Beating Their Centre (Without Them Even Knowing)
Alright, let’s clear one thing up first.
Yes, some of the training pics I post look a bit... punchy. That’s on purpose — because if I put up a photo of me smiling with a cuppa in the backyard, you might not guess I’m about to teach you how to control a human under pressure. Then again, if enough of you weirdos ask, maybe I’ll start doing backyard brutality shots. Let me know.
Anyway, let’s talk about beating someone’s centre — one of the most important concepts in Raw Combatives, and something that works across stand-up, grappling, weapons, and more.
What Does “Beating Their Centre” Even Mean?
When I say centre, I’m talking about a person’s physical midline — where their power, balance and reaction time lives.
If you’re centre-to-centre, you’re in a direct battle. You strike, they strike. You shift, they shift. It becomes a contest of speed, strength, or timing — and that’s not where we want to be.
But when you beat their centre?
You’re now off their radar. They’re no longer in control. They’re reacting to you, chasing you, and trying to find their structure again.
That’s where you dominate.
How to Beat the Centre (Without Footwork First)
A common mistake is to try and beat someone’s centre by stepping. But when you move your feet first, the other person just adjusts — and boom, you’re back in a head-on clash. Instead, here’s the trick: use your body subtly.
In Raw combatives classes, I often use a sway or a shift — a little snake-like move to test which side I want to enter on. It’s a feel thing. You’re reading their alignment, structure, response time.
Sometimes that movement is big. Sometimes it’s a few millimetres. But the better you get, the less you need. It becomes invisible to the untrained eye. You move first, with intent. Then the feet follow if needed — not the other way around.
This is a whole-body skill that takes timing, spatial awareness, and trust in your own positioning. But when you get it right? It feels like magic.
Why It Works in Every Arena
Beating the centre isn’t just for stand-up fighting.
You’ll see it in:
Grappling and clinch work
Stick fighting and weapons flow
Ground control and transitions
Even social confrontations, if you know what to look for
Once you’re off the centreline and controlling from an angle, you control the fight.
Their balance is compromised.
Their reaction is slowed.
Their options shrink.
The beauty? You might already be doing it — you just didn’t have a name for it. But once you understand the why behind it, your growth skyrockets.
The Drill That Gets Misused (And Why It Matters)
Here’s a heads-up: most people butcher the pummelling drill.
They treat it like a shoulder dance — arms in, arms out, spin, swap, repeat. But that’s missing the point. The drill isn’t about movement — it’s about positional dominance.
Beating the centre. Reading pressure. Creating angles. It’s a laboratory for learning this stuff. Do it right, and you’re learning how to own the inside. Do it wrong, and you’re just wasting time.
Look, I can’t give it all away here — not because I’m being secretive, but because some of this stuff needs to be felt. Watched. Played with. Understood through experience.
But if you take one thing from this:
Beating someone’s centre means you’re thinking ahead.
You’re not trying to win a clash — you’re sidestepping the fight entirely by owning the space where they feel strongest.
You move first.
You move smarter.
You dominate quietly.
Now that’s RAW!
Try less, do more.
(Snake technique optional... but recommended.)