-This is not the case. Trying to bite from a bad position just gets you punched more. It is a waste of time.Biting would probably happen predominantly from the worse positions - ie by those being outgrappled.
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-This is not the case. Trying to bite from a bad position just gets you punched more. It is a waste of time.Biting would probably happen predominantly from the worse positions - ie by those being outgrappled.
RoninPimp said:-This makes no sense. There is no padding on the palm or on the striking area of the hammer fist. MMA gloves have no effect on these strikes.
-Some strikers would not wear them and would break their hands like they did in the early UFC's. They would go back to wearing them quick to protect their hands.
-A softer surface doesn't help with the take down. I was a HS wrestler and still wrestle all the time. It helps protect the guy getting taken down. I would argue that a soft surface doesn't take much at all off of strikes. As evidence, people still get knocked out all the time in MMA.
-How the hell is biting going to get you out of a leg lock?
-MMA gloves do not have padding on the palm. Nor do they have it on the bottom of the hand where contact is made with a hammer fist. Therefore MMA gloves have zero effect on palm strikes or hammer fists.Huh?
-Maybe. Its all speculation on this point at any rate...Give them the opportunity. I stand by my comment that many to most would choose not to wear the gloves and that it would work to their advantage. Many Vale Tudos have occured without broken hands and many MMA events elsewhere have not required gloves - ussually the ones demaning that gloves are worn are ignorant politicians and grapplers.
-I'm not arguing it doesn't reduce power. I'm arguing that it is by a negligable amount. All the heavy bags at the school I train at are hanging over tatame mats. I hit them all the time.It does reduce striking power to have a softer surface. Try it with a heavy bag and pad on the floor some time.
-Hypothetically possible? Yes. Likely escape? No. A good way to get kicked in the mouth, then heel hooked anyway.Alone? It won't. However, when some leg locks are attempted, the leg is within biting range while they are attempting to apply the lock. Biting then would in some cases give enough slack, excess tension, jerking, pain or whatever to give the defender an better chance of getting his leg free. It won't work often - but sometimes is enough.
7starmantis said:I think its pretty fair both ways on the standup vs ground issue. If the rules favor anything it is professional career sport fighters, which I think is what we are paying to watch so I dont see the big deal.
7sm
Huh. I just don't see how nibbling someones calf will work to your advantage if they are hammerfisting your throat?They wouldn't be irrelavent. A contest between the heelkicks to the throat and the biting of the person underneth might turn out different than the tug-of-war would in some cases. That would change the outcome. I would be willing to bet on that working out in the bottom person's favor overall (ie more people who escaped that wouldn't have than people submitted who would have escaped).