A car is only as useful, flexible, etc., as the person driving it. Some cars have more muscle under the hood than others, while some are better designed for cornering. Big diff between an old Mazda Rx7 on a sharp bank, or a 1967 Cougar with a beefy engine under the hood, Ford C6 tranny, and a Holly (sp?) 4-barrel carb. One rocks on mountain curves the other would fly off of, while the other does better on a straightaway...The old cougar I'm thinking of wasn't all that hot off the line, but wasn't meant to be; it was a "freeway flyer", and while only doing zero-to-60 in 7 seconds, would go from 65 to 120 in about 3.
So...what do you want it to do? Then, once you have the vehicle selected and tricked out for a purpose, who's driving it? My good buddy Scott was the Cougar owner. Later swapped it for an old Porsche...bought from a guy who used that specific car and engine to jam through time trial trophies like you read about. Scott had to learn to drive all over again...different handling characteristics, in a car built for a different purpose.
I started kenpo for my 6th b-day in 71. Was an addict almost immediately. By my own surmise, kenpo "lacked" stuff...throws, ground fighting, knife and sword work, etc. So I went out annd got black belts in judo and jujutsu, titles in kendo and kenjutsu, apprenticed to an old FMA icon for knives and sticks, and so on.I was among the first kenpo black belts to join the Gracie Academy well before the UFC, having learned of the Gracie Challenge early and lost some students to them...kenpo guys who went and watched, and decided to join. So I did too.
And every time I've come back to kenpo, going through the system with an eye towards certain classes of skills, I have been forced to yield this: The categorical methodology of the kenpo SYSTEM (not style) is a car factory, and not a car. If you want to build a skill set that corners fast and handles well, it's in there. If you want to build a skill set that's fast off the line, it's in there. If you want a muscle car that blows through the competition like they are standing still, it's in there.
About the only thing not in there is a ground game of position/transition/submission, but fighting from the ground? It's in there. Stand up jujutsu? It's in there.
Individual instructors learn their professors emphases, focus on remembering and regurgitating the techniques ad nauseum without ever applying the info outside the box, then pass it on in the same mindless way. Mr. Parker was a knife feind, and by applying the language of motion to his knife work, had some freaking deadly patterns of application that even the Phillipino's could benefit learning from (and several have...I know personally of one well-respected FMA knife prof whose whole 1st level instructor certification is based on a combination of the movement patterns from Shield & Hammer and Reversing Mace). The paths of entry and attack; orbits; recoil; rebounding; etc., all lend themselves exceptionally well to a comprehensive approach to knife-fighting. Wanna have some fun? Pick up a practice Bowie, and run through the system from the basics, up. Allow for knife-based adaptations, but be sure to view each move through the eyes of a knife fighter. Fricking deadly stuff, I'm telling you. Start with Delayed Sword, modified against either a stab, or just a guy facing off with you with a knife of his own. It's there.
Then go through the system again with a stick. Then again with a handgun, replacing punches with barrel thrusts that also squeeze off a round; hammerfists with pommel strikes with the handle; handswords with barrel whips, etc.
Then go through it again with an eye towards limb entaglement and destruction. There is so much Chin Na, Danzan Ryu Jujutsu, and Lua embedded in the system, you can't get through a whole tech with extension without tripping over at least 2 breaks per tech. Then do it again looking for throws, take-downs, strike-downs, etc.
Shortcomings in kenpo reflect shortcomings in the understanding of the instructor (can't teach what they don't know), or lack of exploration by the student (if you haven't taken the time to go through the system with an eye towards applying Circling the Horizon with a handgun in CQB scenarios, how are you supposed to know you can? Or Snapping Twig with a knife or against a knife? Or Thundering Hammers with espada y daga?).
Of course it takes work...it was never meant to be a spoonfed instruction in every little thing. It WAS meant, however, to be a comprehensive model of study of the universal mechanisms of martial movement...applying logic and motion models to various questions. You gotta
1. Learn the language of motion so you can have the discussion in it's native tongue (most only learn the material in a "this-for-that" limited manner, where 5 Swords is a defense against a punch attack, and not a study of applying paths and arcs to relative positions, with broad based applications across a multiple of contexts).
2. Understand the model so you can be conversant in dialogue. We don't use language skills in memorized traveller's phrases, only. We become fluent so we can generate sentences to reflect ideas, on the fly in the course of conversation.
3. Have a clear delineation of the construct under investigation. Knives, guns, kicks, takedowns, controls, destructions, etc. Delayed Sword doesn't teach a defense against a push or grab. It teaches you how to move. The attack scenario is an excuse to get you moving and thinking and learning...practicing a contextual phrase until you become a native speaker, at which point you can make up whatever sentences you need to.
As an aside, one of the best spinning back crescent kicks I have ever seen ... and I been in this stuff for nigh on 40 years, at international tournaments and under the tutelage of impressive TKD and HWD masters ... was by Rorion Gracie. Think he prefected it from the mount? One of the fastest and nastiest knife fighters I have ever seen was Mr. Parker. Think he got that way from drilling in the FMA?
Part of overcoming our personal limitations is understanding and owning that the limitations are, in fact, ours. Only then are we empowered to change. In other words, you can't change what you don't own. So rather than blaming the system, look at it again. And if you still don't see it, ask someone who might.
Best Regards,
Dave
PS -- here is a youtube vid of Mr. Parker applying kenpo conccepts and principles to knifework. "Multiplicity" is a guiding theme in kenpo....one movement with multiple applications to it; more things going on than meets the eye. Consider how many times he cuts the other guy in just one thrusting motion (4 that he mentions). Then consider how many motions are in a technique like 5 Swords, and phrases like "There are 30 cuts in 5 Swords, alone" will look less like confabulation, and mebbe cause you to look closer.