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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Self defense
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<blockquote data-quote="svtfocus2cobra" data-source="post: 16979313" data-attributes="member: 21786"><p>I got my neck/back injury doing MCMAP which is the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program. I was in RTT and our dickhead black belt Corporal instructor was running us all through grey belt and so on and he put us through some brutal shit that I'm pretty sure was unsanctioned because a lot of us got injured. One drill that I don't actually think was too out of hand was putting one guy in the center of a circle with 30 or so other guys having striking pads and he would call 2-3 at a time to attack the person in the center at once, and the rules were 3 strikes to the person with pads to get them to retreat.</p><p></p><p>I did well but got hit hard. Most of these guys had backgrounds in football and it was intense, almost everyone was getting overwhelmed but you kept fighting regardless, there was no option to stop. I remember the most commonly used move by everyone as they tired out was a Muey Tai clinch to get those 3 strikes in and a lot of them were actually connecting despite the pads as the drill was full speed. It was everyone's natural reaction and the quickest and hardest hit they could deliver. I remember getting absolutely rocked by my 230lb friend from behind who sent me flying face first through the air. I was in the air long enough and far enough to be able to go into a roll and get out of it and fight back. I wasn't so lucky on the next blindsided hit that sent me off the mat on my back and my neck snapped back as my head hit the gym floor and I felt it pop. I kept fighting back though and scissor kicked the guy that hit me as he ran up on me and when I got him to the ground I started throwing blows and then turned to clinch the other 2 guys to finish them and get them to retreat. That neck injury was whiplash and I still deal with it today, but I learned a lot about situational awareness during that drill.</p><p></p><p>Only one of the guys in my platoon fought all 30 people without really getting hit. It was my buddy Tutch, and he was all over the place like a maniac. He had such good situational awareness of where everyone was and he just kept striking and keeping guys off of him. It was impressive to watch even if it was a drill.</p><p></p><p>It's hard to train for multiple people but I would think that is a fairly standard drill for most martial arts. You either learn how to counter every person you're fighting against or you learn how to keep fighting through getting hit regardless if you're injured or not.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="svtfocus2cobra, post: 16979313, member: 21786"] I got my neck/back injury doing MCMAP which is the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program. I was in RTT and our dickhead black belt Corporal instructor was running us all through grey belt and so on and he put us through some brutal shit that I'm pretty sure was unsanctioned because a lot of us got injured. One drill that I don't actually think was too out of hand was putting one guy in the center of a circle with 30 or so other guys having striking pads and he would call 2-3 at a time to attack the person in the center at once, and the rules were 3 strikes to the person with pads to get them to retreat. I did well but got hit hard. Most of these guys had backgrounds in football and it was intense, almost everyone was getting overwhelmed but you kept fighting regardless, there was no option to stop. I remember the most commonly used move by everyone as they tired out was a Muey Tai clinch to get those 3 strikes in and a lot of them were actually connecting despite the pads as the drill was full speed. It was everyone's natural reaction and the quickest and hardest hit they could deliver. I remember getting absolutely rocked by my 230lb friend from behind who sent me flying face first through the air. I was in the air long enough and far enough to be able to go into a roll and get out of it and fight back. I wasn't so lucky on the next blindsided hit that sent me off the mat on my back and my neck snapped back as my head hit the gym floor and I felt it pop. I kept fighting back though and scissor kicked the guy that hit me as he ran up on me and when I got him to the ground I started throwing blows and then turned to clinch the other 2 guys to finish them and get them to retreat. That neck injury was whiplash and I still deal with it today, but I learned a lot about situational awareness during that drill. Only one of the guys in my platoon fought all 30 people without really getting hit. It was my buddy Tutch, and he was all over the place like a maniac. He had such good situational awareness of where everyone was and he just kept striking and keeping guys off of him. It was impressive to watch even if it was a drill. It's hard to train for multiple people but I would think that is a fairly standard drill for most martial arts. You either learn how to counter every person you're fighting against or you learn how to keep fighting through getting hit regardless if you're injured or not. [/QUOTE]
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