What is the "invisible fight" and why does it matter for Prates?
The "invisible fight" is controlling distance and reactions before exchanges start—baiting, probing, and framing so opponents commit mistakes, letting Prates land decisive counters.
Video Summary
Carlos Prates transformed his game after fighting over 100 Muay Thai matches in Thailand, which built calmness and repetition-based timing.
A switch between narrow and wider stances (southpaw base) improved defense, long-range kicks, and quick recovery after strikes.
The "invisible fight" focuses on pre-exchange distance control: baiting reactions, probing with jabs/low kicks, and framing to force mistakes.
Superior balance and the ability to reset immediately after kicks lets him continue attacks while opponents think the exchange is over.
Knockouts come from refined mechanics and timing—not raw power—using feints, lateral movement, and well-timed power shots.
The "invisible fight" is controlling distance and reactions before exchanges start—baiting, probing, and framing so opponents commit mistakes, letting Prates land decisive counters.
Frequent Muay Thai fights taught him to be emotionally detached, improved balance and recovery after kicks, and developed long-range tools like the rear knee and teep.
He operates from a southpaw base, alternating between a narrow Muay Thai stance for defense and a wider stance for the invisible fight, using small steps, shuffles and lateral movement to manage space.
Quickly regaining balance after kicks keeps him in position to follow up; opponents think the exchange is over, so his immediate reset allows unexpected continuation and power shots.
No — his knockouts come from precise mechanics, timing and setup rather than raw strength, maximizing force through technique and well-timed risks.
"Carlos Proz learned how to fight from watching animals... Animals don't fight for points, they fight to kill."
"He was just another fighter with a bad record... Most fighters start off with five wins and four losses; their careers are basically over."
"In Thailand, you don't have a sponsor... You have to fight to make money."
"He fights out of a southpaw stance... This is where he develops his long range strikes."
"Each animal has its own powers and its own weaknesses."
"After losing... I learned a lot of things."
"Most fighters are trying to win exchanges. Carlos is trying to end the fight."