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Yu knows she can’t keep this pace. She tries to re-establish distance, but Steel smells blood. He charges forward with a two-punch combination. Yu sidesteps and lands a perfect spinning backfist. Steel wobbles but doesn’t go down. In desperation, he lunges with a left hook. Yu leans back, counters with a straight cross—but Steel absorbs it and finally lands his own right hand flush on Yu’s jaw.
Steel increases pressure. He starts cutting off the ring more effectively. Yu lands a teep, but Steel catches her leg and drives her into the fence. A dirty boxing exchange follows—Yu is uncomfortable. Steel lands a hard body hook. Yu’s movement slows. Late in the round, Steel traps her in the corner and lands an overhand right. Yu survives but is hurt. Round: Steel 10–9. angela yu vs colt steel
Her signature technique is the question mark kick —a deceptive front kick that arcs into a head kick at the last second. Against an aggressive fighter like Colt Steel, Yu’s game plan would be obvious but difficult to execute: keep Steel at range, attack the lead leg, and counter his lunging punches with straight rights and oblique kicks. Yu knows she can’t keep this pace
That said, if the fight were held in a larger ring with no cage, Yu’s footwork could frustrate Steel to a unanimous decision victory. But in a standard enclosed space? Steel’s pressure tells the story. Yu sidesteps and lands a perfect spinning backfist
Colt Steel is not a martial artist. He is a force of nature. His fights are short, violent, and often end with someone unconscious. Steel doesn’t feint or set traps; he walks forward, cuts off the ring, and throws heat-seeking hooks to the head and body. His chin is granite, his left hook to the liver is fight-ending, and his pressure breaks even seasoned veterans.