I have been told to use palms on their hard bits and fists on their soft bits (so as not to risk breaking my knuckles). Is this useful?
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Phoenix Eye and other theoretical strikes.
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Originally posted by MadgrenadeI have been told to use palms on their hard bits and fists on their soft bits (so as not to risk breaking my knuckles). Is this useful?
Your chance of deciding beforehand what type of their bits you are actually going to hit is not that great.
You might hit a different bit.
Just a thought...
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"Bruce Lee sucks because I slammed my nuts with nunchucks trying to do that stupid shit back in the day. I still managed to have two kids. I forgive you Bruce." - by Vorpal
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Originally posted by BackFistMonkeyClose Dale .
I was more referring to him signing off on techniques he has never used immediately after claiming his tiger claw strikes were useful .
Not to mention how he failed to realize that the phoenix eye is a type of closed fist strike .
My style as well rarely punches with flat fist and replaces with the Phoenix Eye. You don't punch at a hard guard with it, but you shouldn't punch at one with an unprotected closed fist either.
The Phoenix Eye is not exactly a good idea if you're going for a knockdown, but it's more painful than a 'plain' closed fist, and it causes cuts easily, especially if you twist.
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As opposed to "normal" punches that never cause cuts? and when are you hitting someone and *NOT* wanting to knock them down or out either?
I posted about this in #19 and Bas Rutten is MOST CERTAINLY NOT a Red Herring. He was very good at using open hand strikes for FIVE YEARS, very effective.. He had years of punching before doing Pancrase, that's why he prefers punching.
You wanna see if open hand strikes work? Train them for a year. Hell, train them for six months. Condition your palm strikes & chops(hand&wrist) against metal shot bags or kettlebells Cestari-style. YOU WILL BE EFFECTIVE.
My beef with the pheonix eye stuff is that it seems like a lot of work to learn to use something that maybe could get accomplished just as easily as a fist. It seems like needless exoticism to me.
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Originally posted by PirateJonAs opposed to "normal" punches that never cause cuts? and when are you hitting someone and *NOT* wanting to knock them down or out either?
Now as to when you wouldn't want to knock someone down or out, I'm not too sure myself. I do know however that there are specific targets that are more vulnerable to phoenix eyes than to punches, though. Ribs are a pretty good example. Except for that, I'm not a big fan of it either, but it's what my teacher advocates, and it certainly works well enough for him and for some other students.
Originally posted by PirateJonMe too. amusingly if you land a punch with the knuckle extended it'll just get pushed back into a normal fist.
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Originally posted by GuizzyWhich is why the drawing was wrong; the knuckle should be supported by the thumb. With the thumb in the right place, there's no place for the knuckle to be pushed back to.
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Functionally Illiterate
- Jun 2005
- 18279 Location: Sinsinnatti Oh Hi Ho
Style: all things in Moderation
Originally posted by GuizzyAsk and ye shall recieve
Now, how one could dislocate his thumb that way is beyond me.
As for the faulty pic ... I really didn't look very hard , just wanted to get the general idea out there . Thank you for the pics .
I will now began teaching Phoenix Eye Kung Fu .
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Originally posted by GuizzyAsk and ye shall recieve
Now, how one could dislocate his thumb that way is beyond me.
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Originally posted by selfcriticalWell generally, fists are less likely to hit hard bits while working the body. And pretty much garunteed to do so while hitting the head. Which is what I find people usually mean.
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Originally posted by golsaLooks almost exactly like how I was taught to go barehanded in Kali, except we were taught to use the middle finger. Your way actually looks like it has better support for the raised knuckle in general thrust type strikes. What kind of angles and such do you strike with? Extra support from the index finger while the middle finger is raised for some angles is the only reason I could fathom doing it different than yours.
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