I did 28, I felt some pain when I did the kicks. I don't know how 56 is even possible . The time it takes to transition between my two legs takes forever.
Sorry I'm posting this so late, guys. My weekend was unusually busy and I was only able to record this today.
I thought that one of the hardest things to do, coordination-wise, was to separate the backfists and the kicks and not do them exactly at the same time. I'm not sure I always succeeded.
And yes, Miss_Dada, shorter limbs are often lighter, which means it's easier to move them at great speed (they don't require as much energy). That is why heavyweight boxers usually punch more slowly than, say, bantamweights. But because they carry more weight, their punches are still more powerful, if that's any comfort.
Redline Oh, I love when copyright hits me in this way
Nevertheless, I spotted you doing backfists and kicks at the same time several times. I had that same struggle when I was practicing. I believe that was the most difficult part of the challenge...
And yes, Miss_Dada, shorter limbs are often lighter, which means it's easier to move them at great speed (they don't require as much energy). That is why heavyweight boxers usually punch more slowly than, say, bantamweights. But because they carry more weight, their punches are still more powerful, if that's any comfort.
That actually makes sense, although I'm not really a short person (1.76 Mts with long and thick legs), however I do have the weight of a woman of my height instead of a man (I was born male, and I'm weighting around 68 - 70 kgs).
Redline I had the same problem with coordinating my strikes. I repeatedly messed up by punching and kicking at the same time and had to take a moment to get back into rhythm.
Slapping my very late and very slow, t-rex limbed attempt here with 18 rounds If anything this only confirms I need to stop skipping out on Muay Thai classes...
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