MUST WATCH BEFORE SPARRING... Good VS Bad Sparring Etiquette

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • This video is a highly requested one, where I'll be discussing AND showing you some good vs. bad sparring etiquette. As someone who has travelled the world and sparred with some top athletes, I feel like I'm in a pretty darn good position to talk about this. Now, let me know if you guys agree below!
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    #goodvssparringetiquette #howtonotspar #badsparringetiquette

Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @Tj45677
    @Tj45677 3 года назад +3102

    I'm the one in red shorts don't want you to take all the blame haha! It was a misunderstanding on both sides for clarification, and wouldn't want it to seem as if Jeff was abusing me. Definitely an intense match but I was very happy to be there in the moment and look forward to being able to spar you once more! 🙏 🙏 🙏

    • @Yeahitsme101
      @Yeahitsme101 3 года назад +36

      The last guy ? ..

    • @Tj45677
      @Tj45677 3 года назад +181

      @@Yeahitsme101 yes right before the backyard scene

    • @gutse007
      @gutse007 3 года назад +71

      Youre such a man of honour!

    • @Tj45677
      @Tj45677 3 года назад +160

      @@gutse007 😭👏🏼 just feel bad that Jeff went out of his way to apologize for a moment that i really enjoyed!

    • @brucele2776
      @brucele2776 3 года назад +5

      I want to spar with you

  • @v9237
    @v9237 2 года назад +817

    My dad was a successful Muay Thai fighter in Europe. And he ALWAYS wore something pink when he trained or when he fought. Never understood it. But I always wanted to fight like him and reflect him since a child and watching him train. Sooo naturally I’d wear pink hand wraps, gloves, ankle wrap etc, with no real reason expect paying homage to my dad who was the most humble fighter I knew. Until one day I visited my grandma in Europe, and my dads brother was there and I showed him a pic of me fighting and he said “wow humble like your dad. Wearing pink to show you left the ego at the door”.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  2 года назад +96

      thats awesome!!

    • @ahverypro
      @ahverypro Год назад +7

      awesome story

    • @scottage_teaches_jujutsu
      @scottage_teaches_jujutsu Год назад +10

      Just a guess, because he knew he was a role model and wanted to make what he had to teach/offer more memorable? Everybody remembers the guy who wears pink and kicks butt, :)

    • @tempest_2222
      @tempest_2222 Год назад +17

      is it because pink is a feminine color? im trying to get a grasp of this

    • @dookieshoes66
      @dookieshoes66 Год назад +5

      ​@·shnki ·yu that's my guess. I wear pink wraps because the other colors are boring.

  • @TheMathPipe
    @TheMathPipe 3 года назад +949

    Sparring really has its own mini culture to it.

  • @fighttips
    @fighttips 3 года назад +1682

    Hey Jeff, this is a very important topic that you're covering here -- one that I feel very passionate about. You bring up a lot of great points like how sparring can often be ego-driven, and how important communication is between you and your teammates.
    However, I have to correct and stress something you mentioned, saying that "there's nothing wrong with hard sparring." You have to remember how wide-ranged of an audience you have, from pro level fighters to first-timers. All of them have the right to know about the risk of head trauma and CTE, and that hard sparring has a high risk of injury.
    After taking a big hit, it's natural to want to hit back even harder. But for you and your partners health and longevity, it's better to swallow your pride after taking a big hit and say to your partner, "I'm trying to get better, I'm not trying to get hurt."
    Also, these clips all seem to be fast-paced, and on the harder side (even the "good etiquette"), especially to the untrained eye. Some slower or drilling clips would have been nice for beginners to see what 5% or 10% looks like, and to explain the difference of speed vs power, or that you can go harder to the body, but light to the head, or to keep the hand open inside the glove vs a tight fist, etc.
    We all know you're no stranger to competition, and will take on any challenge, Jeff. You're a gladiator, for sure. But I believe sparring should RARELY exceed 50% power when striking to the head (you can throw at 100% speed, but impact/power should always stay low). Head kicks should not be thrown unless the fighter has PROFICIENT control and is able to pull them. Same with all spinning techniques.
    I truly mean no disrespect by this comment -- I just feel that with our level of reach and authority in the combat sports world, I must take full responsibility for what is being taught and who I'm talking to. Just wanted to share my view to the others who watch this video.
    Thank you and take care 🙏

    • @allmostovr2223
      @allmostovr2223 3 года назад +76

      ever since i started sparring light i've improved way more than when i was going hard so i agree

    • @joshweleacho1518
      @joshweleacho1518 3 года назад +6

      Hey Shane ! How are you hope u doin fine since the I've gone into a sparing let alone an MMA gym before but I usually train on a heavy bag I have at home is there anything I can do improve my skills with only the heavy bag as my only equipment?

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +361

      I can agree to that Shane! Thanks for the comment and sharing your knowledge!! Keep doing your thing bro!

    • @HutchMeister24
      @HutchMeister24 3 года назад +26

      Big ups on this one. So many situations of escalation and injury could be avoided entirely with a simple "Hey, lets take it down a few notches" after the first hard strike or two. You're not being an asshole or a wimp for asking to go lighter, you're taking care of yourself AND YOUR PARTNER. The whole "hit as hard as you get hit" is good advice for figuring out what somebody else means by "light sparring" or "moderate sparring" etc. but its not meant as a tool to teach somebody a lesson. You have to use your common sense if you want it to stay at a reasonable level. If you want somebody to ease back, quite possibly the worst thing you can do is to hit them just as hard as they just hit you. If you're into the idea of a spontaneous hard sparring session with someone you've just met, go for it, I guess. But like Shane said, not everyone is into deciding mid-round to risk serious head injury.

    • @theartoffighting1643
      @theartoffighting1643 3 года назад +3

      Come to 🇮🇳 india.......

  • @robertnguyen9493
    @robertnguyen9493 3 года назад +92

    Rules of sparring that I abide by are quite simple.
    1) Check the ego at the door.
    2) Only hit as hard as you want to get hit.
    3) If you want to go harder/lighter make that clear with training partner.
    4) If they start to go harder than you want, politely request that they turn it down.
    Disclaimer: this is me personally,
    5) Don’t ask more than twice, if you’ve asked twice already now you accommodate them.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +5

      100%!

    • @robertnguyen9493
      @robertnguyen9493 3 года назад +2

      @@MMAShredded I feel it’s worth mentioning that #5 also applies to gym bullies.

  • @TheDosage-Music
    @TheDosage-Music 2 года назад +100

    At our dojo, all sparring matches begin with a
    TEMPERATURE CHECK:
    We square off low, shoulder to shoulder, head by head, and throw soft uppercuts to the body to see how hard we want to hit / be hit. This goes on for 2-3 minutes as a warm up round.
    No matter the experience of either opponent, this practice is mandatory. I'm unsure if everyone is taught anything similar, but it trains great restraint and respect for sparring partners.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  2 года назад +11

      cheers!

    • @crawler9065
      @crawler9065 3 месяца назад +1

      very interesting.

    • @momoasraf3348
      @momoasraf3348 2 месяца назад +1

      aye this is next level, i gotta try this at boxing

    • @TheDosage-Music
      @TheDosage-Music 2 месяца назад

      @@momoasraf3348 our boxers do it too. I believe my sensei, Robert Edwards Jr. of Seattle, Washington, got it from the Wilbur Brother's Boxing gym when he was younger.

  • @ives3572
    @ives3572 3 года назад +421

    Light technical sparring is always best, speaking based on my personal experience.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +28

      me too!

    • @salamangkali-allmartialart4836
      @salamangkali-allmartialart4836 3 года назад +2

      Same.

    • @angelsjoker8190
      @angelsjoker8190 3 года назад +43

      @ThotSlayer69 You develop toughness that way, but you'll lack in skill if you go hard all the time. As Jeff mentioned, at high intensity, you'll stick to the stuff you already can automatically. You won't try new tricks, because you need a lot of repetitions and errors to get the new movements ingrained and finetune them, but you won't do them if every single error gets punished hard. When you're comfortable with a new technique, then you can do hard sparring once in a while to pressure test it.
      Unfortunately, and that's something that is rarely talked about, the capacity to take damage/having a chin is a huge factor in how far you can get in fighting. That makes "tough" fighters often neglect perfecting their technique and thus leaving potential unused. And later it's much harder to correct flawed technique than spending the time on it early on. That's why you see, even on high pro-level, many fighters with flawed technique.

    • @amnfox
      @amnfox 3 года назад +4

      @@MMAShredded but a few weeks prior to the fights fighters will start getting I tense. I'm training as a hobby, but all the fighters start slinging overhand rights.

    • @seetsamolapo5600
      @seetsamolapo5600 3 года назад +2

      @@angelsjoker8190 brilliant. How would you split the sparring between hard and soft in days, if say, you're sparring daily?
      And what's your views of facesaver headgear - can I use that only for hard sparring?

  • @CullyGotHands
    @CullyGotHands 3 года назад +163

    In my experience, light sparring is great when you’re just training/learning. Although, when you have a fight coming up, i think it’s 100% necessary to spar hard. Otherwise, you’ll be overwhelmed by the intensity of a real fight.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +34

      I 100% agree!

    • @utarian7
      @utarian7 8 месяцев назад +3

      No Thais spar like that and they're the greatest strikers in the world. @@MMAShredded

    • @rico14
      @rico14 3 месяца назад

      @@utarian7it’s cause they fight way more frequently, so they’re used to the intensity of a fight. Whereas guys in the west fight maybe 3 times a year, so they need to feel that intensity.

    • @utarian7
      @utarian7 3 месяца назад +1

      @@rico14 Then you may as well fight. Why take damage for free?

  • @187Cazcrash
    @187Cazcrash 3 года назад +194

    I boxed for 10 years, trained with pros and olympic athletes. This video is a rarity : I agree with seemingly everything you said about sparring etiquette.
    One key difference is sometimes the guy you don't know and that hits hard is indeed an asshole. I was going 50-60% with a guy I didn't know, who was getting ready for a fight. I had arrived at the gym (I'm a regular there, he's a guest) 15 minutes prior to the sparring session, my coach knew I was game to spar short notice because I'm that guy who would rather spar than do anything else. He's going 75-80% l, I'm a HW, he was a cruiserweight, I understand the difference in intensity. I'm circling left to right getting closer to him to allow him to work the inside, he uses that moment to go with a left hook from my blindside, KOs me cold.
    He said it was because I was winning the round that he needed to amp it up. The coach was furious about this explanation : the guy went 100% on a blindsided hook because he was losing the sparring session. That was also the only time I ever got KOd in sparring, because the change of pace caught me by surprise. I also sparred an ex-USSR HW champion, classic fencer style, his sparring was always 100% but I knew about that as he told me beforehand. He was banned from the gym later on after he destroyed a young hockey player learning how to fight, in front of his father and little brother too. I'm rambling now, good video!!

  • @galanoftaa6439
    @galanoftaa6439 3 года назад +361

    This is one of the hardest part about sparing. When you don’t know your partner any perceived increase in intensity can be interpreted as a challenge.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +12

      yeah!

    • @PartyController
      @PartyController 3 года назад

      @Beat Mymeat legit...thank you. I never thought about it this way but it makes sense.

    • @mylesfranco3545
      @mylesfranco3545 3 года назад +6

      I find it interesting seeing the psychological control, or lack of when someone does not find immediate success. If you can not win by matching technique for technique, the next step is to ramp intensity until an advantage is perceived. However the victory in sparring is not from winning but from learning.

    • @Frenchy78ify
      @Frenchy78ify 2 года назад +1

      @Beat Mymeat until that challenge come bak like 3-4 times, taking off after one hard perceived shot is too soon, but if the guy continue several times while you're still going pretty easy then challenge accepted lmao

  • @yungjohnathan1188
    @yungjohnathan1188 3 года назад +369

    I usually tell new guys I’m sparring that I’m going to keep it technical. I also tell them to let me know if I get carried away and that I’ll let them know if they get carried away. Solid communication can help mitigate starting off lite, to turning into hard sparring thing.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +15

      definitely agree to that!

    • @RamboRichardson
      @RamboRichardson 3 года назад +7

      That too is what I always do, but being 125 pounds it's often taken as I'm soft...until they see my technique and how hard I can hit pads or the bag. I'm also very good at pretending were fighting, so if someone ignores my request to go light and tries to test me...I will slip the cross to the outside with a fast and hard drop step at a 45° and throw an overhand lightly to the chest at the same time. The loud stomp lets them know all that power could have gone to their chin as they were stepping in. Even as a Flyweight you command respect with that. I also have a solid chin and a mean look when someone upper cuts me hard...they never do it a 2nd time.

    • @yungjohnathan1188
      @yungjohnathan1188 3 года назад +5

      @@RamboRichardson Sometimes a mean look is all it takes. facial expressions are also a great way to let someone know that they’re going too far. I’ll sometimes just say “ damn bro you tryna take my head off?” If I notice my partner is swinging like a damn mad man haha. Usually beginners don’t mean it, other guys just wana be tough. If they wana take it there then it is what it is. Just be ready 😈

    • @imacryptid5254
      @imacryptid5254 2 года назад

      @@yungjohnathan1188 when I first started mma I was in 8th grade and an adult man told me that if I hit him hard during sparring that he was gonna knock me out I learned nothing sparring with him that first impression was kind of bullshit I think the dude was mad because an 8th grader was twice his size

  • @thatbroman6409
    @thatbroman6409 3 года назад +191

    I feel like more people need to see this ,we all have one or two people who go skitzo in the gym

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +2

      haha yeah.. :/

    • @mrspud2547
      @mrspud2547 3 года назад +1

      I have this tall lad I spar with and hes my only sparring partner sometimes we have good spars and sometimes he dominates me but when he dominates me its cos I'm flustered from his jabs and because its boxing I want to throw a multiple punch combo but you cant really do that with punches being slowed down cos you just get countered instead of being able to fluster him and pick my shots have and I just feel like I'm being pushed into a spar that is made for me to lose when I'm told to chill out after being popped five times from the outside😂
      Have I been getting duped? Or am I just too emotional?

    • @mikegoodwin5951
      @mikegoodwin5951 3 года назад

      @@mrspud2547 you shouldn’t be getting countered just because you’re throwing slower. There’s reactions to counters and counters to counters. This should be practise for those techniques

    • @H33t3Speaks
      @H33t3Speaks 3 года назад

      Maybe you should watch your mouth?

    • @anthonysosa9299
      @anthonysosa9299 3 года назад

      @@mrspud2547 Figure out his ⏱ timing. Also move your feet and head more so they jab doesn’t hitz

  • @infidel900rr
    @infidel900rr 2 года назад +103

    Great video. At my old gym sparring was always at 80-100%. We often had guests who would come in just to spar us. It felt like a war every time. Hard to grow in that environment.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  2 года назад +2

      cheers!

    • @CoronaryArteryDisease.
      @CoronaryArteryDisease. 2 года назад +25

      Wish people understood that gyms are for training and community before anything. Many people love to fight but not in a way that will increase their chance of brain issues. Glad you survived that gym.

    • @isaiahkenny3544
      @isaiahkenny3544 2 года назад +2

      That's not sparring that's fighting!

    • @belikewater420
      @belikewater420 2 года назад +7

      My gym wouldn't let that slide. Someone fresh comes in hitting amateurs that hard, they put em with a pro who will match or exceed them to show them how it feels. Mostly, they get humble, start flowing, and all is well. Sometimes they cannot disengage the ego and get beat out of the gym.

    • @FiniteMan1933
      @FiniteMan1933 2 года назад +2

      Bro I have the same problem 😭

  • @michaelbruno1134
    @michaelbruno1134 3 года назад +7

    I really like how you included examples of YOU being at fault yourself. That shows humility and that is good.

  • @zachf8855
    @zachf8855 3 года назад +58

    A lot of people need to watch this video

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +3

      thank you!! hope it can be shared!

  • @daxisperry7644
    @daxisperry7644 3 года назад +205

    I’ve noticed when people are relatively inexperienced, sometimes they can’t go fast without going hard. Like they can’t separate the two. Also, I had a sparring session where we were going fast (not hard) but right as I threw a Cross they stepped it and leaned their head back and I cracked them right in the nose. I felt so bad Dx

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +29

      yes I agree, sometimes its just not the students fault and its just that they are inexperienced!

    • @closeredge5198
      @closeredge5198 3 года назад +3

      One thing that was practiced at a few thai gyms was open hand in glove for daily sparring.... it kept the arms loose, but you could still move fast without cracking someone...you may not be comfortable safety wise with that but it helped many to Amp things down and learn to control themselves

    • @hillauch
      @hillauch 3 года назад +2

      Iam a beginner sparring bigger much more experienced guys. They tell me exactly what you discribe... Any tips on how to go fast without going hard?

    • @asdfasdf-ob7mo
      @asdfasdf-ob7mo 3 года назад +4

      ​@@hillauch alright so big disclaimer, this was probably rly fn stupid, but i guess i was lucky enough to never injure myself doing this and i feel it did really help me gain much more control in the end (meaning i felt way more confident in sparring in any martial arts i did afterwards in regards to not injuring my partner, BUT i never actually fought and if you want to actually compete, not just train, this might be counterproductive): i started "kicking trees" in my backyard as a kid WITHOUT(!) touching them, and later very lightly touching them (while going full speed tho). Saplings are obviously better than big fat tree trunks, and while doing it with your span feels totally badass when you get it right i guess you might break your foot if youre not careful. I practiced both kicking with the span and the ball of the foot, I'd strongly advise against using your shin doing this. I "only" hurt my foot twice from this, and it only hurt for one day each BUT i was practicing my kicks a lot on mitts during practice, by running my taegueks (TKD kata), and by just kicking air a lot. Like a lot lot, imagine a hyperactive kid living in the countryside with no soccer buddies around lot lol. Now that i'm older and my knees are kinda fucked up from playing a lot of football later in life, i wouldn't do this the way i did back then anymore, because a) i dont like the hyperextension you get in your knees from kicking air fast without any resistance at the end + snapping back into stance and b) it's kinda imprinting bad aim/technique because you train to have full extension before you make contact with your target instead of keeping a technique where you kick through your target but taking the power out before making contact, which would leave you with a bent knee when you make contact - like you see Jeff and other good fighters do it when they spar (imagine me doing a snapping roundhouse, fast but zero weight behind it, very different from kickboxing or muay thai roundhouse and only good if you catch your opponent without him seeing it coming - which is the whole point of that snapping headkick) so take all this with a HUGE pile of salt. I do feel like doing this has helped me tremendously in controlling my kicks tho. In case ur wondering how a kid could be this stupid: we spar with wests in TKD, and as a kid i thought that gave me the green light to just go all out on my sparring partner (back then i just saw him as my "opponent", dumb competitive 10yo mentality). Long story short, i was so in the zone one day that i legit didnt realize i was beating this other kid up so bad with body kicks that he couldn't hold back his tears anymore by the end of the round (not tryna brag, i was being an ass beating up a very casual yellow belt as a hypercompetitive green belt transitioning to my blue belt so i should've known much better). After that i felt so bad that i wanted to have enough control over my techniques to safely spar without hurting the other folks even with headkicks (which we weren't allowed to do in sparring as green belts yet btw). I was always paired with the older dudes after that incident and i think they kinda tried to teach me a well deserved lesson for it lol, good times and learned alot by getting my ass handed to me by the brown belts :) had to get used to those tibia cuddles real quick lol
      PS: tbh if you use a ball hanging from a branch or the ceiling that could be a useful tool to do what i did back then the smart way, just try kicking it as fast as you can, making contact but without booting the ball into the ceiling. Let's you keep proper form, easier on your knees, and no risk of breaking your foot. I might actually try that tomorrow :D

    • @theoneseraph
      @theoneseraph 3 года назад +4

      Especially with some of the bigger guys, I've seen new members come in to the gym and throw bombs not realising how strong they are, but then they go too light and passive because they're scared of their own strength, it's a tough middle ground to find but once you find it, man you're golden. Another thing too is understanding your sparring partner, we had a boy come in who had autism and didn't understand how to control himself so his parents brought him in to get some discipline. He started out as a very shy person, not asking to spar and just hitting the bag instead so I took him to one side and explained that even if he accidentally knocked someone out, as long as he was sorry, it would be OK. Handed him over to one of the coaches who wrapped him up and put him through his paces with a training partner who could handle him if it got out of control.

  • @Parkeraust1n
    @Parkeraust1n 3 года назад +403

    “to be honest 90-95%”😂😂

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +28

      LOL

    • @karimshebeika8010
      @karimshebeika8010 3 года назад +51

      another important point he makes is the speed/power/weight problem. Being a light guy, it is easy for me to be quick. Sparring heavier opponents made me realize that, if someone heavier wants to reach the same speed, their shots automatically increase in power (obviously cause massxspeed=force).

    • @lzrshrk0412
      @lzrshrk0412 3 года назад

      @@karimshebeika8010 yeah that depends on how much they're pulling their punches

    • @karimshebeika8010
      @karimshebeika8010 3 года назад +3

      @@lzrshrk0412 what does "pull punches" actually mean? Decrease power or stop before full extension?

    • @karimshebeika8010
      @karimshebeika8010 3 года назад +19

      @@lzrshrk0412 The point I was trying to make was: Heavier guys cant match speed without going harder naturally

  • @Dtchmastrkilla7
    @Dtchmastrkilla7 3 года назад +17

    It´s often really hard to balance between fast striking and hard striking. You might accidentally hit hard when you just meant to strike fast. And like you said in this video, your partner might confuse fast strikes with hard strikes and it can escalate quickly.

  • @JukemDrawles87
    @JukemDrawles87 3 года назад +10

    It’s really admirable how you keep composure even when their egos get heavily involved. My ego never gets involved

  • @MrHabsfan89
    @MrHabsfan89 3 года назад +102

    Haven’t done Muay Thai in 3 years because someone was sparring so hard I was puking after shots to the head. Definitely great tips in here, and please use your words if you think your partner is going too hard!!

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +42

      I hope you have recovered and I hope you give training a chance again! cheers brother!

    • @bricktea3645
      @bricktea3645 3 года назад +5

      R u sure they weren't body shot?
      I am inexperienced I didn't know u can puke taking head shots,dizzy and a headache sounds realistic.

    • @MrHabsfan89
      @MrHabsfan89 3 года назад +16

      @@bricktea3645 yeah I mean it’s just like any contact sport. Get hit hard enough in the head and you can feel dizzy and nauseous, like a concussion

    • @theelysium1597
      @theelysium1597 2 года назад +1

      @@MrHabsfan89 Because they are concussions

    • @THIS---GUY
      @THIS---GUY 2 года назад

      @@bricktea3645 look up the different levels of concussion and their symptoms. Important to know what you're getting yourself into.

  • @brunobonini4920
    @brunobonini4920 3 года назад +56

    Like you said, it's always better just talk with your partner when things start to ramp up, but it hurts our ego so bad that we tend to choose for a bad training session

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +3

      haha yeah been there so many times :(

    • @kalenhouse
      @kalenhouse 3 года назад +8

      I spared from bjj, boxing, and kickboxing. I remember a time I was sparring with a fellow classmate who's a fucking beast at least 20lbs bigger than me. Anyways we started out light and I went a little to hard without realizing it and my classmate stops me and ask, "hey do you want to go light or do you really want to go hard, cause I'll go hard and we both won't get anything out of this sparring session ". At that point I knew I fucked up lol. I apologized and we went back to light technical sparring. I would say light to medium sparring is where it's at to really learn.

    • @brunobonini4920
      @brunobonini4920 3 года назад +1

      @@kalenhouse yeah, I think you need hard sparring from time to time to pressure test what you know. But light sparring should definitely be the basis

    • @h.r.169
      @h.r.169 2 года назад

      @@brunobonini4920 agreed. hard sparring can have its benefits but it shouldn’t be the goal since injuries happen. probably best to just spar lightly.

  • @jayceeinvincible
    @jayceeinvincible 3 года назад +25

    Oh I definitely remember that one incident in Bali. To this day still glad you bang him up my brotha

  • @ayomarvo
    @ayomarvo 2 года назад +13

    I like this, Sparring etiquette wasn’t something mentioned during Muay thai class. It was usually Spar,Spar, SPAR… I found myself being the only one that would apologize if i felt i hit someone hard.. I’d usually be hard on myself bc i didn’t think it mattered. No one ever talked to newbies or encouraged me to talk to my sparring partners the level we want to spar at. Thank you Sensei

  • @inigocenozhuarte6362
    @inigocenozhuarte6362 Год назад +1

    So cool to see you sparring with your friend Fred that was wholesome

  • @jorxaunfiltered
    @jorxaunfiltered 3 года назад +20

    I've had sparring partner who would say "let's do a light sparring" and try to land hard strikes and then would apologize or get mad when i picked up the pace... people like then are down horrendous 🙄

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +3

      haha 🙄 I see! I hope you can find better partners too!

  • @kickboxingunderground
    @kickboxingunderground 3 года назад +58

    This is a good video to have students watch before they start sparring. Or even maybe for new sparring partners (if there is the opportunity). Setting a proper understanding of sparring, and of expectations between partners, goes a long way towards keeping sparring productive and not combative.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +4

      100% man!!! thanks for watching!

    • @cehinton
      @cehinton 2 года назад

      @@mmoj416 Yeah, I don't mean playing it before class. I mean it's a good video to share with people when they're interested in sparring, kind of like a "reading list" is when you're taking a class.

  • @fitheskeper2114
    @fitheskeper2114 2 года назад +17

    I love your videos! I’m an old guy who doesn’t train anymore. But watching you it’s motivated me to start working again. I love your humility. As well, you have some great insight on fighting and are a great student as well as a teacher .
    Keep up the good work .
    You got an old guy off the couch , thank you young man!!

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  2 года назад +4

      thank you for support and I am glad I had a positive influence on you!!!

  • @mylesfranco3545
    @mylesfranco3545 3 года назад +18

    Great video! This brings back so many memories. It's so hard to keep ego out of it, I think all martial artists are competitive by nature. Its hard to maintain the perfect balance between technique and intensity when your heart just wants a sense of victory. The best sparring partners are the ones who only care about perfecting the art together, sparring partners are teammates not enemies!

  • @poopiepantsmcgee456
    @poopiepantsmcgee456 3 года назад +429

    Those thai sweeps though are slick af.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +15

      :) cheers!

    • @angelsjoker8190
      @angelsjoker8190 3 года назад +9

      I love them. It's such a beautiful display of dominance when good Muay Thai or Sanda fighters drop their opponents on their butts with them. I have the impression they are highly undertrained in most MMA gyms though. I think Cung Le was one of the rare ones who regularly used them at elite MMA levels.

    • @gambarusso
      @gambarusso 3 года назад +4

      I'm a BJJ guy, but... to hell with single legs 😂

    • @luckyhair7052
      @luckyhair7052 3 года назад +2

      @@MMAShredded it’s so amazing!

  • @Moist_yet_Crispy
    @Moist_yet_Crispy 3 года назад +5

    This video should be shown in every gym in America on a regular basis. So many students quit due to safety or injury from sparring and breaches in sparring etiquette for whatever reason. This video is absolute gold for MMA or MA in general. I know I pulled out of sparring at various points in nearly every gym/school I went to because I couldn't trust my sparring partners.

  • @mezzuna
    @mezzuna 3 года назад +24

    I've always enjoyed watching these videos on your channel as the blistering speed and teachnique is so pleasant to watch. I did boxing in my youth from 16- around 22. Every spar (almost) was hard sparring and not only do I find myself in my 30's tripping over my words, I really believe I never reached my potential. I hope martial arts as a whole spreads and fast, light technical sparring most of the time becomes the norm

  • @OldWorldNY
    @OldWorldNY 3 года назад +14

    Thanks for educating the youth my mans 👏🔥🙏 sparring can literally make or break a fighter.. watch n learn folks!

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +2

      thanks for watching brother!

  • @HudsonKane
    @HudsonKane 3 года назад +18

    'Misunderstanding' is the key repeated phrase. I think its a good idea to discuss expectations with every partner, every round. Even just 'same as last round', 'ramp up power a little', 'lets go light this one'.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад

      I can agree with that!

    • @dcgregorya5434
      @dcgregorya5434 3 года назад

      Just like a marriage lol

    • @ThirdLawPair
      @ThirdLawPair 2 года назад

      Especially for novice fighters who are trying to simultaneously learn to gauge/control their power and learn good etiquette. They need the verbal feedback as much as they need the physical feedback.

  • @alaskatoburningmen4549
    @alaskatoburningmen4549 3 года назад +35

    Damn, slamming you into the floor in sparring 1 st time with a 50 lbs weight advantage...i'm at a loss for words...what a meathead!!

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +1

      thanks for watching!!

    • @daslick6085
      @daslick6085 3 года назад +3

      and he still got owned lmao

  • @TheUmmahFightCamp
    @TheUmmahFightCamp 3 года назад

    I have been training for 50 years. This person speaking is very wise beyond his years and right.

  • @zrod6348
    @zrod6348 3 года назад +12

    Your coaches head movement is crazy!!!! Best I’ve seen maybe lol

  • @YamiYoshii
    @YamiYoshii 3 года назад +5

    Love this. Intensity and speed does not have to mean power shots when guys go "hard". Some students have a hard time understanding that. I had a few instances where I would increase volume but not power, and typically newer guys would think of that as a slight challenge to go harder with power shots.

  • @mace_xuo3818
    @mace_xuo3818 3 года назад +4

    That is one of the trickiest things to learn in early combat sport. Sometimes people don't realise that connecting with speed =power shot. It's about knowing how to pull out at that last second to still connect and still close out the shot without injury to partners. Most people take a long time to learn this and you end up having 70-80% sparring sessions until people get more familiar with the sport.

  • @JamesJohnson-pz8pu
    @JamesJohnson-pz8pu 3 года назад +7

    I have done boxing and kickboxing for many years now and I’ve experienced all of these problems. As I am now experienced and matured in the sports, I have found the key to safe sparing is to communicate with your partner beforehand and quickly agree on a pace you’d like to spar at and you’ll find that most people would say around 50% to 70%. Sometimes it might even be ‘light to the head and hard as you like to the body’.
    I’ve heard people communicate before sparing and they’ve said “I’ll hit you as hard as you hit me” and this really isn’t good because you can accidentally land a hard shot and to carry out the rest of the spar at 100% isn’t safe 😁 hope you guys appreciate my comment and that it helps you when you’re next in the gym, stay safe 🥊

  • @jc360able
    @jc360able 2 года назад

    I've been seeing you for many years, you've changed, you've got the face of a fighter

  • @Legkicker
    @Legkicker 3 года назад +6

    Wish my old Muay Thai coach would see this. I was loving it and would have some hard rounds occasionally. He never listened when I asked for light sparring because he injured me on multiple occasions within 3 days of training. One night I had done 2 hours of training and over 20 sparring rounds and I had him to end the day, I kindly requested light sparring. He didn’t listen, knocked me out cold, gave me a concussion that lasted for 3 weeks and I haven’t trained since (This was just over a month ago). So now I’m looking for an MMA gym with a good environment for sparring because it’s not sustainable taking damage like that in training especially at a young age.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +1

      oh wow that's crazy. Glad you are not with that coach anymore. A good gym environment is the most important!

    • @Legkicker
      @Legkicker 3 года назад

      @@MMAShredded He put me in hospital until 4am when I had university the next day.

  • @Nepthu
    @Nepthu 3 года назад +7

    Great video! I love sparring but new people are always terrible at it because they can't control their intensity. I view sparring as rough play and do it for fun and exercise, not injury.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +1

      yeah its true! gotta value those experienced sparring partners!

    • @ashb4275
      @ashb4275 3 года назад +2

      Exactly, I think new people don't know how to control themselves and get a bit overanxious when sparring someone they know is more skilled than them. I always find if a new person is getting a bit too out of hand, a well placed hard body kick usually settles them down haha.

  • @koberowland9798
    @koberowland9798 3 года назад +5

    Just about to go to sparring and u post this stop reading my mind!!

  • @patricioferraggi505
    @patricioferraggi505 Год назад

    I watch this often on fridays since that is sparring day for me. It is a good reminder. Have a nice day.

  • @drae408
    @drae408 2 года назад

    I tell people this, I will give you what you give me. You do a great job with telling people the difference.

  • @silase2029
    @silase2029 3 года назад +4

    This channel is such a blessing

  • @hassanalialqadiri
    @hassanalialqadiri 3 года назад +6

    just came back from sparring with a heavier guy where we agreed to go lighter. as time went, we upped to power and it ended up being like 90%. after landing really good shots i felt bad. i think within the heat of the moment, it's difficult to stay focused while worrying about the power of the shots. i find that sticking with a good partner is key so etiquette isn't an issue because both sparring partners know what eachothers' limits are

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад

      true!

    • @mattiasandersson8693
      @mattiasandersson8693 Год назад

      That’s why I personally only go harder with people I know and have sparred with for a long time. You know their preferred level and they know yours, so you don’t risk something getting out of hand

  • @guyver0005
    @guyver0005 3 года назад +13

    You and Gabriel Varga should do a collaboration!

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +5

      would love to one day!

    • @mndeg
      @mndeg 3 года назад +1

      Oh yeah, they're both Canadians

    • @broakenlag
      @broakenlag 3 года назад +1

      Second this, great idea!!

    • @mndeg
      @mndeg 3 года назад

      There's bazooka Joe too. He's also in Canada.

  • @Canal_Marte
    @Canal_Marte 3 года назад

    That's what i say, what is accorded by both sides, will never get expensive.
    Perfect video.

  • @samblack5313
    @samblack5313 Год назад

    Watching pro fighters move in flow sparring is always a stark reminder of just how substantial the gap is between a pro fighter and a regular person.
    It blows my mind that some people believe they can fight and wouldn’t get put in a body bag within a few seconds vs a trained fighter.

  • @martynkaa6450
    @martynkaa6450 2 года назад +3

    I was told a story by someone who was once a newbie and the instructor let or even made him fight with much more experienced fighters who went much too hard on them. The person eventually became as good as who he used to fight against, maybe even better but they also became egoistic and would offer to spar complete newbies or ppl who never trained the sport (I was one of his friends he would spar) and would go too hard on them causing injury. He did that to me but he also must have not liked me much as he was more aggressive towards me than others.

  • @10t0esdown
    @10t0esdown 3 года назад +3

    Great content again, Jeff! I think most guys who have been in the mix for a while, know this all too well. The good ones let the other dictate the pace, they keep the primal instinct, but leave the emotion out. Those are the partners to stay with. 🙏 🥊 🦵

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +1

      thank you for watching man!

  • @overtflow
    @overtflow 3 года назад +10

    great vid

  • @baqikenny
    @baqikenny 3 года назад +1

    every practitioners out there need to watch this video at least once

  • @konkyolife
    @konkyolife 2 года назад

    Your Father, God bless him, raised a well mannered confident young man. You do him proud.

  • @aanghel
    @aanghel 3 года назад +297

    Brother in your “why you transitioned to mma” video, what’s the name of the last instrumental you used? Hope all is well with you.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +71

      hey brother, the artist's name is OGGY BEATZ!

    • @Nug_Lord
      @Nug_Lord 3 года назад +56

      I subscribed because of this interaction

    • @sytokai6653
      @sytokai6653 3 года назад +14

      @@Nug_Lord Fr tho 😂😂

    • @Rich-tl7nm
      @Rich-tl7nm 3 года назад +3

      @@Nug_Lord same. 😁

    • @nicksalvatore5717
      @nicksalvatore5717 3 года назад +5

      @@Rich-tl7nm just subbed. He's really cool for replying to every comment

  • @tigahstyle
    @tigahstyle 3 года назад +6

    This should be shown as like an employee training video to new students. "Welcome to the academy. Please sign this waiver and watch this video."

  • @rriicckk787
    @rriicckk787 3 года назад +4

    Always always always gotta be ready for when someone tries to take your head off when its someone you haven’t spared with before. I feel like he guy that dropped you was having trouble with your quick feet and couldn’t land anything unless you were in close. It looked like a frustrated shot but not intentionally meant to hurt you. A lot of props for showing that clip though.

  • @SamyJERRARI
    @SamyJERRARI 8 месяцев назад

    This tempo change,gosh,my ribs will remember !!! You said it all !!!

  • @williamsilva7358
    @williamsilva7358 2 года назад +1

    Great video that should be seen by everyone who spars regardless of the discipline or style of fighting. I find that most of best fighters have excellent control and consistently work on technique rather than being focused on just winning. Sometimes when you spar with new people they try to bulldoze you and it is necessary to match or slightly exceed their intensity. I enjoy heavy sparring occasionally but it has to be done without ego. Some guys don’t mind dishing it out but dislike being on the receiving end of the punishment. I have been both the hammer and the nail but I always work on being calm and considerate during my sparring sessions.The mental game is just as important and developing the physical attributes of fighting. Usually it’s best to communicate the desired level of intensity with new partners. It’s appreciated that experienced fighters such as yourself are willing to share some insight on the subject. Thanks!

  • @DeeBeeScribe
    @DeeBeeScribe 3 года назад +7

    When you have a CLEAR advantage on your partner that's when you have to have to slow them down, decrease your own intensity below theirs and turn the session into a lesson.
    When you're clearly the more experienced and skilled fighter it is really selfish to use the rounds to pummel the inexperienced fighter.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад

      I can agree with that! cheers!

  • @bealight5141
    @bealight5141 2 года назад

    Its so important to have this mindset.

  • @catyson91
    @catyson91 3 года назад +1

    Well done Jeff! My rule of thumb is if you can't smile every now and then while you're sparring, you aren't learning as much as you can.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад

      100% bro thanks for watching!

  • @stevena3333
    @stevena3333 3 года назад +3

    6:09 he didn’t throw an elbow, it looked like he was just pulling away or simulated where he might have thrown an elbow. Watch it at .25x

  • @oziaus
    @oziaus 3 года назад +5

    It's all good until the dude throws an oblique kick and then all the rules fall off the table.

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад

      I agree as long as it is a controlled oblique kick! but yeah a hard one would piss me off too haha

  • @zrod6348
    @zrod6348 3 года назад +4

    Jesus loves you!❤️ you’re awesome!

  • @KevinLeeVlog
    @KevinLeeVlog 2 года назад

    Keeping a great communication between you and your partner is so important! Great video bro!

  • @alonsoperez9199
    @alonsoperez9199 3 года назад

    Fred threw a rear uppercut and stepped into a rear leg kick. That’s been doing very well for me

  • @cryptomo8794
    @cryptomo8794 2 года назад +2

    I applaud you for sharing so openly and honestly about what makes good & bad sparring partners, and having the honor to show when you were in the wrong. Thank you Jeff, I learned a lot from this video and look forward to taking it to the dojo

  • @sebastianlencina8549
    @sebastianlencina8549 Год назад

    the way u are in this entire video , show a true warrior , disciple and master of life and martial arts , thx for the motivation about who u are , i train martial arts and sport all my life ( about 33 years of practice ) and this is the first time to see something like this about true respect , honor and wisdom for partners , humans , masters and disciple's , i enjoy a lot urs vids

  • @VRBOXING
    @VRBOXING 3 года назад +1

    Superbe video Jeff. I'm always amazed by your content.

  • @Skazmatron
    @Skazmatron Год назад

    I always thought that this was the way to spar. A few people used to go 100% every single time and I wondered why it was so exhausting until I watched you explain it so well in this video. They were just not good sparring partners.

  • @-007-Warzone-MW3-MW2
    @-007-Warzone-MW3-MW2 3 года назад

    If you ever open a gym in Toronto please let the people know I will join you are a treasure chest of knowledge and I am very proud as a Canadian to watch you grow

  • @tinyman_101
    @tinyman_101 3 года назад

    this is a great video for anyone confused on what they should be doing in the gym

  • @DrVictorLopez
    @DrVictorLopez 8 месяцев назад

    5:35 daaaaaamn! those kicks was smooth and 100% controlled!!!

  • @paulbadman8509
    @paulbadman8509 2 года назад

    Bro, that fight with this big mean dude was straight out of a movie or anime. So good.

  • @DoYouDontYou89
    @DoYouDontYou89 3 года назад +2

    The powerbomb as a defense for a triangle choke is a big part of why I ALWAYS try to hook the leg. You never know when someone might try to elevate you. Hooking the leg also makes the choke much tighter and energy efficient imo.

  • @LeoLeeGaming
    @LeoLeeGaming 2 года назад +1

    I haven't practiced martial arts in a long time(sparring), but I always communicated during sparring sessions. It's too easy for things to get out of hand if both people remain silent. I think it's just better to agree on intensity beforehand and let each other know if there was a strike that was too hard. Keep the anger in check.
    With that said, my favorite was always fast with medium intensity to the body and light with everything else. Nothing better than sparring with someone you are good friends with or someone with mutual respect and trust. Love your videos man!

  • @tjnmma
    @tjnmma 3 года назад

    Sparring etiquette is huge. This is why I came from a martial arts “school“ as opposed to an MMA gym. Lots of crappy people out there and sadly lots of crappy gyms. Keep up the good work Brother 👍🏻

  • @FoxySpartan117
    @FoxySpartan117 2 года назад +1

    Amazing!
    This is really important to feel out and know, especially for someone like me who isn't good at recognizing others and general emotions.

  • @kawaiiqtful
    @kawaiiqtful 3 года назад +1

    Fred is an amazing instructor. He was in Peterborough for a seminar before covid hit, and I honestly couldn't get over how much I learned in the few hour visit.

  • @djamillakhdar-hamina3824
    @djamillakhdar-hamina3824 Год назад

    I think part of it is people sometimes escalate when they feel they are “losing”. So then they get angry and start throwing. Since you are very good a lot of people don’t like getting outclassed .

  • @mr.tau134
    @mr.tau134 2 года назад

    This is what makes it necessary to get your martial arts fundamentals in check before doing MMA. A black belt/1 belt below black in any traditional martial art makes you a better sparing partner and fighter overall

  • @ryansandoval507
    @ryansandoval507 3 года назад

    Amazingly honest. explained in a manner in which I aspire to conduct myself.

  • @tarquin_w2554
    @tarquin_w2554 3 года назад

    All newbies and ego-centric fighters should watch this! 👊🏼👍🏽

  • @steveh.7664
    @steveh.7664 2 года назад

    Light and technical is the best in my opinion.

  • @joaquinsaavedra426
    @joaquinsaavedra426 Год назад

    Thanks Jeff, Ego is the important word here i think.

  • @22leggedsasquatch
    @22leggedsasquatch 3 года назад

    People can communicate during sparring.. this avoids misunderstandings and corrects mistakes. It's also very clear when someone deliberately goes hard and when they are lying about it being an 'accident'. In which case, teach them a lesson. Good video.

  • @Brandon-w3o
    @Brandon-w3o 3 года назад

    One of the best channels out there! That's the bigger bro I wish I had...!!

  • @misterone-3217
    @misterone-3217 3 года назад

    I’ll never up my intensity drastically. You have to have the guts to stop the round and tell them to calm down. That works a lot better than just suddenly increasing your power.

  • @Subject__
    @Subject__ 3 года назад

    i love sparring so much its a beautiful demonstration of self expression.
    I hate bad gyms that focus on nothing but "hard sparring brings harden fighters"
    respectfully im a long time martial artist (not a champion or anything like that just been practicing for a while) and Jeff is 100% correcr with his philosophy on what brings the most learning.
    If your new to a gym then gusse what? you do NOT need to prove yourself by topping anyone. they are your team and things like ego or attitude do not help anyone. LEARN from them, work with them ALL and youll be much better much faster.
    Jeff you really do embody the essance of a good Martial Artist i think. im definitely making a trip to Canada once covids over and visiting to see if i can meet you bro 😄 thank you for always showing people the right way!!

    • @MMAShredded
      @MMAShredded  3 года назад +1

      thanks brother, I would love to train together one day. If you really do ever visit Canada, hit me up via instagram @mmashredded or email me at jeff@mmashredded.com!

    • @Subject__
      @Subject__ 3 года назад

      @@MMAShredded I greatly appreciate it!! since i found your channel bro you've been a mega star to me 😂 it would be my honor to sparr with the King

  • @toubielo8788
    @toubielo8788 Год назад

    It's alright to say: "yo man, I'm not trying to get hurt or hurt you". A 80-90% round should after a light round or address ahead up time but you know how it goes.
    I've been seeing your vids for a long time. I think eventually as people become pros, least for me. I find it less beneficial to spar and train for students.
    Props tho for sticking with it. I fell off due to drug use but keeping a study on fighting has never gone away for me.

  • @stix1904
    @stix1904 3 года назад

    One of the best advice I've heard about sparring is simply to "talk more".
    If you start light and the guy hits you hard, there is no shame in asking: "do you want to go harder like that?" If the guy is like "no let's keep it light" no shame in it either, but you can always call him up on it when he hits you hard and under no obligation to return fire.

  • @jeffreytruong8918
    @jeffreytruong8918 3 года назад

    I always have 1 partner that is flowy and really technical and fast but once you hit them once!! that's when they go absolutely mental!!

  • @blakebindus3102
    @blakebindus3102 3 года назад

    I can say as a new boxer control is the hardest thing for me and sometimes I fall back into street fighting habits and I feel really bad but luckily my partner is patient and helps out

  • @Clearview718
    @Clearview718 3 года назад

    Wow as a new Muay Thai practitioner I learned so much from this video thank you

  • @eliasssoderlund8715
    @eliasssoderlund8715 2 года назад

    Everybody should watch this before sparring

  • @seanlimjz1652
    @seanlimjz1652 3 года назад

    damn, i couldn't continue watching you beat up that poor dude! kudos to you for admitting it

  • @drewyetti
    @drewyetti Год назад

    I’m learning much from these sparring videos and it makes me less hesitant towards sparring then I would usually be.

  • @thrownswordpommel7393
    @thrownswordpommel7393 3 года назад +1

    My little brother always says "did you win ?" when I come back from sparring sessions.
    Sadly, many folks have similar ideas on the purpose of sparring