Not a game changing idea by any means, but makes sense to me and seems realistic. It is definitely a proud day and a morale boost when you finally get promoted to your next belt in BJJ in real life when your instructors reward you for all that mat time and hard work. Maybe this is a good idea to implement in the game?
And also with balance, which I read helped with takedown defense. If I have strictly a KT fighter, should I even worry with training him in balance focused circuit training sessions?
So, from what I understand so far (very little), agility helps with standing striking and from what I read, speed helps with "shoot takedowns". Does speed apply at all to hand speed for your fighters with good punches?
So I have never gotten a random IQ test, and Ive never won one from Spin and Win, but I have basically a gnp guy who got the "stubbed his toe" email. How should I take this? Is he just gonna be a dumb ox who chances are, wont ever perform well?
I used to play back in 2011 after a friend of mine played religiously. I lost track of him since then and have recently started playing again, but he is no longer playing as far as I can tell.
Also, same type of question regarding clinchwork. Would I need a coach good at boxing, mt, and wrestling to teach this or if I hire just a my coach to teach clinchwork, will my fighters only be good at muay thai type attacks from the clinch?
I am going to start my own gym soon and I was wondering if I need to hire a coach who is good at both boxing and muay thai to teach punches and striking defense, or will just a coach good at only boxing work for this?