i am doing both boxing and jujitsu, my aim is to be covered in all fight situations, boxing for a standing fight and jujitsu for ground fighting, is there anything i have left out do you think or am over looking???|||I wouldn%26#039;t restrict yourself to just boxing for your standing fights, Kenpo mixes boxing, pressure point strikes, bone breaks, hyper extension as well as ground fighting, its often refered to as the deadly science of street fighting. I study American kenpo bu-jutsu, which is a more practical, more combative form of the discipline, other than that i%26#039;d also look into getting weapons training. other than that your golden...|||I gave timbugtiny a thumbs up as he came close to describing the real situation.
From your(the question asker) description of what you think a street fight really is you seem to think it involves a match up like in a sport situation.
Real fights and real street fighters dont %26quot;match up%26quot;.Real street fighters are ambush attackers .A bottle busted off the back of your head then the broken end still in his hand jammed into your face or arms as you try to defend .A tackle from the side or behind and various other nastiness meant to keep you from attaining any initiative in a fight.And they dont tackle to get on the ground they do it to throw you on the ground then put the boots to you.
Dont hang around places where these situations are common or hang with people who are prone to such acts or any form of street violence.
As far as match ups go yes boxing and jujutsu are a good combo.|||There is no martial art that will do you much any good in a bar fight which is where 99% of all fights start. Allmost all bar fights are in crampt quaters other people around things in the way which is why most martial arts do not work well in a bar fight or any other tight quarters situtation. What works is quick thinking,keeping your head and knowing how and where to throw your first punch, kick or what to pick up and hit them with. Most fights are over in less than ten seconds. with someone seriously hurt. You don%26#039;t need to be fancy just some plan old Marine Core hand to hand training and common sense.|||You should have some good kicking too, there is always something you can learn but with grapling punching and kicking you will be really covered|||stand up grappling... kicks.... elbows, knees, study of vulnerable points(some times you dont have time to mess around so you gatta be quick and painful with it... lol only sometimes thoughlol)... you probably have the ground covered good... and know body throws and take downs and stuff right(i dono what type of jujitsu you do)? weapons... (sticks, knives,improvised,modern stuff u know) both with or against them...mental training ? just stuff of the top of my head|||Not really, it is an excellent choice. Add a few sparring sessions with kickboxers or muay thai just to learn to block their kicks and knees.|||If you%26#039;re talking specifically for MMA type 1 on 1 competitions, looks like you%26#039;ll be pretty well rounded.If you want to also be prepared to being jumped by multiple opponents, you might want to take a style of Karate or another generalized civil self-defense.|||it%26#039;s a good combo. But you may want to consider kick boxing as well. Defense against low leg kicks - or offense on how to place these - is a huge part of today%26#039;s fighting tactics.
Depending how far you are in jujitsu, you%26#039;ll want to spend some time on ground n pound. I find my jujitsu training to be restricted to either guard %26amp; chokes, or joint locks and arm bars. First time I sparred with an MMA fighter it exposed how little I knew how to do against ground n pound - esp if your opponent knows how to fight against jujitsu...
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