FearlessFreep
Senior Master
One thought on Traditional Arts verus MMA.
I'm a musician, I play bass guitar; I used to play both bass and lead guitar but my bass playing was better, but the split concentration slowed me down on both sides. I dropped playing guitar with any seriousness and now I'm a pretty good bass guitarist; better then if I was still trying to do both.
I guess the thought is that traditional arts were actually designed for a purpose of combat, so I would be loathe to say 'it's not sufficient' until I was sure I'd adequately explored that full range of what the art teaches.
In the same time I could learn to kick and grapple, I think I could learn to kick much better. As is being talked about in another thread about punch mechanics, proper form and proper body movement is imperative. TKD uses very specific and precise body motions to gain speed, and therefore power, into the weapon striking surface. Can I master the philosophies of TKD in regards to power and strategy and body movement and then say 'not good enough' and move on to something else? I don't think I could. More importantly, I'm not sure someone could with any traditional art.
I think that's an important part; it's not that TKD does not want to embrace grappling or clinching or whatever. It's simply that TKD has a philosophy of combat and grappling is outside of the direction of that approach so to embrace grappling would be a distraction. Not that grappling is bad, just that it's...elsewhere, philosophically.
Case in point, when watching grapplers versue strikers in an open match, I keep seeing grapplers shoot forward to grab the legs/thighs of their opponents to take them down. This works in grappling, but from a TKD point of view, it's suicidal to get your head down like that and expose your back and neck. Not that either is 'wrong' or 'right', they just come from different philosophies of how to engage the enemy.
So, do I spend some time learning to shoot in like that and some time learning to keep my back straight and stay upright for maximum balance and power in a leg strike? They are a bit contridictory and I don't think I could be *really* good at either. I also suspect that being *really* good at one would make you less dependent on the other.
One of the few matches I saw on that silly UFC reality show (I call it silly because reality show soap operas are, to me, silly in general) you had a grappler against a striker (mostly with hands); the striker wasn't hittig that hard or that well and the grappler was able to shoot in and take the opponent down. To me, if the striker had better technique, it would not have been that easy for the grappler to take him down.
I think there becomes a mentality of "well, I have to do A, B, and C because A is not complete and B is not sufficient in it's own and.." The perception I think comes from two sources. First, people trained in A often don't train against people trained in B so in a match of A versus B, A doesn't know how to respond to B and loses and people think A is not good enough and they need to add B to their repetoire. Then that leads to the situation that people are training in both A and B, but because of the split concentration in themselves, and maybe the conflicting philosophies between A and B, they never really master either one. So they think they *need* both because they are not really skilled enough in either one. For example, you learn kicking and you learn grappling; you learn kicking for distance strikes and grappling for when the opponent gets in past the strikes to grab you. Now, if you had really mastered the kicking, it's possible that an opponent would never get in past the kicks to need to grapple. *Especially* if, in your learning to master kicking, you practiced *against* grapplers so you would know how they attack and how to counter their attackes with your striking. What little I've seen of mixed matches always has me wondering why, when they drop their head and shoulders, most grapplers don't end up with their heads kicked into the next ring and the best I can guess is that's it's because most kick based strikers don't train/spar against opponents who are going to do that
I may be oversimplifying but the gist is that:
A) Each art has a combat philosophy and different art's philsophies may be contradictory. Training in several may at, at best, slow down mastery of one and at worst, lead to conflicting approaches.
B) Mastering one art can be as sufficient as profficiency in several.
C) To master an art, train against people from other arts.
I'm a musician, I play bass guitar; I used to play both bass and lead guitar but my bass playing was better, but the split concentration slowed me down on both sides. I dropped playing guitar with any seriousness and now I'm a pretty good bass guitarist; better then if I was still trying to do both.
I guess the thought is that traditional arts were actually designed for a purpose of combat, so I would be loathe to say 'it's not sufficient' until I was sure I'd adequately explored that full range of what the art teaches.
In the same time I could learn to kick and grapple, I think I could learn to kick much better. As is being talked about in another thread about punch mechanics, proper form and proper body movement is imperative. TKD uses very specific and precise body motions to gain speed, and therefore power, into the weapon striking surface. Can I master the philosophies of TKD in regards to power and strategy and body movement and then say 'not good enough' and move on to something else? I don't think I could. More importantly, I'm not sure someone could with any traditional art.
I think that's an important part; it's not that TKD does not want to embrace grappling or clinching or whatever. It's simply that TKD has a philosophy of combat and grappling is outside of the direction of that approach so to embrace grappling would be a distraction. Not that grappling is bad, just that it's...elsewhere, philosophically.
Case in point, when watching grapplers versue strikers in an open match, I keep seeing grapplers shoot forward to grab the legs/thighs of their opponents to take them down. This works in grappling, but from a TKD point of view, it's suicidal to get your head down like that and expose your back and neck. Not that either is 'wrong' or 'right', they just come from different philosophies of how to engage the enemy.
So, do I spend some time learning to shoot in like that and some time learning to keep my back straight and stay upright for maximum balance and power in a leg strike? They are a bit contridictory and I don't think I could be *really* good at either. I also suspect that being *really* good at one would make you less dependent on the other.
One of the few matches I saw on that silly UFC reality show (I call it silly because reality show soap operas are, to me, silly in general) you had a grappler against a striker (mostly with hands); the striker wasn't hittig that hard or that well and the grappler was able to shoot in and take the opponent down. To me, if the striker had better technique, it would not have been that easy for the grappler to take him down.
I think there becomes a mentality of "well, I have to do A, B, and C because A is not complete and B is not sufficient in it's own and.." The perception I think comes from two sources. First, people trained in A often don't train against people trained in B so in a match of A versus B, A doesn't know how to respond to B and loses and people think A is not good enough and they need to add B to their repetoire. Then that leads to the situation that people are training in both A and B, but because of the split concentration in themselves, and maybe the conflicting philosophies between A and B, they never really master either one. So they think they *need* both because they are not really skilled enough in either one. For example, you learn kicking and you learn grappling; you learn kicking for distance strikes and grappling for when the opponent gets in past the strikes to grab you. Now, if you had really mastered the kicking, it's possible that an opponent would never get in past the kicks to need to grapple. *Especially* if, in your learning to master kicking, you practiced *against* grapplers so you would know how they attack and how to counter their attackes with your striking. What little I've seen of mixed matches always has me wondering why, when they drop their head and shoulders, most grapplers don't end up with their heads kicked into the next ring and the best I can guess is that's it's because most kick based strikers don't train/spar against opponents who are going to do that
I may be oversimplifying but the gist is that:
A) Each art has a combat philosophy and different art's philsophies may be contradictory. Training in several may at, at best, slow down mastery of one and at worst, lead to conflicting approaches.
B) Mastering one art can be as sufficient as profficiency in several.
C) To master an art, train against people from other arts.