In the first 4 UFC's groin strikes were legal. Didn't matter, grappling arts still dominated.Originally Posted by crag
The guard is becoming less prevalent today in MMA simply because more people study BJJ and submissions, making it more difficult to submit people.
My question again is how many people practice eye strikes on a live resisting human? I doubt any do because they wouldn't have any training partners. Listen a boxer throws hundreds sometimes thousands of punches on a given day - both on a heavy bag and on live training partners. A Boxer with years and years of practice still doesn't have the pinpoint accuracy to hit a trained resisting fighter when and where he wants to at will. Most times they have to throw many punches and combinations to inflict the damage they want. So how can one reasonably expect that a guy that doesn't get to practive eye strikes will be that much more accurate than a boxer who practices throwing punches with accuracy for hours per day?
The answer is you can't. Also if these people could strike an area as samll as the eye with pimpoint accuracy why couldn't they hit any fighter at any time flush on the chin which is a greater surface area? That's because the whole arguement is BS!
If you expand the rules and let a MMA'er eye gouge then the MMA'er will be able to eye gouge more consistenly because they'll be applying the technique from a superior position. If you're under my side control and you try to poke my eye out I'm going to take your arm and break it. But if you're under my mount and I decide to poke your eyes out I'm going to.
Before anyone goes any further with this eye gouging/groin strike arguement see if you can comprehend the points I've made. I think if you look at it honestly you'll see what I'm trying to say.


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