- American soldiers learn how to take it to the streets in WW1.
- English
WW1 Combatives
LOL at the 6:20 back take.
WW1 Combatives
I’ve seen people pay good money and learn shit that was not as effective as this early H2H.
WW1 Combatives
LOL at the 6:20 back take.
“An enemy in No-Man’s-Land tries to regain his own lines. We stalk him and get him with a variation of the Death Lock and kill him.”
Mike Gibbons was a high calibre boxer in the early 20th C. His brother Tommy fought Jack Dempsey at Selby, which went bankrupt.
Interesting techniques and some of them remain pertinent in Trad JJ today.
Cage Ball. In the British Army, it would have been a football (soccer) ball and the game is called “Murder Ball”. A robust game, played indoors or out.
[QUOTE=Eddie Hardon;2727816]
Interesting techniques and some of them remain pertinent in Trad JJ today.
[/QUOTE]
I found that strangely reminiscent to some of my JJJ training.
[QUOTE=Eddie Hardon;2727816]
Interesting techniques and some of them remain pertinent in Trad JJ today.
[/quote] Which ones? Are they pertinent anywhere else? [QUOTE=Eddie Hardon;2727816] Cage Ball. In the British Army, it would have been a football (soccer) ball and the game is called “Murder Ball”. A robust game, played indoors or out.[/QUOTE]
sounds an awful lot like rugby
[QUOTE=Eddie Hardon;2727816]Mike Gibbons was a high calibre boxer in the early 20th C. His brother Tommy fought Jack Dempsey at Selby, which went bankrupt.
Interesting techniques and some of them remain pertinent in Trad JJ today.
Cage Ball. In the British Army, it would have been a football (soccer) ball and the game is called “Murder Ball”. A robust game, played indoors or out.[/QUOTE]
Indoor wheelchair rugby is called murder ball as well, it’s just murder ball in wheelchairs with the oval ball.
WW1 Combatives
i like the sequence that instructs what to do if you and a german crawl towards eachother lol
[QUOTE=andrewpmma;2729944]i like the sequence that instructs what to do if you and a german crawl towards eachother lol[/QUOTE]
So do I, especially because it was very applicable at the time.
That was actually some pretty good training!