Where do you land your lead front kick?

Obviously the answer to this is "it depends".

But I've seen different people practice with a lead front kick or a teep, aiming for either the head, abs/ribs, hips, knees and groin.

Assuming its for the purpose of stopping an incoming attacker, which is your personal preference, and why? How does your form change when you change the target?
I would again say it depends. In a rules bound environment, obviously certain areas (usually the knees) are off limits. In a SD situation they are fair game and I feel the front knee is often ripe for exploitation.

I can’t say I have seen a Teep kick at head level. This is because the body bias is so far forward. A big reason they are so effective for body movement. But hey, if you can pull it off, by all means.

I have seen a Lot of people who could flick a front kick to the face and hardly move their body at all. Sneaky effective in a tournament where a measure of control is required, especially since they would not have much on them anyway.
Lead legs are also great to cancel spin kicks or linear kicks (front, side, axe, etc…).
I had a strong lead leg if I needed it but nothing like a rear leg kick. If you need power and can give up some speed OR need to cover distance, rear leg kick. Rear legs are great fakes as well.
Hope this helps.
 
I can’t say I have seen a Teep kick at head level. This is because the body bias is so far forward. A big reason they are so effective for body movement. But hey, if you can pull it off, by all means.
A friend of mine can do it. I'd have to spar with him/have him show me to see if it's technically a teep, since I'm going off memory. But he definitely is throwing teeps to the body and then will occasionally throw one to the head. Works pretty well and makes you extra cautious when you see it coming, since it's tough to tell in the moment where it's going to land.
 
A friend of mine can do it. I'd have to spar with him/have him show me to see if it's technically a teep, since I'm going off memory. But he definitely is throwing teeps to the body and then will occasionally throw one to the head. Works pretty well and makes you extra cautious when you see it coming, since it's tough to tell in the moment where it's going to land.
There are just some people who are freakishly unnatural with their kicks (think Bill Wallace).
I had a female student who did ballet for fourteen years. Her kicks were not all that technically correct, but she could kick from angles you would think were impossible and still have something on them. I had to rethink my view of whether some things were effective or not. Never deviated from our version of 'correct' but she was a valid, effective exception that could not be ignored.
Especially her hook kick. She can have her body turned and throw her leg like a back kick and make a perfect hook kick out of it. It is quite a sight. Unnatural looking as heck, but man does it work, especially as a counter-kick.
When she went to tournaments, I made certain to raise the fact with refs and judges because she had missed points in the past simply by corner judges who stopped looking too soon or not believing what they saw.
 
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