Difficult question.
I would have to go with boxing/punching range simply because most fights end to start from conversation distance. Therefore it makes sense to specialise in the range which is most suitable for this distance. The down side is that everyone will expect you to punch in a confrontation, and everyone can punch. Not saying everyone on "the street" has proper technique, but as we know, even a technically crappy haymaker has the potential to take teeth or consciousness if it lands.
I think that clinch is a nasty range because most people don't know how to operate in it correctly. The instinctive reaction against the "Thai plum" is usually wrong, and gives the "clincher" plenty of time to work some knees on the "clinchee."
Grappling is also devasting one on one when the other party is clueless on the ground. Unless he/she is a physical monster capable of powering out of whatever you try to apply. DISCLAIMER: I know everyone already knows this.
So I think grappling and clinching are great ranges to go to, due to the reletive inexperience that untrained (and even trained) fighters have with them. The obvious downsides being that they require close proximity with an adversary, and grappling in particular could well be suicidal.
I haven't touched on weapons, because over in here tropical, sunny Europe, only criminals are allowed to have them. If I use a gun or knife, I will be up the creek without a paddle when Johnny law gets hold of me.
So punching ranges it is then.
I would have to go with boxing/punching range simply because most fights end to start from conversation distance. Therefore it makes sense to specialise in the range which is most suitable for this distance. The down side is that everyone will expect you to punch in a confrontation, and everyone can punch. Not saying everyone on "the street" has proper technique, but as we know, even a technically crappy haymaker has the potential to take teeth or consciousness if it lands.
I think that clinch is a nasty range because most people don't know how to operate in it correctly. The instinctive reaction against the "Thai plum" is usually wrong, and gives the "clincher" plenty of time to work some knees on the "clinchee."
Grappling is also devasting one on one when the other party is clueless on the ground. Unless he/she is a physical monster capable of powering out of whatever you try to apply. DISCLAIMER: I know everyone already knows this.
So I think grappling and clinching are great ranges to go to, due to the reletive inexperience that untrained (and even trained) fighters have with them. The obvious downsides being that they require close proximity with an adversary, and grappling in particular could well be suicidal.
I haven't touched on weapons, because over in here tropical, sunny Europe, only criminals are allowed to have them. If I use a gun or knife, I will be up the creek without a paddle when Johnny law gets hold of me.
So punching ranges it is then.
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