Disco
Green Belt
- Joined
- May 22, 2010
- Messages
- 127
- Reaction score
- 2
Oh I don't know about all that. Seems to me that sparring more than one person is much more than an exercise in futility. For one thing, it'll teach you very quickly that mobility is king. There was a video a while back of one man taking on three or four. Furiously backpedaling and landing good solid jabs on one nose after another. He moved backward, but laterally as well. Very effective. And very trainable. (Yeah, not a word. Sue me.)
Even if it goes badly, it's a good lesson in keeping your head about you under duress. And that's an invaluable lesson in and of itself.
Now, if someone does multiple sparring hoping to look good, now that is futile.
Stuart
That video you mentioned is a perfect example of the futility stated. Granted, he back peddled and was punching, but they kept coming at him. Since he didn't look as though he was a trained individual, what he did was instinctive and he did a pretty good job at fending them off, but not putting them down and escaping. As for keeping one's head under duress, that's highly dependent on the individual. Regardless of training, some folks have that ability and some don't. One will never really know until they encounter a real honest to goodness threat. As for teaching that mobility is king is an understatement, this aspect also is instinctive.
Having 2 or more attackers in the confines of the dojo/dojang, along with the mindset that this is nothing but an exercise and your not in any real danger fosters it's a "game" attitude. You can't escape because it's a confined area and you can't put your attackers down, so in reality you've accomplished nothing but getting tired and hit a lot.