martial arts tactics

  • THE RAT SYNTHESIS™ BATTLE PLAN: HOW REAL VIOLENCE UNFOLDS AND HOW TO END IT.

    “The general who wins a battle makes many calculations in his temple before the battle is fought. The general who loses makes but few calculations beforehand.” – Sun Tzu

    Violent encounters can be analyzed many ways depending on context, environment, and intent. For tactical decision-making, however, the most useful approach is to observe behavioral patterns that appear at the moment violence becomes possible.

    When a confrontation becomes mutual and visible, individuals consistently fall into three primary engagement behaviors:

    Jammer. Blocker. Runner.

    What follows are statistically reasonable ranges drawn from law-enforcement observations, self-defense case studies, and combat analysis. These numbers are not predictions, but training priorities—guidelines for how often each problem appears in the real world.


    1. The Jammer — Sudden Forward Pressure

    The Jammer attempts to overwhelm immediately.

    This includes:

    • Explosive forward rushes
    • Tackle or clinch attempts
    • Wild or committed forward strikes
    • Sucker punches followed by rapid closure

    Observed frequency

    Across street assault reviews, police reports, and self-defense case analysis, sudden forward-driving aggression accounts for approximately:

    20–35% of real-world violent encounters

    Context matters:

    • This behavior is more common in criminal assault and robbery scenarios
    • It appears less often in socially mediated or ego-driven confrontations
    • Many jammer-style assaults end the encounter quickly and never develop into prolonged exchanges

    Success depends on immediate interception, angulation, and structural disruption.


    2. The Blocker — Positional Control, Trapping, and Destruction

    The Blocker maintains position and structure.

    This opponent:

    • Squares up and holds ground
    • Maintains posture, guard, or framing
    • Controls range and waits for commitment
    • Attempts to shut down forward pressure through structure rather than speed

    Blockers are common in mutual confrontations where both parties recognize escalation and test each other before committing.

    Observed frequency

    In incidents involving mutual awareness, posturing, and gradual escalation—such as bar fights, road rage encounters, and one-on-one altercations—blocker behavior appears in approximately:

    40–55% of mutual encounters


    Tactical approach against the Blocker

    Against a blocker, the objective is not force-on-force collision.

    It is systematic breakdown.

    You maintain:

    • Trapping to occupy and clear the hands
    • Destruction (gunting and limb damage) to degrade structure
    • Eye jabs to disrupt vision, posture, and intent
    • Low-line kicks to the groin, knees, and base to erode balance

    3. The Runner — Distance, Evasion, and Opportunism

    The Runner avoids direct commitment.

    This individual may:

    • Circle or retreat
    • Use footwork and space
    • Bait reactions
    • Counter selectively or disengage entirely

    Observed frequency

    Runner behavior appears in approximately:

    15–30% of violent confrontations

    Contextual factors:

    • More common when confidence is uneven
    • More frequent with fear, intoxication, or uncertainty
    • Less common in highly trained or dominance-driven attackers

    Runners are not passive. They rely on timing and opponent error. Uncontrolled pursuit often creates openings for counters, weapons, or environmental hazards.

    Against a Runner, the goal is to remove mobility.
    Pursue them attacking the legs with low-line kicks, and force imbalance. When retreat turns into loss of structure, enter, grab, strike, and sweep, placing the attacker in a position where escape and continued fighting are no longer possible.

    NOTE: one type of fighter can morph into another type of fighter as the fight continues. Their footwork is what determines the type of fighter.


    From Recognition to Resolution: Pressure, Termination, Escape

    Regardless of the opponent type—Jammer, Blocker, or Runner—the objective remains the same:

    Create pain. Create imbalance. End the threat. Leave.

    Once the appropriate tactics for each behavior have landed and pain or disruption has been established, the encounter transitions into its final phases.

    Pressure

    You move forward with a straight blast—not as a flurry, but as forward pressure. This drives the attacker backward, collapses their base, and denies them the ability to reset or re-engage strategically.
    The boxing combination—hooks, crosses, uppercuts, inevitability.
    The kung fu sequence—angles, whips, spirals, and snapping power.

    Termination

    As balance and structure deteriorate, pressure is converted into termination tools:

    • Headbutts
    • Knees
    • Elbows

    These strikes exploit the attacker’s compromised posture and force them into retreating positions they cannot easily fight their way out of. As they move backward, they are being hit continuously, overwhelmed both physically and neurologically.

    The goal here is not exchange—it is decisive shutdown.

    Finish (If Required)

    If the attacker remains a threat, additional strikes may be applied, followed by a finishing technique appropriate to the moment, environment, and legal context.

    Escape

    Once the threat is neutralized, disengage immediately.

    Create distance.
    Scan for additional attackers.
    Watch for buddies, weapons, or environmental dangers.

    Survival does not end with dominance—it ends with safe withdrawal.


    Why This Model Works

    This framework focuses on observable human behavior under stress and a clear progression from recognition to resolution.

    People under threat tend to:

    • Crash forward
    • Hold ground
    • Or disengage and bait

    Once disrupted, they retreat.

    And retreat, when pressured correctly, becomes collapse.


    Closing Insight

    Violence does not begin with strikes.

    It begins with movement choices.

    Those choices reveal intent.
    Pressure reveals weakness.
    Termination ends resistance.

    And escape—done with awareness—ensures you go home.

    • This model draws from long-standing combat observations shared across multiple self-defense systems and instructors.

    Now watch the video below, where I break down how to handle each of the three fighter types:

  • RESSURECTING THE BRUCE LEE STREET FIGHTING SYSTEM OF DOMINATION!

    Straight Blast


    It’s not necessarily original JKD.

    It’s not necessarily “new” JKD.

    It’s not necessarily Kali and Silat.

    It’s not necessarily Muay Thai.

    It’s not necessarily Savate.

    THIS IS WHAT IT IS:

    • Pain–Pressure (Straight Blast)–Terminate.
    • Interception (defense)
    • Three Types of Fighters.
    • The Five Ways of Attack.

    That’s what took me nearly 35+ years to truly understand.

    That’s what you need to focus on.

    To be able to end street fights in seconds.

    Simply.

    Like Bruce did.

    Rapid Assault Tactics (RAT) gives you the defense and the body. It also adds destructions (defang the snake).

    Joe Lewis had the 5 ways of attack and the 3 types of fighters. That’s the offense.

    Not sport.

    Things like eye jabs and breaking their legs with low line kicks.

    Especially the eye jab and the lead side kick.

    Champions only focus on a few techniques.

    Not millions of techniques.

    Not necessarily “kickboxing.”

    Not necessarily strong-side forward.

    Not necessarily “move hand first.”

    Not necessarily classical JKD techniques—yes, efficiency matters.

    Not necessarily grinding yourself to exhaustion every day.

    Not necessarily 50 different arts.

    These things help but they are not the differentiator.

    STRATEGY is the differentiator.

    And simplicity. Again, not a million techniques, not a million arts.

    And efficient techniques and attributes.

    And the ability to pass through the door of insanity when the rubber hits the road and execute. Killer instinct.

    There it is.

    Thousands of dollars invested. Possibly more.

    DVDs. VHS tapes. In-person seminars with the greats.

    Research, development, hard sparring.

    All boiled down.

    Jeet Kune Do is simply to simplify – Bruce Lee

    Legends never die.

    To my knowledge, this simple and comprehensive system of street fighting domination is not documented anywhere.

    👉RATsynthesis.com Teaches the Bruce Lee Street Fighting System as its main strategy. We enhance this with kickboxing inspired by Mike Tyson and Denis Decker’s gung fu/Bagua. We also include the counter-ground fighting from Rapid Assault Tactics (RAT).

    Sifu Russo’s works are a collaboration between AI tools such as ChatGPT and himself.

  • BEYOND DEFEAT: STRATEGIC WARFARE, MARTIAL MASTERY, AND THE ART OF THE UNBEATABLE FIGHTER!

    “The good fighters of old first put themselves beyond the possibility of defeat, and then waited for an opportunity of defeating the enemy.”
    Sun Tzu


    Preparation. Defense. Mental Toughness. Mastery.

    The wisdom of Sun Tzu echoes through the ages, resonating deeply not only in warfare but in martial arts, sports, business, and life.

    The secret lies not in mere aggression but in positioning yourself so flawlessly that defeat becomes impossible, while you wait patiently—strategically—for the perfect moment to strike.

    This is more than brute strength.


    This is more than skill.


    This is calculated inevitability.

    The Matrix (1999): The sound of inevitability


    The Pillars of Invincibility

    1. Solid Defense: The Yang Element
    2. Mental Toughness: The Yin Element
    3. Tactical Openings: Drawing the Enemy Out

    1. Solid Defense and Openings: The Yang Element

    Solid Defense and Openings

    In combat, whether on the street or the battlefield, your stance, guard, and positioning dictate the fight.

    Your body language.

    Like a chess opening.  

    A set up.

    Put yourself beyond the possibility of defeat.

    You know the pattern and the what if’s so well you can dictate and control the game.

    Take Floyd Mayweather’s Philly Shell defense—a masterpiece of efficiency and control.

    Observe closely:

    • Lead shoulder up, chin tucked, rear hand guarding the body.
    • Head exposed just enough to bait.
    • Body language calm, relaxed, untouchable.

    THE PHILLY SHELL: Floyd Mayweather Jr vs Everybody Else

    Bruce Lee, the Little Dragon, adopting the Philly Shell

    Bruce Lee adapted the same principle.

    He opens a line—the head—inviting the opponent in.

    The moment they commit, he intercepts.

    Pain.

    Then follow with a straight blast.

    This is called Attack by Drawing (ABD).

    It’s the chess equivalent of sacrificing a pawn to trap the queen.

    Denis Decker, the creative genius of Gung Fu

    Denis Decker, the Gung Fu Grandmaster used Attack by Drawing also.

    He called it Possum.

    Possum

    Your body language is the chessboard.

    Your stance, your guard—like an opening in chess—forces your opponent to play your game.

    2. Mental Toughness: The Yin Element

    Suki (opening): Japanese Kendo

    No stance is unbreakable if the mind behind it is weak.

    In Japanese Kendo, there’s a concept called Suki:
    An opening—not just in your physical guard, but in your mind.


    Fear. Doubt. Hesitation.


    The moment you hesitate, you lose.

    Meditation eliminates suki.


    Meditation steels your mind.


    It silences fear, obliterates confusion, and sharpens focus.

    Training hones the body and mind.


    Meditation fortifies the mind.


    Together, they make you impenetrable.

    3. Tactical Openings: Drawing the Enemy Out

    Kempo Karate – Shield and Sword

    Each martial art system has its unique method of baiting, countering, and annihilating.

    Notice the extended lead arm—like a shield—keeping opponents at distance. It also blocks strikes and kicks.


    The rear hand is cocked, the sword, ready to thrust the devastating reverse punch.


    They rely on distance, timing, and precision.

    How to attack it? Here is one way, Immobilization Attack (IA).

    Break their rhythm:

    • Destroy the lead leg with ballistic low line kicks.
    • Trap their lead hand.
    • Smother the rear hand.
    • Go for the eyes.

    If they do get off that killer reverse punch, elbow destruct it shattering their fist.

    Game over before it begins.

    Kyokushin Karate – Power Meets Precision.

    A blend of Muay Thai ferocity with Karate technique.

    • Guard tight.
    • Low kicks punishing your legs.
    • High kicks breaking your defense.
    • Rear round kicks to sap your base.

    Their stance?


    They leave the middle or tummy slightly exposed—inviting straight punches and kicks.


    But they are waiting.


    The second you commit, they counter.

    The below video demonstrates how they fight, mostly offense in this example.

    Amateur MMA Fighter & Bodybuilder vs Kyokushin Karate Master


    Efficiency Over Chaos: Military Combatives Mentality.

    Rapid Assault Tactics (RAT).

    Why engage in endless exchanges, wasting energy and risking mistakes?

    Sun Tzu warned:
    “There is no instance of a nation benefiting from prolonged warfare.”

    End it quickly.

    The longer the game goes on the more of a chance you will take a hit.

    Then you are in pain and they can win.

    Use destructions, interceptions and the 5 ways of attack to penetrate.

    Straight Blast.

    Terminate, Follow up, Finish.

    Whether on the streets or in business, the longer the engagement, the higher the risk.

    Don’t let them play their game—disrupt their game and dictate yours.


    Nothing is Fixed: Adapt, Improvise, Overcome

    Bruce Lee said it best:

    “Be like water.”

    In chess, fighting, and life—rigidity is death.


    Flexibility, preparation, and strategic patience win.

    Flow


    The Ultimate Lesson

    Grandmasters

    “Invincibility lies in the defense; the possibility of victory is in attack.”

    – Morihei Ueshiba

    Put yourself beyond the possibility of defeat.

    Prepare so well, train so smart, and remain so mentally unshakable that no blow can touch your core.

    Master the pattern (e.g. Philly Shell)

    Anticipate every “what if.”

    Control the counter-pattern.

    Outthink the counter to the counter-pattern.

    In the end, intuition commands the game.

    When they expose themselves—whether physically, mentally, or emotionally—
    you strike. You intercept, destroy, counter, and finish.

    No hesitation.

    This is the strategy of the Grandmasters.


    This is how to play chess with life.


    This is how to win without even fighting (effortless, wu wei).


    Train Strategically and Relentlessly

    “Today is a victory over yourself of yesterday; tomorrow is your victory over lesser men.”

    — Miyamoto Musashi

    Train hard. Meditate deeper. Master yourself.

    Become untouchable.

    Leaders are Readers

    For 19 earth-shattering books diving deep into these concepts and more, please check them out on Amazon. Free on Kindle Unlimited. Click HERE

  • How to Fight Tai Chi Internal Power!

    “Four ounces can move a thousand pounds.” – Tai Chi Saying


    Tai Chi and other Chinese internal martial arts contain real, legitimate power—refined over centuries and rooted in deep principles of energy, structure, and strategy.

    However, let’s be honest: many of the so-called “masters” being exposed and defeated by MMA fighters in China are not true representatives of these arts.

    They are misusing the name and philosophy of internal martial arts without embodying the real skill, discipline, or combat-proven ability behind them.

    In short—they are internal power impostors.

    Their failures are not a reflection of Tai Chi itself, but of their own lack of authenticity and experience.

    This Chinese tai chi master tried to fight a MMA fighter!

    I’ve experienced true internal power firsthand.

    It’s real.

    I can apply some of it myself, and we specifically teach these principles at Tier 3 in RAT Synthesis, drawing from the powerful Bagua system and Denis Decker’s gung fu.

    So, how do you deal with a legitimate internal martial arts fighter?

    The answer is simple:

    Avoid close-range engagement.

    Notice all these guys are crossing hands with them?

    Don’t get trapped in cross-hands, sticky hands, or push-hands scenarios.

    Instead, stay at long range and use low-line attacks—specifically, low kicks to break their legs and target the groin.

    Disrupt their power base before they can channel their internal energy.

    Their foundation is both mental and physical—their mind and their legs.

    This is known in Jeet Kune Do as “fencing with the feet.”

    It allows you to control the distance, dictate the pace, and neutralize their strengths.

    This is the ‘non-contact’ phase.

    Once you’ve compromised their foundation and inflicted pain, then close the distance decisively.

    Pain disrupts the mind and blocks their ability to focus or channel internal power
    (Unless they’re an advanced meditator).

    If their hands and arms are still in the way, attack them using destructions like leopard fists and phoenix eye fists.

    That will prevent you from having to go into a cross-arm position.

    Once you penetrate, strike the eyes to disrupt their vision, immediately follow with relentless pressure—like a straight blast—to overwhelm them, then finish the job.

    Alternatively, consider Mike Tyson’s brutal approach:

    Use broken rhythm to set them up—throw off their timing—and deliver a devastating knockout punch.

    This too is the ‘non-contact’ phase.

    Broken Rhythm is one of the legendary Bruce Lee’s Five Ways of Attack, here analyzed and applied by martial arts icon Joe Lewis, Bruce Lee’s student and world champion.

    We teach all Five Ways of Attack in the RAT Synthesis system—giving you the edge in any fight.

    The Mike Tyson entry

    And here is Iron Mike using it in the ring.

    He closes the gap using head movement and broken rhythm (non-contact) which sets them up and knocks them out.

    Right hook with head movement

    That was quick.

    Did you catch it?

    But be warned—these strategies aren’t foolproof.

    A true high-level internal martial arts master is in a league of their own.

    At very high levels they can vibrate their chi through their legs, creating a shockwave effect that causes your kick to bounce off, repelled by their energy.

    Worse, you could get hurt just by making contact.

    Some can even withdraw their testicles, rendering groin strikes useless.

    Then what?

    At that point, your best strategy may be to respectfully disengage—after all, wisdom is knowing when not to fight.

    Then, take the time to study authentic Tai Chi for yourself—and when you’re ready, return to engage in push hands with them.


    The Reality Check

    Internal power is real—but very few have truly mastered it.

    Especially the ability to vibrate shock waves through their body repelling strikes and kicks sending your force boomeranging back into you.

    Or withdrawing testicles.

    That is even rarer.

    That’s why, after just six months of serious training in RAT Synthesis—achieving Tier 1 level—you’ll be equipped to handle 80% of street fighters.

    • They’re not internal masters.
    • They’re not elite-level Silat fighters.
    • They’re not elite combat sport fighters with exceptional physical attributes.
    • They’re not seasoned warriors.

    Conclusion:

    This post exposes the myth of fake Tai Chi “masters” while acknowledging the real power behind authentic internal martial arts. It offers practical strategies for dealing with legitimate internal fighters—avoiding close-range traps, using long-range low kicks, disrupting their base, and employing tactics like broken rhythm and eye jabs to dominate.

    RAT Synthesis integrates these strategies along with advanced principles from Jeet Kune Do, Bagua, and Bruce Lee’s Five Ways of Attack. The key message: adapt, improvise, overcome—and always train smart to win.