zDom
Senior Master
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2006
- Messages
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OK, lets try this again.
This is my thread, so we are going to do it my way (er..I hope ). So many attempts at discussing these issues get bogged down by the same ol arguments, so Im going to lay some ground rules in the hope we can have a civil, productive, mutually beneficial discussion.
(Dont make me push that Report to Moderator button!! )
Ground rules:
1) NO discussion/arguments relating to the burden of proof. For the sake of this discussion, anecdotes and personal experience will be taken at face value. No requirement for claims to be substantiated by videotape proof although specific videotaped fights MAY be referred to as examples.
2) NO discussions on whose training methods are superior/inferior or effective/ineffective. For the sake of discussion we will assume that everybody is training hard and well. There are strong and weak practitioners in ANY school, kwan, gymnasium, fighting system.
3) NO discussions on what is fighting and what isnt. For the sake of this discussion, we can assume that anything from point-style sparring to wrestling to NHB has lessons that are applicable to real self defense situations while none completely replicate what may or may not happen outside of competition.
4) Just because we havent SEEN it used on video does NOT, for the sake of this discussion, automatically mean that it is therefore proven not effective. We will assume the possibility that it simply hasnt been tried by someone with the skill to make it work.
5) Im probably missing a rule that will sidetrack the discussion. Those sidetrack issues arent allowed either
6) If you have an issue with any of these ground rules, please take them up in a new thread. Bring my attention to it and Ill argue them there. This is not the time nor place to second-guess the above assumptions.
Now on to the TOPICS:
a) What can traditional martial artists learn from the recent mixed martial art systems?
b) In what ways could mixed martial arts be improved by concepts from traditional martial arts not yet being used?
Ill kick things off with some thoughts Ive had on these subjects but never got around to discussing, having been sidetracked by other discussions.
-=-=-=-=-
Relating to a) What can traditional martial artists learn from the recent mixed martial art systems?
MMA is a great game for training the transitions back and forth between different fighting ranges - kicking range, punching range, stand-up grappling/throwing, ground grappling.
Games that cater to kickers, such as point-style and Olympic sparring, kickboxing, etc., can establish some bad habits: if you know the guy is not allowed to grab your leg and throw you, you are much more likely to use kicks in ways that might get you hurt in self defense situations.
The MMA game shows the importance of TIMING when using kicks:
Wrong time = tossed on your butt HARD.
Right time = easy end to a conflict (such as GSPs well-timed roundhouse to the head in fight vs Hughes, or turning back kick in a previous fight).
*MMA has also demonstrated well how devastating Muay Thai-type knee strikes can be. As it doesnt take a WHOLE lot of training to pull a head down into an uprising knee (as compared with learning a jump-spinning wheel kick, for example), I think learning to watch out for, avoid and block the upward knee to the head is something all martial artists should think about in their training. I would love to hear comments from others on this subject.
MMA has also shown just how BAD letting someone get in the mount position on top of you can be. Being grounded and pounded on the street could end up being a ticket to the hospital with no referee there to stop things. Training to avoid letting someone achieve the mount and how to quickly get them off of you, I think, is something else all martial artists should seriously think about.
MMA has also shown how useful various submissions can be such as the rear naked choke, armbar, and kimuras. RNC and armbars are techniques I have always considered to be very effective tools. MMA matches have demonstrated I was not wrong in my opinion/theory.
I put quotes around submissions because, in self defense, these can cause devastating damage. Dislocating an elbow or shoulder may put them in shock, and will definitely make them less of a threat should they continue to attack. RNC can put someone to sleep or worse, if held for a long time, can cause brain damage or even kill someone.
If you dont have these in your toolbox, I recommend GETTING them.
Conditioning IS important. It doesnt matter how good your techniques are if you gas out and are unable to use them. Maybe not AS important in self defense as in a ring, as self defense situations tend to be shorter, but I subscribe to the better safe than sorry line of thinking.
One thing I think Pride Fighting has demonstrated, since it seems to let things go a bit further than UFC, is that it aint over till its over. I mean, I have seen some fighters weather a devastating flurry either during standup or during a ground and pound and, by keeping their head and blocking/covering, keep conscious and turn the fight around, even coming up with a win sometimes.
Not to be confused with being saved by the bell, but then again, there may not be a bell in self defense situations, but very often there is a time limit in that law enforcement or friends or even compassionate strangers may arrive to intervene.
One of the weaknesses I see in the MMA game (but is probably unavoidable due to safety issues) is how the mat mitigates the effect of throws. In MMA matches, a throw seems to be merely a means to an end: get them to the ground for the ground and pound or submission.
On most surfaces a throw, IMO, would be a fight-ending technique. Not always, but many times. Especially with an untrained attacker who is not used to keeping his head from bouncing off the ground upon impact.
Not talking about some of the less ballistic takedowns, mind you, where both people end up tumbling to the ground. But the judo-type throws, scoops, body slams, suplexes, etc., where there is a hard impact on solid surfaces are devastating.
...
Moving on to topic b) In what ways could mixed martial arts be improved by concepts from traditional martial arts not yet being used?
I dont see a lot of effective feinting used. By effective, I mean feints that REALLY make the opponent think they are going to be hit by the feint but in actuality open them up to your REAL intention.
If you truly deceive your opponent with a feint, they will be VERY vulnerable to that real technique.
Great example is GSPs recent knockout of Hughes. He never even SAW the kick and the ones you dont see usually hit you harder. MUCH harder.
Part of the problem, as I see it, is during stand-up in MMA matches almost nobody is using body shots. Everything is going to the head (with the exception of the Muay Thai leg shots).
In my ITF-type fighting Ive noticed that what works for boxers also works for me: if you make them fear those body shots, their hands will drop and open them up for a clear, hard shot to the head.
I am not seeing a lot of attacks in MMA matches which go after the solar plexus. While training abdominal strength can reduce the size of this target, I find there is always a quarter-sized target to hit which can seriously affect their ability to breathe.
This goes back to the above point: even if you dont completely knock the wind out of them, if you can just stun the diaphragm enough to get them to drop their hands, that head shot becomes much easier to land.
Powerful kicking is a useful tool. Slapping MT kicks into the legs can chip away at them or weaken the knees. But during the last UFC, an undercard fight showed that one powerful, committed kick to the leg can drop someone.
Again, going back to the above comments about body shots (keeping in mind that you must have timing to safely pull them off), a powerful blast to the body can end a fight as quickly as a kick to the head.
With the exception of the turning back kick I saw GSP throw, I really havent seen this tool used much, if at all, in the UFC/Pride/IFL matches I've watched over the years.
This power kick to the gut could, I think, be achieved easily enough in the very same way the fighter in the recent UFC set up the power roundhouse to the leg: he feinted a shot to the head and unleased the kick.
So feint the shot to head (to bring their arms up, preventing a block), and of course timing to make sure a shoot or leg-grab doesnt happen, and blasting the ribs or solar plexus could very well end them or knock enough wind out of them to enable a finishing flurry.
=-=-=-=-=
That pretty much is my thoughts in a (rather lengthy) nutshell.
Now Im very interested in hearing from other TMAists (JMAs, CMAs, FMAs, etc.) as well as MMAists (and other fighting arts that are typically grouped with them such as wrestling, Sambo, etc.)
I hope this works out well and we can finally get to sharing things from differing perspectives as opposed to getting bogged down in the same old arguments.
This is my thread, so we are going to do it my way (er..I hope ). So many attempts at discussing these issues get bogged down by the same ol arguments, so Im going to lay some ground rules in the hope we can have a civil, productive, mutually beneficial discussion.
(Dont make me push that Report to Moderator button!! )
Ground rules:
1) NO discussion/arguments relating to the burden of proof. For the sake of this discussion, anecdotes and personal experience will be taken at face value. No requirement for claims to be substantiated by videotape proof although specific videotaped fights MAY be referred to as examples.
2) NO discussions on whose training methods are superior/inferior or effective/ineffective. For the sake of discussion we will assume that everybody is training hard and well. There are strong and weak practitioners in ANY school, kwan, gymnasium, fighting system.
3) NO discussions on what is fighting and what isnt. For the sake of this discussion, we can assume that anything from point-style sparring to wrestling to NHB has lessons that are applicable to real self defense situations while none completely replicate what may or may not happen outside of competition.
4) Just because we havent SEEN it used on video does NOT, for the sake of this discussion, automatically mean that it is therefore proven not effective. We will assume the possibility that it simply hasnt been tried by someone with the skill to make it work.
5) Im probably missing a rule that will sidetrack the discussion. Those sidetrack issues arent allowed either
6) If you have an issue with any of these ground rules, please take them up in a new thread. Bring my attention to it and Ill argue them there. This is not the time nor place to second-guess the above assumptions.
Now on to the TOPICS:
a) What can traditional martial artists learn from the recent mixed martial art systems?
b) In what ways could mixed martial arts be improved by concepts from traditional martial arts not yet being used?
Ill kick things off with some thoughts Ive had on these subjects but never got around to discussing, having been sidetracked by other discussions.
-=-=-=-=-
Relating to a) What can traditional martial artists learn from the recent mixed martial art systems?
MMA is a great game for training the transitions back and forth between different fighting ranges - kicking range, punching range, stand-up grappling/throwing, ground grappling.
Games that cater to kickers, such as point-style and Olympic sparring, kickboxing, etc., can establish some bad habits: if you know the guy is not allowed to grab your leg and throw you, you are much more likely to use kicks in ways that might get you hurt in self defense situations.
The MMA game shows the importance of TIMING when using kicks:
Wrong time = tossed on your butt HARD.
Right time = easy end to a conflict (such as GSPs well-timed roundhouse to the head in fight vs Hughes, or turning back kick in a previous fight).
*MMA has also demonstrated well how devastating Muay Thai-type knee strikes can be. As it doesnt take a WHOLE lot of training to pull a head down into an uprising knee (as compared with learning a jump-spinning wheel kick, for example), I think learning to watch out for, avoid and block the upward knee to the head is something all martial artists should think about in their training. I would love to hear comments from others on this subject.
MMA has also shown just how BAD letting someone get in the mount position on top of you can be. Being grounded and pounded on the street could end up being a ticket to the hospital with no referee there to stop things. Training to avoid letting someone achieve the mount and how to quickly get them off of you, I think, is something else all martial artists should seriously think about.
MMA has also shown how useful various submissions can be such as the rear naked choke, armbar, and kimuras. RNC and armbars are techniques I have always considered to be very effective tools. MMA matches have demonstrated I was not wrong in my opinion/theory.
I put quotes around submissions because, in self defense, these can cause devastating damage. Dislocating an elbow or shoulder may put them in shock, and will definitely make them less of a threat should they continue to attack. RNC can put someone to sleep or worse, if held for a long time, can cause brain damage or even kill someone.
If you dont have these in your toolbox, I recommend GETTING them.
Conditioning IS important. It doesnt matter how good your techniques are if you gas out and are unable to use them. Maybe not AS important in self defense as in a ring, as self defense situations tend to be shorter, but I subscribe to the better safe than sorry line of thinking.
One thing I think Pride Fighting has demonstrated, since it seems to let things go a bit further than UFC, is that it aint over till its over. I mean, I have seen some fighters weather a devastating flurry either during standup or during a ground and pound and, by keeping their head and blocking/covering, keep conscious and turn the fight around, even coming up with a win sometimes.
Not to be confused with being saved by the bell, but then again, there may not be a bell in self defense situations, but very often there is a time limit in that law enforcement or friends or even compassionate strangers may arrive to intervene.
One of the weaknesses I see in the MMA game (but is probably unavoidable due to safety issues) is how the mat mitigates the effect of throws. In MMA matches, a throw seems to be merely a means to an end: get them to the ground for the ground and pound or submission.
On most surfaces a throw, IMO, would be a fight-ending technique. Not always, but many times. Especially with an untrained attacker who is not used to keeping his head from bouncing off the ground upon impact.
Not talking about some of the less ballistic takedowns, mind you, where both people end up tumbling to the ground. But the judo-type throws, scoops, body slams, suplexes, etc., where there is a hard impact on solid surfaces are devastating.
...
Moving on to topic b) In what ways could mixed martial arts be improved by concepts from traditional martial arts not yet being used?
I dont see a lot of effective feinting used. By effective, I mean feints that REALLY make the opponent think they are going to be hit by the feint but in actuality open them up to your REAL intention.
If you truly deceive your opponent with a feint, they will be VERY vulnerable to that real technique.
Great example is GSPs recent knockout of Hughes. He never even SAW the kick and the ones you dont see usually hit you harder. MUCH harder.
Part of the problem, as I see it, is during stand-up in MMA matches almost nobody is using body shots. Everything is going to the head (with the exception of the Muay Thai leg shots).
In my ITF-type fighting Ive noticed that what works for boxers also works for me: if you make them fear those body shots, their hands will drop and open them up for a clear, hard shot to the head.
I am not seeing a lot of attacks in MMA matches which go after the solar plexus. While training abdominal strength can reduce the size of this target, I find there is always a quarter-sized target to hit which can seriously affect their ability to breathe.
This goes back to the above point: even if you dont completely knock the wind out of them, if you can just stun the diaphragm enough to get them to drop their hands, that head shot becomes much easier to land.
Powerful kicking is a useful tool. Slapping MT kicks into the legs can chip away at them or weaken the knees. But during the last UFC, an undercard fight showed that one powerful, committed kick to the leg can drop someone.
Again, going back to the above comments about body shots (keeping in mind that you must have timing to safely pull them off), a powerful blast to the body can end a fight as quickly as a kick to the head.
With the exception of the turning back kick I saw GSP throw, I really havent seen this tool used much, if at all, in the UFC/Pride/IFL matches I've watched over the years.
This power kick to the gut could, I think, be achieved easily enough in the very same way the fighter in the recent UFC set up the power roundhouse to the leg: he feinted a shot to the head and unleased the kick.
So feint the shot to head (to bring their arms up, preventing a block), and of course timing to make sure a shoot or leg-grab doesnt happen, and blasting the ribs or solar plexus could very well end them or knock enough wind out of them to enable a finishing flurry.
=-=-=-=-=
That pretty much is my thoughts in a (rather lengthy) nutshell.
Now Im very interested in hearing from other TMAists (JMAs, CMAs, FMAs, etc.) as well as MMAists (and other fighting arts that are typically grouped with them such as wrestling, Sambo, etc.)
I hope this works out well and we can finally get to sharing things from differing perspectives as opposed to getting bogged down in the same old arguments.