Making Sure to Change Levels when Striking is Important
Changing levels while striking keeps your opponent guessing and opens up new angles of attack. Mix head, body, and leg shots to break their rhythm and land clean, unexpected strikes.
Changing levels while striking keeps your opponent guessing and opens up new angles of attack. Mix head, body, and leg shots to break their rhythm and land clean, unexpected strikes.
Combine speed and power with the Superman Punch into a lead-leg roundhouse kick! Launch the punch to draw attention, then snap the kick to catch your opponent off guard for maximum impact.
Plant your support foot and pivot on the ball of it, chamber your kicking knee, then whip your hips so the lower shin or instep snaps into the target — high or low depending on range.
Keep your hands up and eyes on the target, snap the kick back to regain balance, and follow with a quick punch or step-in to capitalize.
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Plant your lead foot, chamber that rear knee, then whip your hips and rotate your standing foot so the lower shin snaps into your opponent’s lead thigh or calf like a freight train.
Snap the leg back to stay balanced, keep your hands high, and follow with a quick step‑in or punch to turn the hit into real trouble.
Learn to cross block by angling your arm and shin together, creating a strong shield against your opponent’s kick. From there, flow immediately into a counterstrike whether it’s a punch, knee, or kick to turn defense into offense.
Launch like a rocket — fake the jab, push off your rear foot, drive the lead knee forward, then extend the rear hand in a flying, snatching punch to close distance and sell the setup. Land with your foot down or flow straight into a follow-up strike (like a kick or hook) so the move becomes a devastating combo, not just a flashy trick.