Lynne
Master of Arts
This week we are going to be doing Olympic sparring drills in class. I suspect that these drills come from Tae Kwon Do.
Does anyone have an idea what we might cover?
Does anyone have an idea what we might cover?
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I'm sure class will be a challenge. And that will be no joke, lol. On the second floor, we have bleachers and that worries me!having watched some of the competition during the past olymics i would say alot of kicking while holding your arms at your sides will be involved, that and kicking the occasional judge upside the head.
kidding, i would assume drills to increase your kicking speed.
Hey Wade,Lynne, are you delibertly being obtuse are do you really not know what I was asking or maybe, do you actually not know your master's name? Not meaning to be disrespectful but I am curious.
BTW, did you ever get a chance to practice your olympic sparring drills? If so, may I ask what they were and how it went? I am always looking to update my own workouts.
Hi TerryLynne why did you not get to the training this time?
I'll let you know if and when we get to do them. I heard the sparring clinic was rather intense. The class used our bleachers for one part - hopping over the individual bleachers. Sounds worse than the bunny hops we do!Thanks Lynne, I was just wondering if I knew him. I have a friend who is also a 6th Dan and he goes by Master R, not the same one.
Good luck in your training and let me know how the Olympic drills go when you do them, OK?
I want and need more actual sparring instruction. I love point sparring and was hoping that Olympic sparring drills would help with speed, endurance, and tactic (maybe not? I don't really know anything about Olympic sparring).I've never liked "Olympic" style sparring. Not only do the rules seem odd, but the way it's practiced always seems so sloppy and self limiting.
I've never understood it's obsession with back leg round kicks or it's constant habit of fighting linearly. The lack of kicking fundamentals and a basic guard has always left me slack jawed. Always comes out looking like flailing.
I LOVE point sparring. It's by far my favorite thing to do in class, both teaching and training. I love the mind game, the finesse, the positioning and the required control of all aspects of yourself to truly break into excellence. I've always compared it to a chess game. A chess game at high speed with pads, but a chess game none the less.
I'd be curious how you're enjoying the actual teaching of sparring. Not of the physical conditioning, the exercises, but of HOW to spar. The tactics and philosophy.