Sneaky Front Kick Setup for Kickboxing, Muay Thai and MMA
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- čas přidán 9. 03. 2022
- You can see the complete Front Kick Focus course along with tons of setups and technical details to make your front kick land more often, more accurately and with more power at hard2hurt.teachable.com
I will be teaching at Keishidojo in Sumter, SC on March 26th at noon!
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Check out the complete Front Kick Focus course at hard2hurt.teachable.com
Always looking for your videos, specially after browsing AliExpress, where some of your videos are used to advertise crappy Chinese self defense tools 😅
What a nice looking school
I practice the teep at work all the time. I'm a server and we have doors between the kitchen and the dining room. When I'm carrying stuff, I teep the door open. One of the doors is a "one-way" meaning if I'm on the wrong side, I have to bounce the door to open it. Which I use the teep for. And sometimes add a heel hook to open the door more. Doesn't even have to be high, just a low, leg level kick is enough and I build the muscle memory.
Steven Segal taught Anderson Silva his front kick man how could we forget
Man, Steven Segal is such a living legend! He created martial arts AND blues guitar! Dude's a GAWD!
Icy Mike actually learned this technique from Steven seagull
Segal uses this kick to close the fridge after getting ice cream…
Some say his nose hair is so sharp they use it to shave razors
@@mr28086 that's the funniest one I've seen yet
I like throwing a front kick and re-chambering into a high round kick, so basically a modified question mark kick. I've never attempted to do the opposite, by throwing a low round kick and re-chambering into a front kick like demonstrated in this video, but I am very excited to try it.
I kinda do that I throw a low front kick and re-chamber it in to a high side kick
I extend a front kick after a turning spinning or rear leg hook kick. Say what you want about taekwondo guys (I say it too) but extreme body control through the kicking process is a great skill when people rush you after a kick. It adds a bit more injury to insult when your opponent leads their head or chest forward into a kick from an unorthodox position.
The teep is Muay Thai's longest weapon; the spear.
Old Muay Thai adage:
Knee beats elbow
Punch beats knee
Kick beats punch
Teep beats kick
Teep beats everything
Diggit, coach!
front kicks > sidekicks
You can also turn a front kick into a side kick. You first lift your knee vertically straight up as you chamber, then as you kick you can pivot and roll you knee over and get a side kick.
Can turn a front kick into any kick that’s why it’s so good!
Used to think this kick was my invention )) It can actually be surprisingly effective in sparring for the following reasons:
1. You are much less likely to break your toes or tip of the foot when kicking someone's elbow. Side of the foot is a much thicker bone and less injury prone spot. No dozens of small fragile joints, like in the tip of the foot.
2. You can cover significantly longer distance and generate more force by pivoting.
3. It really surprises your opponent, when in the last split second a typical front kick turns into a longer and stronger side kick. Works even on bigger and better opponents.
With all these advantages, I still don't think that it's a suitable kick for competition or fighting. It takes slightly longer and you can't afford it if someone is going 100%
It's a cool kick to stop a sparring partner charging you or even dropping them, if you catch them on one foot, but it's not a fight stopper. Tough guys would just ignore getting a kick in the stomach
Shhh… I like that others don’t utilize these moves it helps me.
Why would you turn a kick that works into a kick that doesn't work?
@@dmfaccount1272 One of the good reasons is to avoid walking around on crutches for 6 weeks or a permanent injury which stops your training forver :) An opponent only needs to move one of the elbows slightly for this to happen. Other reasons I mentioned above
I was also a believer that sidekick was one of the best kicks. It's so "martial artist" and it's always shown with so much power. However, put the same effort in learning the front kick, and you'll realizing it gives such huge power, it's simple, and don't have to change your stance.
I think both the side kick and front kick are the most realistically effective kicks out of all of them
The front kick might be better at some things and the side kick better at others
In the example that Mike showed, if you replace the front kick by the side kick you don't have to change your backfoot so it's kind of a question mark kickbut with a low kick then a side kick ( to the body / face )
So it has its uses
The front kick most especially using my lead leg is the kick the I practice most as a self-defense practitioner since it's the simplest and most effective for self-defense scenarios where a well-placed and well-timed front kick with sturdy shoes on is quite effective for intercepting and stopping your attacker from barging forward towards you
I like the front-kick. a few ways that I use it is if the opponent goes to step forward with a jab then I give them a quick front-kick to the solar plexus to mess up their step so their jab falls short and can't reach me. I also use it to set up my superman punch by flicking a rear leg front-kick forward once or twice then faking the rear leg front-kick and coming through with the superman punch. I also do this move where I front-kick them once or twice then I do a switch step and act as if I'm gonna do a switch-round-kick so they go to check the kick then I just front-kick them again when they are balanced on one leg. I don't use these moves too often but they work fine when I do use them I guess.
This is a straight up Olympic TKD drill. I love to see coaches outside the TKD community using these types of set ups and chambers. Great to see different views on the same techniques! I would really check out lead leg TKD kicking drills if you haven't yet! Keep it up Mike!
That second set, touch-go (low kick go front kick) is great. We train it especially if your opponent checks the kick, to then teep them while theyre on one leg
It be nice to see a "diamond on the rough" type of segment. Take some common tma movement and give us your perspective on what it is. It might make a really cool series on CZcams Shorts.
"MMA guys struggle with the front kick"
Anderson Silva/Chito Vera - "And so we took that personally"
Add in Machida
that was kinda the whole point of the video. That they still find success with it
Anderson and Machida have a heavy traditional martial arts base, they're not the average MMA guy that only learns Thai boxing.
Muay Thai in general usually has terrible front kicks compared to Karate guys (there are exceptions of course though). People rag on Seagal when he helped Anderson and the Machida brothers, but the man had 30 plus years of Karate experience, so it makes sense that he helped him refine (not "create") the setups/mechanics of the kick.
@@AztecUnshaven you seriously think that Seagal had a part in Anderson's Legacy?
@@lunafreed I never said that. Context matters here. Anderson's legacy was already solidified before he ever trained with Seagal. But what Seagal legitimately DID do is help REFINE the setup and delivery of the Mae Geri (front snap kick) with Anderson, in private lessons from 2009 to 2010. That's why both Chinzo and Lyoto Machida have explained on their own youtube channel that Seagal does have legitimate power and skill in his methods. Vitor never saw the kick coming, that's why it was so devastating; the little details make all the difference in the world.
People later on got things twisted, and were ragging on Seagal for "claiming he taught them how to front kick", but that's nonsense. The goal there was to refine a basic kick to the point of making it non telegraphic and with precision power.
I find that double front kick is a good combo too. Quick snap with the first one followed immediately by a deeper extended kick really laying it in. And yeah I definitely land front kick on people *way* more often than any other kick.
the touch-go concept is interesting though! Reminded me of faking a roundkick and switching to a teep when the roundkick is halfway thrown
Front kick to the bladder is a beautiful weapon (Only if you're accurate enough to not kick'em in the balls)
That's kind of the beauty of the front kick, if you aren't in competition then kick to the balls is totally ok.
Seeing the way you teach is just awesome Mike. Thx for sharing!
Thanks Mike this is really helpful I've been working on learning a very similar principal with the sidekick and alot of the little details are super useful
That looks fun to practice, I gotta try it out.
Thank you for sharing ☺️.
That hop made it so much easier! Thanks for the tip, awesome video 🙏🏾
Damn.... front kicks are a real integral part of my game, I throw that all the time.
Never realized that all the decades of kicking air is what makes the difference.... ahhaha
I LOVE the frontkick! Use it for distance, jabbing and even powerfull Kicks. And yes, I do MMA🤙
It's insane - my friend and I have been watching MMA for years & we are casual enthusiasts. He's been mentioning this for so long now, so I was surprised to see a video about exactly this subject!
Hey, I'm definitely gonna try this in my Muay Thay class. Pretty cool
Lerdsilla uses the front kick as a counter to everything, to the point of just sitting his foot on their hip. Pushing off their center of mass pretty much stops any forward motion.
Awesome Video!
Man, the front kick, when utilized correctly, can catch almost ANYONE of guard for an easy KO!
Yeah, it is OP when used against someone that isn't that used to it. I've seen it a lot while practicing Muay Thai
@@jestfullgremblim8002 I remember an mma match that ended in a front kick KO. Man, it was BEAUTIFUL!
@@sukmykrok3388 hell yeah!
Love front kicks 💪🏼
I like the approach of seeing front kicks on a scale from teeps to snaps. That and using roundhouses as a setup makes it feel more like how a boxer may set up a one-two.
Huh. I always wondered about this, glad to see Mike addressing this.
Looks like an awesome environment
Magomed Ankalaev, has really good timing on his front kicks. As did Silva in his prime and Machida. One thing my coach use to have us drill, is front kicks from jab range (head height, right under chin). Its a pretty good chance of landing, because it's pretty well hidden. It needs good flexibility and some feinting. But if your leg gets caught, it's almost always a a trip to the floor. I'm glad you covered this bro.
I'm so glad you highlighted the "little hop". Without it (from what I saw of participants), you'll either (toes forward to favour front kick) twist-stress the knee joint on the round house, or (toes 90 degrees to favour round house) stress the meniscus on the front kick. Good job.
The style labeling will never die
this works extremely well ( better i think) with a sidekick. especially if they pull their leg back so you miss with the leg kick. the sidekick allows you to turn your foot more on the leg kick, avoiding the half assed positioning due to trying to do a good leg kick into a front kick you had mentioned. nice tutorial.
Good shit!
I was taught being able to throw it from standing feet shoulder width apart effectively and hard creates a solid foundation, and seemingly naturally nutures even harder kicks in ideal foot positions and fosters strong foot work.
Interesting thought at the least.😁
Thanks for another video 🙏🙏🙏
I started with mma and recently started with more traditional Muay Thai and I can tell you that the teep/front kick has completely revolutionized my striking. Such an underutilized kick that when someone gets good with can dictate a fight
I liked the way this one was edited
My favourite and best kick.
I love the front kick! I use too keep my knee up high to protect myself and when he moves forward i kick to both stop, score and push him back. If you are good on sniping you can hurt the liver and also push on the blatter which is extremely uncomfortable and distracting. It's a really awesome skill to work on for kickboxing.
same theoretical background we have in hunggar and we show also on instagram and tiktok💪🏻 but i totally agree the point with traditional martial art and mma with sparring and the air kicking
I agree completely! I often teach people the scale of front kicks and that intent is really the only thing to consider. If you throw one it should work and do something. I guess the only fear is maybe getting the kick caught or grabbed for MMA into a takedown as many fighters are often afraid to commit to their kicks because of this.
Love this. Always wondered why it's under used in MMA. Seems like a front kick with the heel to the solar plexus would drop some dudes. It's kind of like how many MMA dudes throw overhand and looping punches all the time and not short straight boxing style punches. Seems to me the front kick is the quickest to the point kick and has a lot of power.
Conditioned people are not bothered with front kicks to the stomach. It becomes an annoyabce if you get hit 2 3 times in a row, but thats it. In mma, i guess you could get taken down easily if you try it.
@@Alekth85 Yea I figure they don't want to get taken down but just seems if a guy really sat on one at the right moment he could do some real damage. Lot of power. I mean a shot to the solar plexus with your hand can shut a person down as can a liver punch. I especially don't understand why you don't see it when you're fighting someone you know the takedown is a mute point. McGregor for example does not like to get hit to the body. Even those push kicks of Nate's were hurting him. Nate meanwhile a Gracie black belt in BJJ would love it if Conor tried to take him down so why not cut loose a little more with the kicks? I guess another thing you have to worry about is getting countered and with his power that's a big risk.
@@Alekth85 you might wanna watch Conor vs Mendes. Conor devastated Mendes body with piercing front body kicks.
Evander Holyfield got clunked by Vitor Belfort who threw one of those looping overhand punches. It worked because it's sloppy and wrong and usually people fighting Evander Holyfield don't throw undisciplined slop at him, so it worked.
1:12 - Reminds me a lot of Rico Verhoeven's front kick. He often starts his kick whilst still executing his jab, making the kick land at the retraction of his punch.
Never forget to add your own sound FX when you do this in practice.
Just realised your wearing a ZNA hoody, mines one of my favourites
That slo mo was good as hell, i thought it was an edit for a second
I wish I had skills that came in handy more often lol
Savate Chasse frontale, awesome especially when applied to knee area with Heavy boot.
Yo! The hop made all the difference. I paused it after the first clip and drilled it with my gf in the living room. We made it work but it felt "clunky". That little hop tho? Immediately the body mechanics felt way less weird.
I use it a lot when practicing but I don't know if I'll ever use it in an actual fight. For me it's more a warding blow to push them back.
I wager MMA fighters don't use it much for fear of single or double leg takedown. Seems quicker to shin kick the person.
Seems fun, I'd go :)
Man Mike I love your in-depth explanations for why you're doing everything you're doing and the various considerations therein. At my gym, we generally just train combos and spar with little thought given to the theoretical reasons why we do one move over another. Its so important to build this theoretical knowledge because the more you know why you're doing various moves, the more you can dynamically alter them as the situation requires.
that's how most gyms do things
@@hard2hurt Thats unfortunate. I thought my gym was uniquely bad.
Ooooo...well done Mike, I like this one...a LOT. Plus, it’s already got my creative juices flowing: how about tap-oblique. Jeff Chan does a beautiful close-range oblique to the sternum etc. which would work brilliantly with this. Much harder to predict than a front snap-kick, or regular teep. 👌
PS. I don’t like those inside leg kicks using your metatarsals bro...great way to get your toes broken since that’s super-easy to check. But what do I know? 🤷♂️
Seanchais front kicks are beautiful
Referencing the base foot compromise issue at 6:20, another alternative to the hop…… is the side kick ;)
Roundhouse base foot position and side kick base foot position are almost identical. So you can touch then side thrust kick.
Growing up In my karate school we learned both snap and thrust front kicks. Later learning the Muay Thai version made for an interesting revelation. If the foot travels in a quarter circle arch towards the target, there is a good chance your kicking foot will run into the point of the opponent’s lead elbow, and it can cause some serious pain. The Muay Thai version where the foot comes way up. Then travels in an almost straight line to the target, reduces the chance of injury to your own foot, at the cost of some speed.
Great video on the front kick. One of my favorite kicks!
The overall explanation was excellent, especially about traditional martial arts vs MMA and finding a balance.
The explanation was pure speculation and just there so he could get some clicks out of putting it in the title.
Cuz they r always loading up for a muaythai roundhouse or a big pushing teep. We have had some nice front kick KOs in mma, def a grt kick to use. Old days, some karate guys used them all the time.
Would love to Train With you please open up a gym in NJ 😂
Front kick is my favorite attack let's go
You're my kind of dude!
@@hard2hurt hell yeah
2:15 nice advice ik just where to use it
It is a good first move.
Machida`s front kicks are an obvious one to follow. Also uses it in a teep mode. karate nerd here and when sparring with a Kung-Fu mate he uses it all the time to drive me bonkers. Infact I ran into one in a local comp and broke a Rib.
Playing with front kicks at a slight rounded angle is also nice. Stabby floating rib shots you can hide under a straight punch :)
I'm a boxer and honestly the teep is my fav kick lol I guess it's the boxing back ground lol it's the jab for feet.
Cool
I like how you don’t give shitty kicks a pass.
I wonder if this would work if the round kick were thrown higher. I ask because in my school we use oldschool American kickboxing rules for valid point areas (no leg kicks). I'll try it in sparring tomorrow and see how it goes.
Machida had a nice front kick.
One of the components that made Young Conor the Good Conor. He had that piercing front kick he would stab guys with as a setup for other kicks
Zednaught Alpha! 🥰
Watching the lesson, I realized that I have been tossing front kick combos so long I just adjust base foot by pivoting back.
at 6:00 to 6:10 ish when you turn the leg a lil bit to do the round kick, im assuming you could follow that up with a side kick, perhaps performed by a sidekick? a sidekick side kicking a kick to the side?
Almost 2 years ago, I broke my big toe when I frontkicked my sparring partner by accidently hitting his ellbow. Unfortunatly it was the last time i ever used the frontkick cause I'm too scared it happens again.
Same here. I need to get over this fear haha
You must have kicked hard
Dang. Yeah that's why I kick people so slowly when I spar I'm afraid of how bad it'll hurt if they block it with a harder part of their body.
It's not the front kicks fault, you can break all parts of your feet if you kick e.g. roundhouse straight into an elbow also.
I hope Eli knows you're repping the ZNA merch
Mma stance(s) makes it harder for sure its easy for k1 and muay thai as we stand taller without worrying about take downs only catches and sweeps
I think a lot of mma guys don’t use front kicks because most of them have wider boxing like stance. I I like front kicks a lot but when I use them I normally have to square my stance up a little 🤷♂️
That kick set up is very common in Savate "French kickboxing"
Interesting to hear that frontkick meta prediction.
After seeing a few work, I was like: "Damn, this is underutilized!"
I guess that's what we've all been thinking! 🤷🏻♂️
🧛♀️
I think front kicks are a little less prevelant in mma because they're way easier to throw faster from a more narrow stance in muay thai and kickboxing. When i get into a wider stance mma/boxing stance it's significantly harder for me to do a teep or front kick
While if it lands is really good I am more afraid of throwing front kicks than other types of kicks because it lands with the foot in an area that can be blocked with an elbow, which is painful. I got blocked sometimes that way and I also try to do it when being front kicked, specially with the snap one.
On the other side I throw the roundhouse kick to the head, where an elbow block is not frequent or I make contact with the shin, where the possible elbow block is not a big deal.
We need "front kick focus" in Tallahassee!
i was looking for a booking in north florida for april but that trip got canceled. still open second half of the year.
@@hard2hurt I'll shoot you an email tonight, let's see if we can make it happen!
Side kick is also under rated
The front kick is just absurdly easy and effective. I've been saying for years that if somebody can develop a good 1-2 and a good front kick, they're already going to be better at fighting than the majority of people even if they learn nothing else (though some wrestling experience would also help a lot lol).
Except for Silva and Machida. I guess that’s to be expected, both have karate backgrounds. It’s a bit like a jab to the body that Mayweather used so well. Very underrated but very effective. It saps your energy like no other.
I think people neglect it because they're petrified of being taken down. Teep to the face can be practiced on the bag and pads. It can also be trained in sparring as long as students are advanced enough to pull it and keep it controlled. I always pull my head kicks during sparring. Being able to control kicks makes it easier to throw hard too
may be the risk of the takedown but then again it could be used to bait a takedown
yo can you help with understanding how not to get hurt while kicking? I'm not sure if you have already done some sort of conditioning or something but I was sparring a couple days back in the gym and this guy step bup back kicked me and I intuitively checked it with my shin and now it hurts when I walk.
Can you do a video on what to do if someone grabs your leg when you throw a kick?
ive done it
I looked at all of the titles of all of your CZcams videos but I couldn't find it.
Front kick great for firemen breaking down doors
😅
YOOO MIKE IN A ZNA HOODIE?
thats comes natural to 6lack gods i been using that as a jab an kick in knees brung the biggest to a submit stage
2:21 I wonder what dirty joke Mike said right there
Best fromt kicker I can remember in MMA was Conor at featherweight
I am probably just clueless but having trouble finding seminar links. Granted, I am not great at Instagram.
@6:15 side kick time!
Lyoto Machida is 😛🍿
Oh, the foot jab....