Basically, I'm wondering if anyone's had experience in bringing their foundation of a Traditional Martial Art and somehow making it work with some tweaking to have basic, yet effective applications, such as short blocking or pulling.
Sparring with a few friends of mine who train in the same mma/jiu jitsu center, we had hyrbrid MMA gloves on and we were going at it full contact on the mat. My partner was getting tired, and I noticed his strikes were becoming a bit more heavy, but still powerful, yet I was exhausted as well and was not doing much better at this point. He over-extended his jab as I was coming in, and my initial reaction was a short left outer-circular block that threw him off balance to my left! I immediately followed it in with a right cross and a sloppy left round house (he mostly blocked it with his right arm up covering, as he attempted to slip any more strikes)
I had another successful application work for me by throwing a right outward block with my right hand at my opponent's left cross, immediately throwing a quick left vertical punch (only a bit stronger than a jab, tad bit quicker) at his nose while leaning to the left as he stepped into it. Of course afterward I covered his right hand strike and we continued, etc, etc.
So basically my question is this; is it possible to bring effective, modified applications of traditional martial arts into the MMA stand up game? I mean it seems to me that I'm having more success as a fighter using these traditional techniques I rendered useless after converting to more modern arts when my opponent over-reaches or gets tired. So perhaps these applications can be used as a finisher for a fight, or to end them quickly when I get the chance?
I'm a very newly converted MMA fighter, been doing about 10 years of Chinese Kenpo Kung Fu and two years of MMA. There's a part of me (perhaps naive) that hopes I can perhaps take what I've learned these last twelve years to sort of blend into my own form of fighting. I do realize that most of it is only basics that work, and they'd have to be extremely modified to be any effective as far as stand up goes, but can anyone give in their two cents regarding bringing TMA applications into MMA stand up? (Nothing to do with when it gets on the ground, though!)
The reason I ask this question is, because despite my own success, if it were really useful wouldn't it be known more in big organizations like UFC or King Of The Cage?
Sparring with a few friends of mine who train in the same mma/jiu jitsu center, we had hyrbrid MMA gloves on and we were going at it full contact on the mat. My partner was getting tired, and I noticed his strikes were becoming a bit more heavy, but still powerful, yet I was exhausted as well and was not doing much better at this point. He over-extended his jab as I was coming in, and my initial reaction was a short left outer-circular block that threw him off balance to my left! I immediately followed it in with a right cross and a sloppy left round house (he mostly blocked it with his right arm up covering, as he attempted to slip any more strikes)
I had another successful application work for me by throwing a right outward block with my right hand at my opponent's left cross, immediately throwing a quick left vertical punch (only a bit stronger than a jab, tad bit quicker) at his nose while leaning to the left as he stepped into it. Of course afterward I covered his right hand strike and we continued, etc, etc.
So basically my question is this; is it possible to bring effective, modified applications of traditional martial arts into the MMA stand up game? I mean it seems to me that I'm having more success as a fighter using these traditional techniques I rendered useless after converting to more modern arts when my opponent over-reaches or gets tired. So perhaps these applications can be used as a finisher for a fight, or to end them quickly when I get the chance?
I'm a very newly converted MMA fighter, been doing about 10 years of Chinese Kenpo Kung Fu and two years of MMA. There's a part of me (perhaps naive) that hopes I can perhaps take what I've learned these last twelve years to sort of blend into my own form of fighting. I do realize that most of it is only basics that work, and they'd have to be extremely modified to be any effective as far as stand up goes, but can anyone give in their two cents regarding bringing TMA applications into MMA stand up? (Nothing to do with when it gets on the ground, though!)
The reason I ask this question is, because despite my own success, if it were really useful wouldn't it be known more in big organizations like UFC or King Of The Cage?
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