@RobertLei Only a trained fighter would know those moves. Most people will let go of the neck so they can catch themselves instead of slamming into the ground. If it's a trained fighter though, yeah, you're screwed and this move probably won't work.
@ajwall1 Agreed. It is hard to perform this technique against a choke unless you are stronger than the opponent. This technique works MUCH better against wrist locks, where it succeeds almost every time. Of course, against trained opponents, it is a different story. A trained opponent will be watching your feet and pulling back to throw you off balance, and this may not work. Most trained fighters fight in the ring though, not mugging people. I would still recommend this move for street defense.
@trentdelasario another thing I forgot to mention is that the guy holding isn't pulling back, which should change his defense. if the guy pulls back and he's strong it would be hard to rotate your hip back behind his
@ajwall1 No. Only trained fighters do that. The natural reaction is to break your own fall, and most attackers will release their grip to soften their own landing. I've done this in the gym before plenty of times, and it works almost every time on chokes and wristlocks. Only MMA fighters and judokas/wrestlers will hang on tight, and if you're up against a trained fighter, you're screwed anyway.
@GaiaAS That's true! He would only end up holding on to you, & get you into a triangle choke or get you into a Guillotine on the ground! It was a nice attempt tho. Lol
hmm...wht if he doesn't loosen his hand?... Break a Neck?...
zogamtangval 9 months ago
if he tried that against a guy that just got outa the pen he'd get raped.
8520rah 9 months ago
@RobertLei Only a trained fighter would know those moves. Most people will let go of the neck so they can catch themselves instead of slamming into the ground. If it's a trained fighter though, yeah, you're screwed and this move probably won't work.
trentdelasario 9 months ago
@ajwall1 Agreed. It is hard to perform this technique against a choke unless you are stronger than the opponent. This technique works MUCH better against wrist locks, where it succeeds almost every time. Of course, against trained opponents, it is a different story. A trained opponent will be watching your feet and pulling back to throw you off balance, and this may not work. Most trained fighters fight in the ring though, not mugging people. I would still recommend this move for street defense.
trentdelasario 9 months ago
@trentdelasario another thing I forgot to mention is that the guy holding isn't pulling back, which should change his defense. if the guy pulls back and he's strong it would be hard to rotate your hip back behind his
ajwall1 9 months ago
@ajwall1 No. Only trained fighters do that. The natural reaction is to break your own fall, and most attackers will release their grip to soften their own landing. I've done this in the gym before plenty of times, and it works almost every time on chokes and wristlocks. Only MMA fighters and judokas/wrestlers will hang on tight, and if you're up against a trained fighter, you're screwed anyway.
trentdelasario 9 months ago
@jujufishgenz There is pressure points...
pastropmal 10 months ago
you idiot the attacker would hold on the whole way down.
ajwall1 1 year ago
@GaiaAS That's true! He would only end up holding on to you, & get you into a triangle choke or get you into a Guillotine on the ground! It was a nice attempt tho. Lol
RobertLei 1 year ago
I would not throw a guy as long as he still is hanging around my neck, thats for sure. And another thing. What pressure points?
GaiaAS 1 year ago