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Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts: From Wrestling to Mixed Martial Arts

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Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts: From Wrestling to Mixed Martial Arts
 
Manufacturer: Victory Belt Publishing
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Product Description

Matt "The Law" Lindland is an all-American wrestler and Olympic Silver Medalist in Greco-Roman Wrestling. In Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts, he unveils for the first time the unorthodox and highly effective system of fighting that carried him to the top of the mixed martial arts mountain.

Lindland provides the tools needed to be proficient in both freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling, and then demonstrates how to tailor these techniques to overwhelm your opponent in MMA competition. He covers fundamental control positions such as the two-one-one, underhook and head control, as well as numerous bone-crushing attacks from each position. Learn your opponentÆs most common defenses to your attacks, and then how to use these reactions to launch secondary attacks. Lindland also shows you how to strike your way into the clinch and, once there, he schools you on the art of dirty boxing, striking from close range, and a plethora of throws and takedowns.

Whether you are a wrestler looking to compete in MMA or an MMA fighter looking to sharpen your game, Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts is the book for you.

Product Details

  • ISBN13: 9780981504445
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

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Customer Reviews

Excellent training manual
 
Review Date: September 16, 2009
Reviewer: Kid Nate,
Matt Lindland's Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts is surprisingly good.I didn't expect as much as I do from some Victory Belt manuals perhaps because I've got a bias against wrestling, perhaps because Matt Lindland comes with a lot of baggage.

Let's get that out of the way up front. Yeah, yeah, Lindland is the guy who put together a documentary about how he was being blackballed from the UFC because they fear him and then went out and got KTFO'd in under a minute in his very next fight. He got run out of the UFC in a dispute over a sponsor and he's funny looking. He got his position on the U.S. Olympic team by going to court to appeal a loss in the qualifiers.

All of that said, the guy won a silver medal in Greco-Roman wrestling in the 2000 Olympics and has won more than 20 MMA bouts. In his twelve year MMA career he's beaten top fighters like Pat Miletich, Carlos Newton, Jeremy Horn, Ivan Salaverry, Travis Lutter and Mike Van Arsdale.

As one of the founders of Team Quest, along with Randy Couture and Dan Henderson, Lindland pioneered the path of elite wrestlers entering MMA. He also was among the first to prove that wrestlers could expand their game and successfully incorporate submissions and strikes into their MMA games. The even split of his wins between decisions, submissions and TKO's testifies to his well-rounded mastery of MMA.

Now let's talk about the book.

There have been some complaints that the book is misnamed. The critics are saying that it's a wrestling manual for MMA, not a text book on how to use Dirty Boxing in MMA. To some extent that is a fair criticism. The book's original title was "From Wrestling to MMA" and that might have been a more apt title. But at the same time, this is easily the best book how to apply Dirty Boxing in MMA, bar none.

Sure, only somewhat less than a third of the book specifically discusses striking. But the key thing is the context in which that discussion of striking takes place.

Matt Lindland's Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts details a complete MMA system for the standup game. Where Randy Couture's Wrestling for Fighting is a primer that outlines the basic techniques of getting and defending takedowns, Lindland's book provides a complete system. The closest comparison I've read would be Eddie Bravo's two books.

Like Bravo's books, this one provides the diligent student with a series of options from every key position. Lindland outlines the key standing control positions and shows how to transition back and forth between them so you can take advantage of your opponent's mistakes and avoid his strengths. The structure of the book is also logical and builds a strong foundation at the beginning that allows him to build a complex but sold system by the end.

Reading this book really reinforced by respect for wrestling as a martial art. It's as much built on skill, science and strategy as jiu jitsu, Muay Thai, Judo or boxing. Lindland's moves are fundamentally predicated on misdirection and deception. He shows how to bait your opponent into moving and then how to use that energy against him. In that, Lindland's approach to takedowns reminds me of nothing so much as Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira's approach to the sweep.

It's only once he's established the foundation and shown the reader how to use the techniques of Greco-Roman wrestling to thoroughly control your opponent's body that he elaborates on how to take advantage of that control with strikes, throws and submissions.

The book is the usual great Victory Belt production. The sections are color coded for easy reference in the gym. Each move is described step-by-step and each step is illustrated by color photos. I did notice that many of the action shots are a bit blurry, this is an unfortunate distraction but doesn't impact the educational value of the book as the shots that show how to set up the grips and positioning are crystal clear, it's only the mid-air shots of the throws that tend to be blurry. In trying to do my due diligence as a book reviewer, I did conclude that the lack of an index is regrettable, although the organization, color-coding and detailed table of contents go a long way towards eliminating the need for one.
The Most Technical MMA Manual Out There
 
Review Date: August 24, 2009
Reviewer: Muay Thai Student, North Carolina
I've purchased a lot of martial arts books that are just a bunch of random moves and strikes. They never show you how to put everything together. This book is not one of those books. Instead of focusing on how to throw a kick or a punch, it shows what Lindland is a master at--controlling his opponent's through it a number of different control positions. Once all the controls are shown, he demonstrates all of your opponent's possible counters. He then shows how to use those counter to transition to other control positions. In my opinion, that is critical. A lot of books make you believe that once you reach a certain position, you can do whatever you like to your opponent. That is far from the truth. Your opponent will always fight you and counter. If you do not know how to counter his counters, you will most likely constantly lose dominant control. Lindland teaches you how to become a master at keeping your control, as well as how to use whatever control you are in to punish your opponent. It's not a book to get if you want a lot of flashy moves. It's a book to buy if you actually want to go through the grueling process of learning how to be an actual fighter. When you watch the UFC, you constantly see guys fighting for dominance on their feet. Transitioning from one control position to another control position, until one guy gets the upper hand. This book teaches you how to always get that upper hand. I looked back at some of Lindland's old fights where he dominated his opponents, and the moves he used in the fight are the exact same moves he shows in this book. Amazing to see something on paper in action, but maybe that's just me. I can't recommend this book highly enough! Personally, I feel it is the best book every to focus on the clinch for MMA fighting. Again, not flash and glam. It's all practical knowledge that any fighter shouldn't be without.
www.knucklepit.com
 
Review Date: October 12, 2009
Reviewer: Mr. Marc Wickert, Australia
MATT LINDLAND
DIRTY BOXING for Mixed Martial Arts
with Glen Cordoza & Erich Krauss
(Victory Belt)
© Marc Wickert October 11, 2009
[...]

An All-American and silver medalist in Greco-Roman wrestling at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, Matt Lindland debuted in MMA in 1997, along with US World Greco Roman Wrestling Team buddies Randy Couture and Dan Henderson. In 1999, this elite trio founded Team Quest Fight Club in Portland, Oregon - one of the most successful training camps in mixed martial arts history.

This same trio also formulated the devastating "no frills" style of stand-up combat adapted for cage fighting known as "dirty boxing".

Rather than spreading his wealth of cage knowledge too thinly, in "Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts", Matt Lindland addresses the first aspect of fighting: the stand-up game, and he covers standing control positions, striking, off-balancing techniques, takedowns, throws, takedown defense, and the dirty boxing clinch. "With all MMA fights starting in the stand-up position, it is important to master this realm of combat before tackling the ground game, which will be the focus of my next book," says Lindland.

Part One: Basic Skills
Includes stance, positioning, controls, control setups, underhook setups, and transitioning to control positions.

Part Two: Takedown Setups
Deals with two-on-one techniques, where you latch onto one of your opponent's arms with both of your hands as a form of control or for executing an arm drag. This section also covers underhook control and head control.

Part Three: Finishing the Takedown
Illustrates double-leg finishes, single-leg finishes, and back control finishes.

Part Four: Takedown Defense
Demonstrates takedown defense 101, double-leg defense, and single-leg defense.

Part Five: Striking
Includes striking into the clinch and reestablishing the clinch.
Part Six: Clinching Techniques
Here Matt takes the reader through off-balancing techniques, dirty boxing techniques, takedowns, throws, and double collar tie defense.

This book is a real gem for anyone wishing to improve their game dramatically under the tutorage of one of the game's best. As Matt Lindland states, "The techniques that you'll find over the coming pages are the ones that I have used to defeat top MMA fighters in competitions around the world, including the Ultimate Fighting Championship."

What a cracker!






Dry but thorough.
 
Review Date: September 5, 2009
Reviewer: James Kirkland, Manassas Park, VA
The next in Victory Belt publishing's line of instructional manuals, Matt Lindland's Dirty Boxing for Mixed Martial Arts follows the same format as previously released guides. To use the word "boxing" in the title, but give almost no advice on actual striking is a little misleading. Lindland shows you how to position yourself to deliver strikes, but leaves actual striking advice to someone else. With over a thousand color photos detailing hundreds of moves and set-ups; Lindland with co-authors Glen Cardoza and Erich Krauss cover plenty material without ever getting into striking. The book is a solid, well organized reference for the basics of grappling and clinch work for Mixed Martial Arts.

[...]
Good instructional
 
Review Date: November 8, 2009
Reviewer: S. Parker, Atlanta, GA USA
This book shows mma from a wrestler's standpoint. It is a wonderful addition to a more traditional background. Plus, wrestler's will enjoy the familiar starting points. Overall, a very refreshing mma book even if it doesn't cover as much "dirty boxing" as the title would indicate.

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