INfighting, Develop your Close-Range Combat Reflexes (Streaming) | YMAA

Home >> Publishing >> Streaming videos

To view the streaming videos, the player requires:

Desktop Computers:
Requires Chrome 65+, Edge 16+, Firefox 60+, Internet Explorer 11+, or Safari 10+ or newer.

Mobile Devices and Tablets:
Requires Android 4.4+ or iOS 11+ or newer. Chrome 63+ or Safari 10+ or newer.





INfighting, Develop your Close-Range Combat Reflexes (Streaming)

by Rory Miller

Infighting has the most possibilities, and thus the most variables, of any fighting range. And it is quick. Distance is time and if you're fighting at zero distance you have no time to waste. Offense and defense cannot be separated. You must be able to act on your opponent without needing to know what the opponent is doing, because by the time you know, it is too late.

Code: S2887Duration: 79 min

Average: 2.8 (5 votes)

Develop your close-range combat reflexes with Rory Miller.

Infighting is close-range combat, in which you defend yourself while simultaneously controlling the opponent’s limbs, transferring his momentum, and forcing him off center.

You will learn basic Infighting Building Blocks, including
• Moving a Body
• Locks
• Takedowns
• Gouges
• Striking
• Kicking
• Leverage
• Strangles and Chokes
• Spine Manipulation
• 9 Video Lessons

“What is infighting? You can call it standing grappling. You can call it a variation on clinch range. Infighting is close contact, chest-against-chest, halitosis range. You are close enough to throw, sweep, strike, strangle, gouge, bite...and not too close to kick, if you know how.

Infighting has the most possibilities, and thus the most variables, of any fighting range. And it is quick. Distance is time and if you're fighting at zero distance you have no time to waste. Offense and defense cannot be separated. You must be able to act on your opponent without needing to know what the opponent is doing, because by the time you know, it is too late.

Many traditional arts work better once you play with them as infighting systems. Infighting is the perfect range, and the perfect game, to integrate your other fighting skills into a unified package that functions below the conscious level.”
- Rory Miller

Program also features Coach Jeff Burger (YMAA author of ATTACK the ATTACK).

Rory Miller is a writer and teacher living peacefully in the Pacific Northwest. He served for seventeen years in corrections as an officer and sergeant working maximum security, booking and mental health; leading a tactical team; and teaching subjects ranging from Defensive Tactics and Use of Force to First Aid, and Crisis Communications with the Mentally Ill. For fourteen months he was an advisor to the Iraqi Corrections System working in Baghdad and Kurdish Sulaymaniyah. He received a BS degree in Psychology; served in the National Guard as a Combat Medic (91A/B); and earned college varsities in judo and fencing and received a mokuroku in jujutsu.

Watching Streaming Videos on Your Account

Watch all your streaming videos by logging into your YMAA account. Your video library is located at the "My Videos" section.

Streaming videos require a constant internet connection. Your streaming video is returnable if you are not satisfied. Downloading videos is not available at this time.

The video player will automatically detect your Chromecast or AppleTV if it is connected to your TV—so you can watch the videos on your TV. The videos will play at the highest quality possible depending your internet connection. The better your connection, the better the quality of the video will be.

To watch the videos on your TV using Chromecast find and click on the button . To watch through your Apple TV via Airplay find and click on the button .

Please email [email protected] with questions, feedback, or let us know the next streaming video titles you’d like to see.

You may find more information about on the streaming videos FAQ page.