How to Use Low Kicks for MMA and the Street: Below the Belt

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Uploaded by on Sep 4, 2009

After years of being asked, "Don't you guys ever kick?" renowned grappling expert Mark Hatmaker finally unleashes his vast arsenal of low kicks for MMA and self-defense in this comprehensive video.

Hatmaker will show you the formidable Thai kicks from the rear leg and switch kicks that are well known to most fighters, but if you think they represent the full array of possible kicks, you're about to get an education.

Stressing the high-percentage kicks that will work almost every time, Hatmaker demonstrates kicks from the outside range and the clinch; the brutal "Ax Murderer" series; back kicks to get out of a rear-clinch situation; cut-kicking; painful and surprising point kicks; and defenses against any kick imaginable. For the complete fighter, he launches into an exhaustive display of kicking combinations followed by kicking and upper-body tool combinations that show you how to mesh Western boxing strikes with kicking attacks to the thighs, shins, and ankles. To burn it all in, he gives you kicking chain drills, kicking conditioning drills, and leg conditioning drills that rely on sparring contact, not kicking trees because "the Thais don't do it, and neither should you."

Simply put, Hatmaker proves that if you want to be on top of your game, you have to go low.

Available now from the Paladin Press Professional Action Library: http://www.paladin-press.com/product/Below_the_Belt/Other_Martial_Arts

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Uploader Comments (PaladinPress)

  • Please keep comments intelligent, on topic and constructive.

    Please watch the entire video and listen to what is being said before making a comment. We welcome constructive criticism. That means if you do not agree, please offer what you would do differently and why. The value in opposing opinions is that we all can learn even more from constructive discourse. But it must be civil.

    If you cannot conduct yourself in an adult-manner, you will not be tolerated.

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  • @PaladinPress This is youtube. You're never going to find intelligent, on topic and constructive comments on here.

  • I have mark's book on street self defense & I hope he makes a video of it...He's an excellent teacher.

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