One of my targets, Tyrone, hangs out at the Bromley shopping centre was a wing chun exponent. I boxed his face into a mess and he's stopped selling his filth on the streets. This video looks nothing like that instance. I don't believe the so called boxer is really a boxer.
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Originally posted by Sagacious Lu View PostThanks Ben, I'd at least agree that that's a viable body blow. I don't see how it's "deadly" though; it's a perfectly legal target in boxing, kick boxing, MMA, san shou etc.
Sudden cardiac death by Commotio cordis: role of m...[Cardiovasc Res. 2001] - PubMed Result
NEJM -- An Experimental Model of Sudden Death Due to Low-Energy Chest-Wall Impact (Commotio Cordis)
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- Dec 2008
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Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves. Albert Einstein
When you are courting a nice girl an hour seems like a second. When you sit on a red-hot cinder a second seems like an hour. That's relativity.
Albert Einstein
I've heard of people going to the hospital because of Commotio cordis. Never stopped me from going for the breastbone if it's open though.
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This is interesting but hardly contradicts my statement. In the test they fired wooden "baseballs" at a precise point on pigs, and even went so far as to time the shots with their heart beat. That means that not only do you have to land your shot in just the right spot you have to time it with their heart beat, which you can't do without taking your opponents pulse. Even if you manage all that it still isn't necessarily a death sentence.
Moving on, the article talks about a miniscule 38 deaths over a 25 year period in BASEBALL players. In addition to being extremely rare apparently it generally happens to children:
This phenomenon is termed commotio cordis and predominantly affects children and adolescents 5 to 15 years of age
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Originally posted by Sagacious Lu View PostThis is interesting but hardly contradicts my statement.I don't see how it's "deadly" though; it's a perfectly legal target in boxing, kick boxing, MMA, san shou etc.
In the test they fired wooden "baseballs" at a precise point on pigs, and even went so far as to time the shots with their heart beat.
If you can't target and hit someone in the middle of their chest with the same force as a baseball going 30 mph then you need to get with your boxing coach. You have some serious work to put in on the focus mitts and heavy bag.
That means that not only do you have to land your shot in just the right spot you have to time it with their heart beat, which you can't do without taking your opponents pulse. Even if you manage all that it still isn't necessarily a death sentence.Moving on, the article talks about a miniscule 38 deaths over a 25 year period in BASEBALL players. In addition to being extremely rare apparently it generally happens to children:
We also know that this has never happened to an MMA competitor, and if it has happened in boxing or kick boxing it is extremely rare. Death in the ring is usually caused by massive head trauma, not cardiac arrest.I'd like to repeat my earlier statement that there isn't anywhere that you can expect to kill a person with a single unarmed strike,and I'll add that death in a fight is MUCH more likely from a blow to the head than it is from commotio cordis.
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Originally posted by mellow View PostOh, a thousand pardons! I thought that when you said that you were genuininely curious about the methodology. I wasn't trying to contradict your statement.
That's scientific experimentation for you, very tedious and and detailed. Sometimes I miss those days. . . . . .
If you can't target and hit someone in the middle of their chest with the same force as a baseball going 30 mph then you need to get with your boxing coach. You have some serious work to put in on the focus mitts and heavy bag.
Not as rare as you think. You're looking at one study in one sport where actual impact to the chest is rare. There is a commotio cordis registry that reported 128 death in the last 4 years.
Death in any sporting event is rare.
Are you going to stop punching to the head now?
I don't recall Ben Grimm or anyone else saying that it was an automatic death sentence.
I'm sorry that you got suckered in by magical claims of a particular CMA school, but it's time to let go of the bitterness and move on. Death in a sporting event or unarmed confrontation is highly unlikely in any respect.
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LOL, man, you are hilarious! All I did was present you with information to show you that it is feasible and you really took it and ran with it. But what can I expect from someone who thinks they know everything already?
Anyway, here's a few more for yah, Emmanuel Stewart!
PUNCH TO CHEST EYED IN BOX DEATH - New York Post
Streetwise: A Boxer's Death - Western Neighborhoods Project - San Francisco History
Never say never!!
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Originally posted by mellow View PostLOL, man, you are hilarious! All I did was present you with information to show you that it is feasible and you really took it and ran with it. But what can I expect from someone who thinks they know everything already?
Anyway, here's a few more for yah, Emmanuel Stewart!
PUNCH TO CHEST EYED IN BOX DEATH - New York Post
Streetwise: A Boxer's Death - Western Neighborhoods Project - San Francisco History
Never say never!!
"hitting point CV17 is lethal"
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Originally posted by Sagacious Lu View PostNow I just don't understand what your argument is.What I'm attacking is the idea that one can, as a martial artist, intentionally inflict commotio cordis on one's opponent.
CV 17 is lethal
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Originally posted by mellow View PostYou change your argument with every post. Keep trying you will get it right eventually.
There are others.
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