[QUOTE=Adventure427;752469]This is for all the trolls…and the newbs…(even tho im kinda one
)…and people who are genuinely curious as to why they feel certain arts “dont work”…Maybe this can put the argument to rest.[/quote]
it will never be put to rest. too many people, too many opinions.
Every art designed for fighting…EVERY art that i can think of…if you strip it down…has basic elements used for fighting.
that was actually never in dispute. However, you are learning to fight within a certain realm, which may or may not transfer into other areas. MMA training transfers to other areas well - except maybe the real of sport tkd. Sport TKD doesn’t transfer well ANYWHERE, though it can be trained to fit. That said, the main issue is training methods, not so much the style. However, if the style in general is known for sorry ass training methods, then you can’t say a whole lot else about the style.
Every art that i can think of seeks to finish a fight primarily with a strike or a submission. Every powerful strike that lands in the right place at the right time can end the fight. (Notice i said at the right place at the right time and powerful) So to say a certain striking art “doesn’t work” doesn’t make sense. People used to say this about kung fu to me..i’d say “ok, so if i punch you in the face…that doesn’t work?”
probablility. What are the chances that you will hit someone with a jump spinning crescent kick? what is the chance that you will hit them with a roundhouse kick?
Then a submission move…if it is put on you…will either break a body part or cause you to pass out. Every fighting art that does not seek to strike to end the fight has a move like this. If I break your arm/wrist/leg/neck/cause you to pass out…whatever…does that not work?
just because the style has it means nothing. some locks are easier to escape than others - a standing arm bar is a good example. when you are on the ground, you maintain more control over your opponent - the less space they have to move, the easier it is for them to escape.
What people doubt is usually not whether the technique itself would WORK per se (even though thats how they communicate it)…its whether THEY could LAND the technique themself (or the practitioners they’ve seen).
not really. it’s probability, like I mentioned above. Theoretically, a kick to the head is great. legs are stronger than hands, it can easily KO a guy. Realistically, when you put your leg that high, you also have a higher probability of being taken down, as you are already off balance. nobody is saying that high kicks absolutely don’t work, just that common sense and previous engagements tell us that hand strikes and low kicks are safer. most of us have probably used - and landed - the very techniques we are talking against.
Which brings us back to the basics. If i have trained a strike enough times…and can hit hard enough and fast enough and as many times as needed to end the fight…then the art works…whatever it is. Every art has something to contribute. If it is a FIGHTING art, and it has lasted some time…chances are there are some aspects to it…so that you COULD (in theory) make it effective. This goes for grappling too.
you keep reiterating the same thing. See my above reply about training methodology.
I think alot of people are afraid to train hard…and so they choose an art they feel they can ‘baby’.
interesting. Please explain.
And maybe it just so happens that some arts that people feel DONT WORK…are just arts that alot of people take that aren’t very disciplined enough to develop much skill.
or are arts with inefficient training methods and strategies tied into them.
but since when does getting punched in the face, kicked in the nuts or getting a joint broken “not work”???
getting kicked in the nuts really doesn’t work the way people think it does. I’ve been kicked there a few times and didn’t feel it until AFTER the confrontation, which is too late. I’ve seen that happen to others too.