A little research - What do you see when your opponent drops their high guard?

So with this guy. How low does his have to drop his guard before you think he's not baiting you?
Only a beginner will have his boxing guards up when his opponent is 10 feet away. When you are outside of your opponent's kicking range, the first thing that you have to deal with should be his kick and not his punch.
 
Its not about how high or low his guard is that tells you whether he is baiting you in..... its the rest of the context that tells you that.
I wonder. I would think that the application of a bait is to not look like a bait. So in looking at the context of things. One would assume that it's not a bait and fall for it.

For example:The guy on the left is open. But I could be in the same position and not be open. The thing that makes this position a bait for me is not when my hands are like this but what comes after.
1736971251030.webp


The guy on the right would be open for me. Even if he was baiting, my follow up would have still landed. By the tie time my arm crossed my body then my second strike would have already been on it's way. Below you can see m
1736974144910.webp


The picture below shows when I start my kick. I started my kick while his guard was still down because I knew he would go for my face and creating the opening that you see above he
1736974566508.webp



In the image below he maintains his guard. So he falls for one but not the other. Do any of the pictures of me sparring make you want to take a chance to punch me or kick me in the face?
1736973962934.webp
 
Only a beginner will have his boxing guards up when his opponent is 10 feet away. When you are outside of your opponent's kicking range, the first thing that you have to deal with should be his kick and not his punch.
Ranges change so quickly though; a person can be outside kicking and striking range in one second and be within range within the same second. One of my strategies is to attack outside of kicking and striking range while advancing. I do this knowing that I can move a greater distance towards my opponent than they realize. The strategy starts of like this.

Throw a long punch and advance - My opponent knows I'm out of range.
Throw a second shorter punch and advance. My opponent thinks he's out of range because the second punch didn't reach. It didn't reach because I intentionally shortened the punch to make it appear out range.
Throw a third attack. All punches and kicks are well within range.

This sounds crazy but keep in mind that these are long fist circular strikes and not jabs. I don't know if it would work the same with linear punches.. With circular punches the range of the punch can be increased or decreased by allowing the shoulder to move forward for longer strikes or keep the shoulder from moving forward to shorten the strike.
 
Do any of the pictures of me sparring make you want to take a chance to punch me or kick me in the face?
It is not an equation.... if(hands are this high) then (attack this target) else if (hands are this other height) then (attack other target). How did his hands get there and why.... what are his intentions....?

Assuming you are the guy in the black t shirt.... Let's take that first pic where your kick is waist level.

If, you are initiating that position, moving in to deliver that kick, at that distance, going for the face would be a mistake. However, if you have just delivered the kick, and I blocked it and sent you back into that position, such that you are recovering, but off balance.... I may go for the head shot, if I thought I could get there before your foot landed. (this would depend greatly on how you reacted to the block.... if I sensed pain or surprise at the block I would be more apt to go for the head shot, if you expected or were indifferent to the block I would hold back)

If I were a little closer, such that a quick jab could snap your head back, and you were initiating that kick, I would fire the jab.... but the distance shown in the picture is way to far away for the jab....

Pictures show more context.... but you really need to see the motion, and feel the other guy out. Very hard to do with out a little hands on work.
 
It is not an equation.... if(hands are this high) then (attack this target) else if (hands are this other height) then (attack other target). How did his hands get there and why.... what are his intentions....?

Assuming you are the guy in the black t shirt.... Let's take that first pic where your kick is waist level.

If, you are initiating that position, moving in to deliver that kick, at that distance, going for the face would be a mistake. However, if you have just delivered the kick, and I blocked it and sent you back into that position, such that you are recovering, but off balance.... I may go for the head shot, if I thought I could get there before your foot landed. (this would depend greatly on how you reacted to the block.... if I sensed pain or surprise at the block I would be more apt to go for the head shot, if you expected or were indifferent to the block I would hold back)

If I were a little closer, such that a quick jab could snap your head back, and you were initiating that kick, I would fire the jab.... but the distance shown in the picture is way to far away for the jab....

Pictures show more context.... but you really need to see the motion, and feel the other guy out. Very hard to do with out a little hands on work.
I was outside of my jab range but I was well within his jab range. The guy I was sparring with is much taller than me.

The thing about front kicks is that thit's a good inside kick. Another sparring partner. This kick was done while I was moving backwards. He's within punching range which is why he got kicked. He punched at me and I kicked under his punch. So the front kickds that I do don't push out like a teep., It swings upward.
1736979516248.webp


This is the normal kicking range for me. The top picture is about as long as it gets.. I can kick it out longer than that, but it defeats the purpose when the goal is to kick under a punch. In order for me to kick under a punch, I have to be within my opponents punching range or else he won't punch.
1736980028503.webp



To give you an example of how close I kick. I can't remember when I practiced a kick front kick that was outside of punching range. There's a front kick that I do to bait a leg grab. When they catch my front kick, I shoot the kick down into their knee which should be straight, I like that one but it's one of those things I can't ever really land without injuring my sparring partners.
 
Back
Top