The Art Of Deception

Hit People More & Get Hit Less

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Mini course videos:

THE SECRET TO DIABOLICAL HOOKS

Fixing The Flawed Punch

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THE ART OF DECEPTION

Mini-course videos:

THE SECRET TO DIABOLICAL HOOKS

Fixing the flawed punch

Video 3

THE ART OF DECEPTION

  • Hi Trav, I have the old striking package already. What is the added value of this one (besides better hooks)? Do you focus on kicks too. I’m struggling a lot with my roundhouse.

    • I have one lesson on the roundhouse, and it’s specifically a jab into roundhouse combination… but you send me some video of you doing a roundhouse, and I will fix it for you.

  • Another great video or three, plus have always liked, appreciate showing us tests and research demonstrating accuracy, thus standing out in the process.
    Always good stuff (hand making a fist with the thumb extended)

  • I am a female hopeful boxer one day I’ve been watching ur videos religiously but
    I am short with short arms and will almost always have an opponent much larger than me what r sum things I need to work on to make my punches more effective


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    Transcript

    Ah, now let's talk about deception
    
    and how it can make you more dangerous at every single level
    
    of the martial arts game.
    
    Well, the faint is at the heart of deception
    
    because it creates unpredictability.
    
    So if every single strike that you throw
    
    that looks like a jab is in fact a jab,
    
    then you have a tendency and you can be countered easily.
    
    Your opponent just has to time the full extension
    
    of your arm to coincide with his counterstrike,
    
    and you get punched in the face.
    
    This is the major problem with predictability.
    
    But if you're jab and faint, and faint and jab and faint
    
    and jab, you no longer have a timetable moment
    
    of vulnerability that your opponent can exploit.
    
    Otherwise, that guy can just wait for your jab
    
    so he can slip it and bash you in the head
    
    with a counterstrike.
    
    Now, with Koto having an additional tendency
    
    of pulling his hand back too low,
    
    this cross was almost guaranteed to land.
    
    But if you're fainting once or twice per jab
    
    or even every other jab, your opponent can't have that kind
    
    of timing, certainly not without giving away his idea.
    
    So if you fire a jab and then you faint
    
    and that guy whips an uppercut,
    
    that just barely misses your head.
    
    Well, for one thing, it's a good thing you might have just
    
    been saved by your faint,
    
    but for another, now you know
    
    how he might intend on countering your jab,
    
    and if you're smart, you'll take a step back
    
    and think of a way to make him pay for throwing
    
    that counterstrike again.
    
    Now that you're expecting it,
    
    that would mean you're countering your opponent's counters.
    
    You're thinking two steps ahead in the chess match
    
    that is striking, which is even more impressive than just
    
    observing an offensive tendency
    
    and making that guy pay for it.
    
    But both of 'em certainly count as smart fighting
    
    or fight smarting.
    
    My business name will hands forth be used as a verb.
    
    Yeah, like tweeting or xing, whatever.
    
    Now, I am gonna break down some make
    
    or break technique in this video,
    
    but I have to mention first that you can also use your faint
    
    to exhaust your opponent.
    
    It costs you almost no energy to do this,
    
    but if your opponent keeps reacting with a big slip
    
    or a big blast backwards,
    
    or pretty much anything
    
    that consumes more energy than a faint, well,
    
    you can keep fainting and fainting
    
    and drawing out that response.
    
    And over time you start to win the battle of energy economy,
    
    at which 0.1 of two things will likely happen.
    
    Number one, the guy gets tired
    
    and he has to stop executing those big defensive movements
    
    because of fatigue.
    
    And of course, this makes it easier for you to hit him
    
    with the intended strike in the absence of those defenses.
    
    Now, when people get tired, especially in street fights
    
    where there's no one minute of rest between rounds,
    
    it's extremely unlikely that he ever catches his breath.
    
    And as a result, his overall offensive output will be
    
    lowered, he'll be significantly less dangerous,
    
    and the, the, the probability of you winning
    
    that fight increases dramatically.
    
    Now, number two, let's say the guy's a little bit smarter
    
    and he realizes that you're just trying
    
    to faint him into executing big defensive movements.
    
    Although his big defensive movements are again gonna get
    
    smaller and smaller,
    
    and when they're essentially not happening anymore,
    
    it becomes a whole lot easier to hit that guy in the face
    
    with the strike that you want to land land.
    
    So either way, the faint creates a lower defensive output in
    
    our opponent, and that's exactly
    
    what we want when we're trying to land strikes.
    
    So in this video, I'm gonna teach you how to faint a jab,
    
    and then you can apply a similar method
    
    to pretty much any strike that you want to throw.
    
    Now, arguably, the most important part of a good faint is
    
    to take the same step
    
    that you would normally take if you were actually
    
    throwing a jab at that guy.
    
    So the the, the thing that's gonna give the guy the feeling
    
    that he's being threatened is in part the encroachment
    
    of your body, the feeling that you're getting closer to him,
    
    like you're trying to move in on him and to hit him.
    
    So you gotta take that step.
    
    If you don't take it and you're just throwing a faint, it,
    
    it just, it just reads as fake.
    
    It reads like you're, you're one
    
    of those guys who's just doing this to try to get you
    
    to put your hands up and be like, eh, alright.
    
    So you gotta take a step.
    
    Now that step can be a small step if you're worried about
    
    encroaching too much and potentially
    
    being accountable, right?
    
    You could even potentially step in place though it's not
    
    gonna give you the same type of a defensive impulse,
    
    but no matter what, to have a successful faint,
    
    you gotta be taking a step.
    
    Now, while you're taking that step, I need you
    
    to do two initial movements simultaneously, one in the core
    
    and one in your arm.
    
    Both extremely simple movements.
    
    So for the core, what I want you
    
    to do is get in your stance,
    
    imagine an opponent right in front of you,
    
    and then try to crunch your abs in a way
    
    that would draw your body
    
    and your, your lead shoulder two inches
    
    closer to your opponent.
    
    So this'll sort of depend on how square
    
    or angled your stance is.
    
    For me, it's mostly on my obliques
    
    and a super quick crunch brings my torso
    
    just a little bit forward.
    
    Alright, a couple inches.
    
    Really the smallest movement that you can make
    
    where it discernibly brings your,
    
    your torso in towards that guy.
    
    Little abdominal crunch. Alright?
    
    Now, the arm aspect I like to describe as if you're,
    
    you're standing with your pinky knuckles three
    
    or four inches away from a door
    
    and you're trying to quickly knock on that door
    
    with your pinky knuckles.
    
    Please note we never lead real punches
    
    with our pinky knuckle because the fifth metacarpal has a
    
    tendency to break upon impact.
    
    But since we're not actually punching anything, it's fine.
    
    Keep your hand loose if you can,
    
    that makes it move a little bit quicker
    
    and maybe a little bit of flex
    
    and tension at the end of that.
    
    Okay? Now we need to combine the step with the,
    
    the torso crunch, and then we add the arm flex to that.
    
    And then we have a faint try
    
    to be unpredictable surprise even yourself.
    
    All right, throw a real jab, throw a faint.
    
    Alright, throw a faint, throw a jab. Okay?
    
    This is giving you the, uh, an uneasy feeling.
    
    That's a good sign that my faint is working on it, right?
    
    Just a, a quick little burst.
    
    So now I command you to throw at least one faint,
    
    throw every three jabs
    
    or perhaps throw one jab for every three faints.
    
    There is no right
    
    or wrong formula other than ensuring absolute chaos
    
    and unpredictability.
    
    How about that left Hand?
    
    Now, in the full minimal striking course, I point out
    
    that there's really only a few common defenses to a jab
    
    that you're likely to see,
    
    and people are much more likely
    
    to have defensive tendencies than offensive
    
    ones offensively.
    
    You kind of get to sit back
    
    and think for a second about
    
    how you wanna dive in there and attack.
    
    But defensively, the vast majority
    
    of people are still operating under some degree
    
    of flinch reflex,
    
    where they're not consciously choosing their defenses.
    
    Their brain is just telling their body what
    
    to do in the midst of an oh crap moment.
    
    And sometimes that's a block and sometimes it's a slip.
    
    But since it's instinctive, they're a lot less likely
    
    to vary that movement since they're often not consciously
    
    choosing it to begin with.
    
    This leads people very quickly into defensive tendencies
    
    that you can exploit.
    
    So in this course, we examine those common responses to jabs
    
    or to fainted jabs,
    
    and for each extremely common response, I'll give you a way
    
    to knock that guy unconscious if he keeps on doing it.
    
    So we build up your faint so that it's sharp and deceptive.
    
    We keep an eye on how your opponent tries to it,
    
    and then we put 'em to sleep
    
    for not being as smart as we are.
    
    So if you wanna build all that stuff, feel free
    
    to click the button beneath this video
    
    and learn more about the course.
    
    That'll teach you all of it.
    
    And hey, that's it for the free miniseries.
    
    I hope you enjoyed watching it
    
    as much as I enjoyed making it.
    
    And I do hope we get a chance to work together more in
    
    the full training program.
    
    And again, I appreciate you even just watching my videos.
    
    So thank you for being a part of Fight Smart.
    
    I really do appreciate it.
    
    And as always, have a fantastic day. Hey.

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