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Old Man Attacked From Behind... Wrath.

An old man skilled in wrestling and jiu jitsu destroys a young man who tried to choke him at his gym. This is an educational breakdown of the sequence. Thank you for joining me as we take a closer glance.

More notes:

Old men (think 40–60+ years old) absolutely can and do beat much younger men (18–30) in boxing and BJJ, even when the younger guy is athletic and strong. It happens far more often than people think. Here’s why:1. Technique beats athleticism most of the timeA 50-year-old with 20–30 years of high-level training has thousands more repetitions than a 25-year-old with 3–5 years.
Timing, distance management, economy of motion, and defensive responsibility are all skills that peak in the 40s and 50s, not the 20s.
Young guys gas out swinging wildly or spamming athletic takedowns; the old man barely breathes hard because he’s not wasting movement.

2. Experience in managing adrenaline and painOlder fighters have been hit in the face hundreds or thousands of times. A 25-year-old’s hardest punch often doesn’t faze them.
They’ve been in bad positions in sparring/competition countless times and know how to survive and reverse, while the younger guy panics the first time he’s truly smothered or cracked.

3. Mental warfare and patienceOld men rarely get baited into brawls. They make you chase, frustrate you, and wait for you to make the big mistake.
Younger athletes often have ego and feel they “have to win now” because they’re supposed to be in their prime. The old guy is happy to go into the championship rounds.

4. Strength & explosiveness decline slower than people thinkMaximum strength peaks around 30–35 and declines slowly until ~55ish if you keep lifting.
A 50-year-old who has lifted and grappled consistently can still be stronger than a 25-year-old “gym bro” who only started training seriously at 22.

5. Cardio can actually be betterRecovery between sessions gets worse with age, but single-session work capacity (fight endurance) can stay elite for decades if you train smart.
Many older fighters have better gas tanks because they pace themselves and don’t rely on anaerobic bursts.

Real-world examplesDan Henderson KO’d Fedor Emelianenko (and Hector Lombard) at 41–42 when both much younger.
Randy Couture was submitting 25-year-old monsters at 45.
Glover Teixeira won the UFC light-heavyweight belt at 42 and choked out younger wrestlers.
Gordon Ryan (prime BJJ monster) still taps high-level 25-year-olds at 30+, and legends like Roger Gracie, Saulo Ribeiro, or Xande Ribeiro were beating teenagers and 20-somethings well into their 40s.
In pure boxing, George Foreman came back at 45+ and was knocking out 25-year-old heavyweights. Bernard Hopkins was outboxing people 20 years younger at 49.

The caveatThe old man has to have stayed very active and avoided major injuries. A 55-year-old who trained hard in the 1990s and then took 20 years off will get destroyed. But the ones who never really stopped? They’re terrifying to young bulls.Bottom line: Youth gives you recovery, explosiveness, and raw power. Age, if paired with obsessive skill training, gives you witchcraft-level timing, efficiency, and ring IQ that often outweigh those advantages until the age gap gets truly massive (60+ vs 25).

Видео Old Man Attacked From Behind... Wrath. канала MindSmash
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