Question:

What the best martial arts for me?

by  |  earlier

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I really not looking to learn how to defend my self. Im not looking to get in a street fight or anything. I want to fight in a ring where thier is a lot of coditioning and alot of times im going to want to quiet because the training is so intense. I also want to do weights and spar and alot.

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7 ANSWERS


  1. Ok sounds liek aserious question so I will give a serious answer: Probably the best thing for youo do is find a good Mixed martial art gym and train hard. this will give you everything you are asking about.


  2. If you want to fight in ring and you don't care for clinching or grappling, then boxing may be you best bet.

    However, Muay Thai would also be well worth considering.

  3. dont sweat it, just join a studio close to where you live, (prolly end up in tea kwon do) im sure that you'll have fun

  4. Definitely kickboxing, Muay Tai or Taekwondo.

    Good Luck!

  5. None of knows what best for you. But with the information that you have given us One you might want to take a good look at is Muay Thai. I can't tell you a lot about it because I don't study it. You can also look at Shorin Ryu ( Matsabashi Ryu and Kobeashi Ryu) As far as using weights with the training you have to visit the school. Each school is different regard having the availability of weights.

    Good Luck

  6. That's stupid. If you want knees and elbows, you need to have clinching. Before you can get good at throwing free standing knees, you need to know how to work them from a clinch.

    Try Muay Thai. Knees, elbows, kicks, punches, and clinching. Clinching's good for you.

  7. Thai Boxing should be what you're loking for.

    Muay Thai involves boxing techniques, hard kicking, and knee and elbow strikes. Low kicks to the thighs are a very distinguishing technique used frequently in Muay Thai. Stand up grappling is also used and allowed in the ring. Muay Thai practitioners develop a very high level of physical conditioning developed by its practitioners.

    The training involves rigorous physical training, similar to that practiced by Western boxers. It includes running, shadow-boxing, and heavy bag work. Much emphasis is also placed on various drills with the so-called "Thai pads". These pads weigh five to ten pounds, and cover the wearers forearms. In use, the trainer wears the pads, and may hold them to receive kicks, punchs, and knee and elbow strikes, and may also use them to punch at the trainee. This training is vaguely similar to the way boxing trainers use focus mitts. The characteristic Muay Thai round kick is delivered with the shin, therefore, the shins become conditioned by this type of kicking.

    Full contact, full-power sparring is usually not done in training, due to the devastating nature of the techniques employed. Thai boxers may box, hands only, with ordinary boxing gloves. Another training drill is for two fighters to clinch, and practice a form of stand-up grappling, the goal of which is to try to land a knee strike. However, full-power kicks, knees, and elbows are typically not used in training.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yPfukurJ...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNOemiCij...

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