To me, fitness has nothing to do with a grading, unless it is a prerequisite for whatever reason someone likes to give. I have one guy training presently who will be about 70 years of age if he gets to grade for black. I don't care if he can't do 100 push-ups. I don't care if he can't run 5 km. What I want to know is, does he know the course material? Can he make the techniques work? Would he be capable of defending himself if the need arose and, mainly, is he ready to be a black belt?
Now if you have a style that says you have to go 20 2 minute rounds or more, so be it. That is the requirement of that school. In 20 years most of those guys won't be still training and of those that are, many wouldn't be capable of going those 20 rounds. All that peak fitness does at the time of the grading is demonstrate that you can achieve a certain level of fitness if needed.
If you are training a martial art for competition it is totally different. Your fitness produces the edge you may need to win. But then, you don't need the fitness to grade. You need the fitness to compete.
I am not saying that fat, lazy slobs with zero fitness would make good black belts. All I am saying that a good general level of fitness is all that is required.
:asian:
Now if you have a style that says you have to go 20 2 minute rounds or more, so be it. That is the requirement of that school. In 20 years most of those guys won't be still training and of those that are, many wouldn't be capable of going those 20 rounds. All that peak fitness does at the time of the grading is demonstrate that you can achieve a certain level of fitness if needed.
If you are training a martial art for competition it is totally different. Your fitness produces the edge you may need to win. But then, you don't need the fitness to grade. You need the fitness to compete.
I am not saying that fat, lazy slobs with zero fitness would make good black belts. All I am saying that a good general level of fitness is all that is required.
:asian: