In any case, any situation where you need immediate medical attention, I would define as serious physical damage. I consider Joe Theisman's football injury to be serious physical damage.
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Sais, Nunchuks, and Kamas are originally all farm tools.
MMA has been widely publicized, by media and by MMA reps, as being LESS dangerous than many other rough sports, like hockey, football... A super-quick internet search should make that pretty clear. Also, as I recall from being reprimanded, elbow/knee strikes to the head are generally only allowed in pro MMA, yes? So, it's not like the average MMA joe is going around getting kneed in the face every Saturday open mat? Maybe it's different in Maine, but...
Also, since you seem to know enough of all TMAs to dismiss them as a group, here's a brief history lesson.
1. Sai are ancient, and have only EVER been recorded as being used as weapons, originating in India, I believe. As i recall, they were most likely the Old-School Indian equivalent of a cops night stick.
2. Nunchuku, (Not "nunchucks/numchucks" unless it's ninja turtles, or something, please!) Were not Okinawan farm tools, but rather more of a whip utilized by the Okinawan Nobility to beat the daylights out of the peasantry. They're also not really traditional. Bruce Lee came along and suddenly people made up a whole bunch of flashy Nunchaku tournament forms.
3. Kama. Finally. HERE, you have hit upon the farm implement. Kudos.
4, 5, 6. Tonfa, Bo, and Stick, other common martial arts weapons, are ALSO, not derived from farm implements... The wide variety of Chinese weapons are not generally farm implements either, although I'm not discounting the possibility, there are a LOOOT of weapons in "kung fu."
Then you wouldn't do that particular move. You would assess the situation and make adjustments. In that situation shown in the vid, it was very smart, because it restrained the drunk.
Since I can do that one movement in so many ways, it makes it easy for my mind to remember the technique. Rhonda Rousey is a prime example of this phenomenon, because she defeats ALL of her opponents with the arm bar,
The person who can, in the split second of the moment, scan the entire room and determine that NONE of the people are friendly enough with the aggressor to come to their aid with the proverbial beer bottle, choose which technique to perform, and then perform it with good results is, I might suppose, of such preternatural skill and ability to be above the need for learning ANY fighting style. That sort of awareness, speed, and dexterity should be more than enough to keep you safe, you super-ninja, you.
Also, as Mr. Hanzou has mentioned time and again, in the heat of the moment, you don't have time to decide which technique to perform, which is why learning so many is just silly. You have to drill one or two so that they come without thinking, all else is wasted time. Apparently. I would assume that applies to this situation too, yes? So, If I won't be able to react with a decision to palm strike rather than punch, perhaps the average MMA fellow wouldn't be able to react with the decision to grapple or stand? Not my views, just asking about the ones I've seen stated...
Yes, for a variety of reasons. However, it IS dependent on the situation. If I'm fighting multiple opponents, I'd use something more akin to boxing and muay thai to stay on my feet and move around as much as possible. If I happen to get taken down, I'll use bjj to get back on my feet as quickly as possible. If I'm fighting some oversized wrestler roid freak, I'm using bjj.
I have a coworker who recently informed me that he wants to learn Shotokan and Systema, so that he can use the power of Shotokan until he begins to tire, and then switch to Systema to use the force of the dead weight of his body until he gets his stamina back. In the course of the fight, that is. Not relation, just random association I thought I would share.
Boxing is mobile, and its quick strikes is pretty solid if you got a lot of guys coming at you. I wouldn't do kicks, because there's a chance that you could be taken down.
There's also a chance that being trained to hit skulls with padded gloves is likely to get your hand smunched on a skull, when the gloves come off. A broken hand/wrist can be pretty hampering in a "real street fight", so I hear. It might not be common, but it's common enough to be a worry. Probably shouldn't punch OR kick then I suppose. Although, with a good ground game, it'sounds like that's the place to be in a fight, so maybe kicks are a good way to get taken down, and thus take it to the ground? It's also not that common to be taken down while stomp-kicking a knee, perhaps, thinks I...
Sure, if properly trained, and removed of antiquated methods.
Which is exactly how most of us like our TMAs, I do believe. I'm assuming this conversation is "well-trained MMA vs well-trained TMA," not "well-trained MMA vs after-school program TMA with free ice-cream," isn't it? Does that mean we're all in agreement? TMAs generally work well if the practitioner learns and trains well, and not otherwise, exactly as does MMA?
One thing I dislike about TMAs is their insistence that their way is the best way because its "old".
I would dislike that too, if I had ever met a TMA school that thought that way. I haven't yet though, so I still like TMAs, in general.
If I was instructing a TMA, I would teach all of my students how to box and how to wrestle. I would teach them how to jab, boxing footwork, MT clinch and knees, guillotine chokes, and how to do a single leg and double leg takedown.
Pretty sure the average TMA has some sort of jab, a hook, a cross, and an uppercut. Pretty sure the average TMA does NOT fight out of a stationary traditional stance. No one (I hope!) has ever advocated that... My school actively drills no strikes/contact, pure footwork "sparring." All you do is move your stance effectively, based on the other person's. Can you name a TMA that doesn't have a choke or two in it's repertoire? Unlikely. You keep mentioning that we train to defend against all these techniques, and we do! To defend against them, you first have to learn to use them, however... The Muay Thai clinch is not some close kept secret methodology, I think the average TMA school probably plays around with various ways to pull your opponent in tight and keep them there, albeit probably doing something a little more efficient than trading side-knees to the body. As far as single/double leg takedowns... TMAs do love their takedowns, but they tend to avoid the ones that get you a nice bunch of dropping elbows to the cerebral cortex because, in a self-defense art, those are, ya know, permitted...
Why? Because they work, and they're likely to encounter that sort of thing in a fight. Why learn 25 hand strikes when you really only need 4? IMO, its a waste of time. But then again, I view nothing as sacred.
Because, without knuckle padding, four punches doesn't really cut it for those of us who want to protect our bodies AND our hands. A punch to the skull can be a pretty bad idea. Have you ever sparred with the full-contact that you love MMA for, and done it WITHOUT gloves? I bet you either started pulling your head shots, or developed some pretty painful wrists pretty quickly. Throat might be a good target for a strike, but it's hard to get a fist in under the chin... Nose/mouth is a great target, but it will almost certainly open your knuckles. The stretched, thin skin of the knuckles splits easily, and the stretching causes it to pull/suck whatever is on the knuckle back into the cut when the hand is opened. Probably a good time to get your blood tested, it would suck to win the fight and contract HIV or VHF...
If I had the opportunity to learn Wing Chun or Boxing, I'd choose Boxing every time.
I've taken boxing, but, as I had already become reasonably familiar with the movements in TMA, I found it frustrating to repeatedly do something that worked, and be told that it was not allowed. Yes, the boxing was fun. Yes, it was good striking training. Yes, it would make some decent self-defense training on it's own. But it's not the be all and end all. Neither is Win Chun, but I probably got a good deal more practical striking defense out of a one-hour class on arm contact and sensitivity with some Win Chun guys about five years ago, than I did out of 5-6 months of boxing. They're both great to train, I am sure.
Okay, but I do have experience in a Kung Fu system that claimed to be traditional.
There are probably over a hundred "Kung Fu" systems out there. Was this Tai Shing? Shaolin Fist? Win Chun? Baguazhang? They are all incredibly different. Even supposing you were at a good traditional school, unlikely if they just taught generic "kung fu," and you managed to learn and understand everything, it doesn't mean you experienced anything of the other many many martial arts out there known as "kung fu."
Unfortunately, my experiences color my opinions. Its just the way it is. When I first walked into a bjj school, I wanted to test those guys out and see what they were made of. A white belt stomped me into the ground. A purple belt made me his girlfriend for several minutes. I didn't even want to see what the instructor was going to do to me. That's when I joined bjj.
My experience with the average martial arts schools is that those who have been training in it, even for a few months, can usually outperform those who have not trained at all, when sparring in the context of the style...
I would say that Kung Fu has that issue more than any other branch of TMA. Its just too easy to spew out BS with Kung Fu and claim legitimacy.
...So, you're arguing that, because some people know from nothing and call it "kung fu," (Which means nothing, again!), that the actual variety of martial arts which really ARE kung fu are also bad? I bet I can find you a couch potato who watches the UFC and claims he is a MMA fighter, but knows nothing. That doesn't change the fact that MMA is a highly effective and very demanding sport.
Of course Bjj uses that tactic. If you can take down a boxer, then you can probably take down the average brawler. If you can survive a wrestler's headlock, you could probably survive a brawler's headlock. The benefit of modern arts like Bjj is that you attract people from a variety of styles who willingly incorporate their background into the art. So we have former wrestlers at my school, who are more than happy to show us how a wrestler would put you in a headlock, or how a wrestler would defend against a takedown.
Weren't you just criticizing TMAs because they have studied, learned and taught defenses against wrestling techniques and boxing strikes? How is TMA doing this different from BJJ? (Incidentally, isn't BJJ around a century old? Getting dangerously close to being "traditional", that...)
Arts like Bjj rapidly incorporate these abilities into the art, and it becomes stronger because of it. For example, Judo and Bjj took the double legged takedown from wrestling. Why? Because it works.
It works great. It also fuses your motion with that of the opponent, removes your ability to see their arms, and exposes the base of the cranium and cerebral cortex to some VERY powerful (banned in MMA for that reason) dropping elbows. Which can kill or paralyze you. Which again, is why a sport martial art disavows their use. Dead and maimed competitors are not exactly a selling point...
Do you feel the same about this guy?
Yes that was terrible. He had poor balance, poor technique, poor control, and mimed smashing his knuckles of the sturdiest bone in the human body... Was that Shaloin Kempo Karate? Not exactly a traditional art; it's what, half as old as BJJ? Not sure how that's relevant. Especially since Kajunkenbo and SKK are often cited as some of the primary attempts at Mixed Martial Arts.
He is a fraud and any credible Martial Artist would recognise that.
He is a fraud, has nothing to do with Traditional Martial Arts, and any half-conscious, sensible PERSON would recognize that! Really, bringing something like that into the conversation is about as relevant as saying, "Hey, scuba-divers can be around sharks, which are dangerous, and THEY don't practice Traditional Martial Arts!" The no-touch super-power thing is a Martial Arts movie convention. I challenge anyone to find the traditional style of martial arts that teaches you to take down opponents with magic wavey-no-youchy hands.