Mixed Martial Arts, Thaiboxing, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Combat Submission Wrestling, Jeet Kune Do, Women's Self-Defense, Boxing and Filipino Martial Arts
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| | #16 (permalink) | |
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__________________ " If you are in the right then you can afford to keep your temper, If you are in the wrong then you cannot afford to lose it." Mahatma Gandhi | |
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| | #17 (permalink) |
| Novice Join Date: Jul 2003
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![]() | hey, first time poster, need some advice. basically i'm contemplating taking up muay thai to get in serious shape, and to become a hard bast*rd!! j/k anyways, i currently go to the gym 6 times a week, M/W/F chest/back/egs, and T/T/S arms/shoulders. i'm by no means a meat head, i do fairly light weights, 12-10-10 reps, but i was wondering if this will be detrimental to my learning muay thai?? i don't think it should be a real issue personally, i'm endurance/toning training in weights, so I think my muscles I imagine could handle same day workouts. i'm guessing!! i would really appreciate anyone with experiance giving me advice thanks in advance |
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| | #18 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2003
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![]() | hi, welcome to the forum...if your going to do any muay thai or fight training lifting 6x a week is way to much you should limit yourself to 2 to 3x a week actually 3x is pushing it i have found that a full body routine as opposed to a split is better for fighters not set in stone but thats my 2 cents. |
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| | #19 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Here and there.
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | I train the same way as Billywest describes. No more than 3x per week (usually 2x) with excercises that work out compound muscle groups. The no of reps is high 15+ up to 6 sets with explosive movement in the concentric part (the up portion of the arm curl or push off in bench press). Looking good is not my goal, but is a nice benefit. My goal is to be able to maintain quickness and explosive power over a longer period of time. I think this is called power-endurance. Think about it - how often do you wish you could explode kicks and snap punches just one more round longer? Ever get 4-5 fresh fighters ea. to spar you for one round, one after the other with fair contact? I would love to be able to maintain intensity over a long workload rather than have mean looking biceps or a huge bench. Afterall fighting is about technique, strategy and intensity and not a beauty pageant (allthough I would give the beauty vote to Mia St. John in women's boxing). Last edited by Tom Yum; 07-14-2003 at 11:46 AM. |
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| | #21 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Here and there.
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | From 142 - 148lbs, you would be a welterweight. You don't want to get too big, but you could add some lean muscle mass over a year or so. In kickboxing/boxing the general school of thought is that leaner is better but at 6'1" 145 lbs you would seem ultra lean. If you're under 18 yrs of age, you will naturally fill out in the next couple of years, just eat right and get into a healthy weight training regiment. Power comes from excellent technique and explosive speed - weight training helps, but is only used as a supplement for your fight training. There are guys that look like Tarzan but hit like Jane as Terry put it. You never can tell how hard someone can hit until you watch them. I've gotten my @ss handed to me sparring pro fighters your size but who just have more experience and awesome speed/power. |
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| | #24 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Here and there.
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Ok wild Bill: I train 4-5 times per week, up to 2 hours per session. The first 10 min. is steady rope jumping followed by 5 min. of stretching. From there, I work on shadow fighting - rd 1 boxing, rd 2 kicking, rd 3 elbows, rd 4 knees, rd 5 combinations. I'm still not faster than my shadow! But I focus on being loose and light with good technique. From there I work on 30 minutes of pad drills and bag work. The emphasis is on being rather quick and banging the hell out of the pads - I might work on 5-7 strike combinations, while having another partner jump in with me (for the same combos) Then I work 1 min fast drills / 1 min defense against the drill for a continuos 4 min round- punches, kicks and knees. Then work on boxing drills with focus mitts and body protection - my classmate and I switch out with punch combos, reflex drills and body conditioning (getting hit with about 60% power). I just finished off season so I'm going to start sparring on a regular basis. My sparring partners toy with me as they are professional fighters, but after sparring them for a month I can plow through others in my peer group. |
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| | #25 (permalink) |
| Premiere Member Join Date: Jun 2003
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![]() ![]() ![]() | I posted my routine on another thread. Can't remember which one. Hre goes again, its pretty basic. Workout A. 5 x 3 minute rounds striking practice. Each round has a different focus. Sometimes repeating a technique, sometimes dealing with someone behind/at the side. Some pre emptive strikes etc. I vary the striking pad uased (different bag, floor to ceiling ball, Spar Pro etc). Then a full body weight training workout (I am nowhere near as stong as Tom though). I include a major compound move (usually the Squat) with a 20 rep set. these are killers. Then stretch. Workout B. 5 x 3 mintes round as above. Supplementary weight training, mostly for the neck. Anaerobic circuit (10 minutes of hell) Stretch. I do a total of three workouts per week. One week will be A - B - A and the next week B - A - B. Isn't a lot, but am sooooo old. And I'm into a high return on my training. I make it as productive and efficient as possible. I've done all that "train for hours each and every day" stuff and rejected it. |
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