2 hours a day and still are able to compete in equal footing with the Thais.

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +8

      not all of them train 6 hours a day and not all dutch train 2 hours a day

  • @sethnorling4864
    @sethnorling4864 Год назад

    Great video as always ⚔️❄️☯️🔥⚔️

  • @richsmi6180
    @richsmi6180 Год назад

    LK your videos are inspiring.

  • @mgmodp8966
    @mgmodp8966 Год назад +3

    I love Dutch style, however I still enjoy it more when I see a Thai fighter winning like klinmee vs hoeltzen or Nolan, dunno why...

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +5

      Thai style is amazing! that's up next

    • @mgmodp8966
      @mgmodp8966 Год назад +1

      @@LawrenceKenshin man your videos motivates me to go training even when I feel like sh... Thank you!

    • @guererodelluz
      @guererodelluz Год назад

      Dutch kickboxers dominate until they face a good Muay Thai fighter in the finals of the tournament...Buakaw, Petrosyan, Keaw fairtex, Sittichai..(being some examples who dominated in kickboxing rules) who neutralise them with higher iq and skill. I like to practice both and Dutsh style is more direct for self defence or mma. Thai style much more tricky and technical.

  • @xamenoskli
    @xamenoskli Год назад +5

    Knockouts at sparring.. Sorry but accumulative brain damage never helped anyone.

    • @LawrenceKenshin
      @LawrenceKenshin  Год назад +1

      thats the way they do it

    • @xamenoskli
      @xamenoskli Год назад +2

      @@LawrenceKenshin And they have produced amazing talent/champions. I am not disputing that. It comes with a cost of physical and mental health in laters years though.

  • @leagreenall5972
    @leagreenall5972 Год назад +1

    I was learning my craft when Muay Thai hit big time here in Australia at the turn of 1990's. At that time 'full-contact' was kicks above the waist only and they were fully padded. So when Muay Thai came to the fore front, it was a game changer for the genre. Just like Bruce Lee had an impact from tip-tap kung fu movies to full on dynamic 1 or 2 hit knockouts.
    Now with the Dutch and then later us Aussies, we were not afraid of the elbow and knee to the head. Back then most fights were 'C-Class' that is more like modern K-1 with no clinching and definitely no elbows. Then 'B-Class' became the staple with clinching and knees allowed -even to the head - but no elbows. 'A-Class' or 'World-Rules' was full Muay Thai rules. Here in Australia we had to negotiate our fights if it wasn't C class before B class became mainstream. A class was reserved for title fights or high professional fighters - a novice/amateur was not allowed to fight with elbows to start.... I was lucky that I fought mostly B and A class.
    The reason why I say this is to show how and why the Dutch and later Aussies became dominant over all others. The reason why you never saw US champions in Muay Thai was because they banned outright the use of elbows as they considered them 'too brutal'. Heck even the low kicks in the Rufus vs Kiatsongrit legendary match was considered too brutal and 'anyone can kick legs'. Rufus' rother later went on to take Muay Thai and adopt low kicks to be a champion in USA. It would ironically take UFC/Pride/MMA to relax those rules and mindset. SO while Dutch and Australia allowed elbows, US didn't, and it shows in the progression of how well the fighters performed on the world stage.
    Dutch also had a different system in Europe. When a fighter had fought enough fights they HAD TO fight A-Class... and therefore the training and mindset adapted accordingly. And that's what a lot of toughness boils down to; Mindset. Countries and federations that promote A-class fights also promoted the mindset and training required for it. I remember there were states here in Australia that refused to allow A-class rules - but this was very political due to the dominant martial arts and brand was a certain type of Karate and they used to supposedly add Muay Thai to the classes - it was a debacle with students who wanted to fight were trained properly, and when they faced Queensland fighters, they were destroyed, and the cries was brutality. No, it was that Queenslanders were the pioneers of true and faithful Muay Thai that was no holds bar and was closest to the real intensity of authentic Muay Thai training and mindset. Though we had jobs, we still dedicated massive amount of time to be real fighters.
    Now all of that I mentioned about Australia was concentrated in the Netherlands. It is why Hoost, Aerts, Dekkers, Kaman and the others became so tough and legends.... they adapted and embraced it completely and earlier than others in the west, and as such had the head start in mindset, and becoming culturally accepted and expected.

  • @nicholasmessina6406
    @nicholasmessina6406 Год назад +2

    Amazing video. Loved this. Is there anyway you would do a comparison video of different kickboxing styles. Like the origin and mechanics of each. Savate, American kickboxing, Muay Thai, Taekwondo, Sanda...etc?. thanks