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Kacey said:Focus
Application
Balance
Timing
Distancing
In ITF TKD, step sparring follows a continuum (although every class I've seen jumps into free sparring at white belt instead of waiting for black belt the way the continuum calls for):
3 step sparring alone
3 step sparring with a partner
2 way 3-step sparring (Yom Chi TKD Association [YCTA] only)
2 step sparring
1 step sparring
Model step sparring (like 1 step, but done once at full speed, and once in slow motion for technique and focus - so no jump kicks)
Semi-free step sparring (not orchestrated like previous step sparrings - your partner only knows when s/he is being attacked, but not what with)
Foot sparring (like semi-free, but feet only)
Free sparring
Differences between free sparring and step sparring:
Step sparring has no illegal targets (unlike free sparring, which limits targets to the front of the torso above the waist, and the entire head; nothing on the back, below the waist, or on the neck) - so you can throw techniques and aim at targets not available in free sparring for safety reasons
There are no illegal techniques in step sparring, which can include throws, grabs/releases, takedowns, sweeps (only legal at red and above in YCTA), and there are no illegal targets as there are in free sparring - so knees, kidneys, spine, throat, etc. are all legal in step sparring.
Step sparring is one of my favorite activities in TKD - especially 1 step, which allows more opportunity for creativity and exploring technique than most other formats.
Kacey said:3 step sparring alone
Kacey said:3 step sparring with a partner
Kacey said:2 way 3-step sparring (Yom Chi TKD Association [YCTA] only)
Kacey said:2 step sparring
Kacey said:1 step sparring
Kacey said:Model step sparring - like 1 step, but done once at full speed, and once in slow motion for technique and focus - so no jump kicks)
Kacey said:Semi-free step sparring - not orchestrated like previous step sparrings - your partner only knows when s/he is being attacked, but not what with
Kacey said:Foot sparring (like semi-free, but feet only)
Kacey said:Free sparring
You learn how to deal with one attack at a time. You can't deal with attack # 2, 3, and 4, if you can't first defend against 1. One steps are a great teaching tool in the beginning.JeffJ said:I've been thinking about this lately. For me, it allows me to experiment in a safer situation. It also really helped me with my footwork. I'm interested to see what other people get out of it.
Jeff