I think being an expert in Sanda & Sambo would make a person a very VERY dangerous fighter, I think to be a great fighter you should get into Sanda first and then move into Sambo.
In Sanda you will learn the punches, kicks, sweeps & takedowns/throws.
In Sambo the grappling, leglocks, armbars/kneebars, chokes and even more complex throws.
@Dungarth 1 thing you dont need in a fight is anything complex,keep it simple.Bjj is a far more effective ground style than sambo so sanda and bjj would be better.Also sandas wrestling ist that strong and thai and western boxing are better striking styles than sanda.
I have seen too many Thai fighters get their butts kicked in Sanda VS MuayThai fights to believe that... It depends on who is doing the style. BJJ is ground fighting, Sanda's grappling system is not ground fighting, it is called Shuai Jiao and it is based on throwing the other person onto the ground. BJJ is really cool, but it again depends, if you have a 10 year Judo champion VS a 2 year BJJ fighter, Judo guy will probably win. It just depends, can't say which is better.
@GuamKomudo well i remeber when they did a competition ofr tht in the late 1800's. the judo ddues kicked their butts. and its evident today too. every judo vs. jj OR bjj judo kicked butt.
@GuamKomudo actually now tht i think abotu it sanda does have ground fighting. but in actual combat y wrestle wit the other guy when u cud take him down and kil more?
Yeah... For real, I think in MMA or grappling tournaments, takedowns like a judo throw or slam or Sanda throw or slam should be ALOT of points, because on the sidewalk, that's going to be the end of the fight... The person will probably be too hurt to fight, or even dead if they hit their head or something...
Yeah... For real, I think in MMA or grappling tournaments, takedowns like a judo throw or slam or Sanda throw or slam should be ALOT of points, because on the sidewalk, that's going to be the end of the fight... The person will probably be too hurt to fight, or even dead if they hit their head or something...
San Da, is good transition into grappling. They take into account takedowns, sweeps and throws along with strikes you'd see in muay thai. For me San Da is a nice striking art to add if you want to integrate grappling into the mix.
I have a question. Why should a person pick San Shou as a striking art over say Muay Thai or Kyokushin? My line of questioning isn't meant to be disrespectful. I just want to know from practitioners of the art about what it has to offer that these arts don't.
looking at this right away i can see why, new techniques ive personally never seen that might work for you better. Or you could just want to fight in Sanda matches, w/e your preference. I can see a difference, especially compared to kyo :)
u have to look at the principles behind the art muay thai focuses on destructive but the power sacrafices speed n u might have trouble connecting with ur strikes kyo foucses on physical toughness ur body must be able to take dmg the downside is wat if u wana just move out teh way or block n dun wana get hit sanda foucses on speed cuz with all teh grappling if ur 2 slow ur gona get caught sanda was based on chinese martial arts principle avoid ur enemies strength n exploit his weakness
ok sanda is like the mma of kung fu , with punches from boxing, intercepting from wing chun as well as the center line theory , ba gua and shuai jiao (ancient chinese wrestling learnt from the mongolians) , kicks from the northern shaolin . and its the MA For China Army . Im a Muay Thai Practioner and i spar with sanda and i think they are badass . (Its Hard to knee Them When They Wrestle You to the ground )
What IS great about Kyokushin is that you can use the toughness you gained and the mind and spiritual training, and the kicks too. Some good kicks and strong bodys come from Kyokushin. They have the feeling of FULL contact sparring, know some distance, foot work, basic strikes, blocks. It's definatly a step ahead of the average nobody coming into MMA
As a sport, Sanda is practiced in tournaments and is normally held alongside taolu events in wushu competition. For safety reasons, some techniques from the self-defense form of Sanshou such as elbow strikes, chokes, and joint locks, are not allowed during Sanda tournaments
So it's a hybrid of muay thai and ju jitsu then?
DylanForster92 8 months ago
very good instruccion!!
thanks for do it free 4 the viewers like me
sorry my english
saludos!!!
Intilo 1 year ago
I think being an expert in Sanda & Sambo would make a person a very VERY dangerous fighter, I think to be a great fighter you should get into Sanda first and then move into Sambo.
In Sanda you will learn the punches, kicks, sweeps & takedowns/throws.
In Sambo the grappling, leglocks, armbars/kneebars, chokes and even more complex throws.
Dungarth 2 years ago
@Dungarth 1 thing you dont need in a fight is anything complex,keep it simple.Bjj is a far more effective ground style than sambo so sanda and bjj would be better.Also sandas wrestling ist that strong and thai and western boxing are better striking styles than sanda.
billysue2 1 year ago
I have seen too many Thai fighters get their butts kicked in Sanda VS MuayThai fights to believe that... It depends on who is doing the style. BJJ is ground fighting, Sanda's grappling system is not ground fighting, it is called Shuai Jiao and it is based on throwing the other person onto the ground. BJJ is really cool, but it again depends, if you have a 10 year Judo champion VS a 2 year BJJ fighter, Judo guy will probably win. It just depends, can't say which is better.
GuamKomudo 1 year ago
@GuamKomudo well i remeber when they did a competition ofr tht in the late 1800's. the judo ddues kicked their butts. and its evident today too. every judo vs. jj OR bjj judo kicked butt.
thegodofpop1 1 year ago
@GuamKomudo actually now tht i think abotu it sanda does have ground fighting. but in actual combat y wrestle wit the other guy when u cud take him down and kil more?
thegodofpop1 1 year ago
Yeah... For real, I think in MMA or grappling tournaments, takedowns like a judo throw or slam or Sanda throw or slam should be ALOT of points, because on the sidewalk, that's going to be the end of the fight... The person will probably be too hurt to fight, or even dead if they hit their head or something...
GuamKomudo 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Yeah... For real, I think in MMA or grappling tournaments, takedowns like a judo throw or slam or Sanda throw or slam should be ALOT of points, because on the sidewalk, that's going to be the end of the fight... The person will probably be too hurt to fight, or even dead if they hit their head or something...
GuamKomudo 1 year ago
@billysue2 actually sanda is better than western boxing. becuz western boxing is too limited. but nuay boran is very brutal.
thegodofpop1 1 year ago
San Da, is good transition into grappling. They take into account takedowns, sweeps and throws along with strikes you'd see in muay thai. For me San Da is a nice striking art to add if you want to integrate grappling into the mix.
streetkunedo 3 years ago
I have a question. Why should a person pick San Shou as a striking art over say Muay Thai or Kyokushin? My line of questioning isn't meant to be disrespectful. I just want to know from practitioners of the art about what it has to offer that these arts don't.
Zothos 4 years ago
looking at this right away i can see why, new techniques ive personally never seen that might work for you better. Or you could just want to fight in Sanda matches, w/e your preference. I can see a difference, especially compared to kyo :)
Uberboy07 4 years ago
u have to look at the principles behind the art muay thai focuses on destructive but the power sacrafices speed n u might have trouble connecting with ur strikes kyo foucses on physical toughness ur body must be able to take dmg the downside is wat if u wana just move out teh way or block n dun wana get hit sanda foucses on speed cuz with all teh grappling if ur 2 slow ur gona get caught sanda was based on chinese martial arts principle avoid ur enemies strength n exploit his weakness
SoundwaveSuperior373 3 years ago
@SoundwaveSuperior373 ur crazy. muay thai is very fast. if not he fatsest striking art.
thegodofpop1 1 year ago
you can throw in a sanda match
kolamancow 4 years ago
ok sanda is like the mma of kung fu , with punches from boxing, intercepting from wing chun as well as the center line theory , ba gua and shuai jiao (ancient chinese wrestling learnt from the mongolians) , kicks from the northern shaolin . and its the MA For China Army . Im a Muay Thai Practioner and i spar with sanda and i think they are badass . (Its Hard to knee Them When They Wrestle You to the ground )
HayatoFernandes 3 years ago 2
You learn to strike very well, while taking into the account of being possibly taken down, which is extremely useful.
MartialArts4Ever 2 years ago
@Zothos Kyokushin isnt good unless you really mold it. It wont workin mma unless you make it much more felable. alot of people dont get that
jaredg613 2 years ago
What IS great about Kyokushin is that you can use the toughness you gained and the mind and spiritual training, and the kicks too. Some good kicks and strong bodys come from Kyokushin. They have the feeling of FULL contact sparring, know some distance, foot work, basic strikes, blocks. It's definatly a step ahead of the average nobody coming into MMA
GuamKomudo 1 year ago
are elbows allowed in sanshou? i didnt think they were
RevolMaster 4 years ago
As a sport, Sanda is practiced in tournaments and is normally held alongside taolu events in wushu competition. For safety reasons, some techniques from the self-defense form of Sanshou such as elbow strikes, chokes, and joint locks, are not allowed during Sanda tournaments
laytickfreestylah 4 years ago
yes and knees
SasukeX142 2 years ago
Way to go sifu, David Ross.
memyself2k 5 years ago