Author | Comments |
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Resident 729 posts |
Friday 27th April 2007 at 21:52 Do you guys see a future in traditional martial arts that aren't olmpic sports? "no weapon formed against me shall prosper" |
1319 posts |
Friday 27th April 2007 at 21:53 'traditional' arts will be around for years, not everyone wants to take into the cage, etc. The Admin Guy |
Resident 729 posts |
Friday 27th April 2007 at 22:03 you dont need to take judo, TKD, BJJ into the cage or any competition i was just asking of people believe that the rise of MMA will open peoples eyes to the 'realism' of martial arts "no weapon formed against me shall prosper" |
1319 posts |
Friday 27th April 2007 at 23:21 I still don't think MMA is as big as some make out, it's got a LONG way to go yet, but atleast it's getting there. The Admin Guy |
Regular 92 posts |
Monday 30th April 2007 at 18:01 Chi is my opinion is nothing more than the electrical force that controls your muscles. It's an imbalance between calcium and potassium. I'm sure that it can be focued, but not to the extent that you can throw it. Blue Belt - Gracie JJ |
Spectator 31 posts |
Thursday 3rd May 2007 at 05:32 while it is important to note olympic sports are really pretty useless in the street, i think traditional arts definitely have a place in the ma world(they ARE the MA world!)but it is important to cut out the BS techniques...if somebody is attacking you or your family you wont be afforded a "picturesque" scenario. however, it is important to note that cutting out the BS doesnt mean turning karate into kickboxing, there are distinctive valuable techniqes in many arts. Fu Jow Pai Kung Fu, Gracie Jiu Jitsu, Boxing |
Regular 92 posts |
Sunday 6th May 2007 at 22:30 Not really, complicated forms and techniques dramatically increase coordination. Having a good tornado kick will make your roundhouse better. BS techniques are still very important. Blue Belt - Gracie JJ |
Spectator 31 posts |
Monday 7th May 2007 at 03:30 i disagree, doing 1000 roundhouses will make your roundhouse better Fu Jow Pai Kung Fu, Gracie Jiu Jitsu, Boxing |
Spectator 45 posts |
Monday 7th May 2007 at 21:38 Well as somobody who started out training in Traditional Ju-Jitsu I think its an unfortunate fact that there just isn't that level of interest in tradional stuff anymore. The amount of new people who come to the club and say 'I wanna be an MMA fighter' is unbelievable and if you even try and include the traditional values in training nine out of ten times people are gonna loose inetrest. "Its not the chances we get in life, its what we do with them that matters" |
Regular 92 posts |
Tuesday 8th May 2007 at 14:42 I'm a traditional martial artist and I've done MMA. One tournament I was pretty successful at and the other I wasn't so much. The problem is that on the street you want to use the most effective techniques possible, in MMA you can't do that because they are extremely dangerous. Blue Belt - Gracie JJ |
Spectator 31 posts |
Wednesday 9th May 2007 at 03:58 this is true, while MMA is as real as it gets while being LEGAL, there are still a host of illegal techniques which can be used. they are found in kung fu, karate etc...and from what i can tell i it is epitomozed in Krav Maga Fu Jow Pai Kung Fu, Gracie Jiu Jitsu, Boxing |
Regular 33 posts |
Wednesday 9th May 2007 at 12:46 If you are attacked by someone with no formal training it will always be strange to deal with. They won`t always come in with the right hand yee haa punch. The same can be said if the fight goes to the ground. Getting good position will be at the back of their mind. Punching out your lights will be their priority. The edge comes with reading the situation and keeping your cool. Take away all the rules and you can fight them no holds barred. Trouble is cos you know where and how to strike you may find yourself in hot water. As you said previously one palm heel and the jobs a good un. The authorities may take a dim view of you plucking their eyeballs out. Which takes us nicely back to the boring old reasonable force issue. "Bee" |
1319 posts |
Wednesday 9th May 2007 at 20:04 One problem every style has with so-called illegal techniques is that you simply can't practice them. The Admin Guy |
Spectator 31 posts |
Wednesday 9th May 2007 at 22:32 this is true, and it does limit the efficiency of many techniques, but just becuase i cant practice kicking an actual person in the nads it doesnt mean it wont work Fu Jow Pai Kung Fu, Gracie Jiu Jitsu, Boxing |
1319 posts |
Thursday 10th May 2007 at 23:23 Kicking someone in the nads you can practise. The Admin Guy |
Regular 235 posts |
Monday 28th May 2007 at 13:30 Well usuall, you can either practise speed to the wrong target, or accuracy to the right target (eye pokes and groin strikes). |
Spectator 20 posts |
Monday 28th May 2007 at 23:55 I practiced Karate for years and we always worked on the apporach of use whatever workd, I think this is very traditional approach that is found with everyone in MMA they use all sorts of styles to make them more effective inheir sportg arena. What I am trying to say is that often the paths we all take are a lot more similar than not! Having said that I would practice baseball bat do against some of those ufc monsters and would still loose!!!! I like pies |
Spectator 20 posts |
Thursday 7th June 2007 at 07:43 As I've not seen all the UFC fights I cannot fully comment. |
Spectator 9 posts |
Thursday 7th June 2007 at 16:18 Not all traditional styles train to punch the air! |
1319 posts |
Thursday 7th June 2007 at 17:02 I've never known or even heard of a professional MMA fighter have that sort of attitude. The Admin Guy |