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One of the blackbelts at our school can punch hard enough that I'm glad I have the hogu! If I had to pick, I'd rather him kick me than punch me.Never-the-less, punching does not generate as much power as kicking.
Slingblade, I agree kicking does generate more power than a punch. However, I have seen people knock the breathe out of their opponet with a punch despite the hogu.
I wouldn't look at the prevalence of certain schools in an area and equate that to the current popularity of various styles worldwide. there are a lot of other factors, primarily, who came and opened up schools in an area in the first place.
In my area, the 90% of the TKD schools are WTF affiliated. I know of one ITF school and one ATA school. I'm out near philadelphia....you can't swing a dead cat without hitting an AIKIDo school...why? Because a couple of Ueshiba's stuents moved here to start teaching and then their students went and opened school as well. That doesn;t speak to the popularity or lack thereof of Aikido...just that's what got a foothold.
Peace,
Erik
regardless of whether *I* would punch to the face, many people out there in life *will* punch to the face. Which means that I need to learn to defend against those shots. If the rules under which I spar do not have that kind of attack, then it's something I don't have to worry about defending against. This lessens the effectiveness of sparring as a training tool for the wider vision of Tae Kwon Do as a pragmatic art
I agree.regardless of whether *I* would punch to the face, many people out there in life *will* punch to the face. Which means that I need to learn to defend against those shots.
Not entirely true; the face and head are legal targets, admittedly only for kicks, but as such, WTF practitioners must learn to defend their head and face, either via blocks and parries, or via distance and evasion. Distance and evasion work equally well, if not moreso, against punches. Most WTF schools do teach punching and defense against it. Can't speak for other WTF schools, but we practice it regularly, and at speed, so if need be, any of us can defend against punches.If the rules under which I spar do not have that kind of attack, then it's something I don't have to worry about defending against. This lessens the effectiveness of sparring as a training tool for the wider vision of Tae Kwon Do as a pragmatic art
Don't you know? Special cardio/shoulder strengthening excercise, detailed in '101 uses for a dead cat'I agree with your post 100%, but I just have to ask:
why are you swinging dead cats around?
regardless of whether *I* would punch to the face, many people out there in life *will* punch to the face. Which means that I need to learn to defend against those shots. If the rules under which I spar do not have that kind of attack, then it's something I don't have to worry about defending against. This lessens the effectiveness of sparring as a training tool for the wider vision of Tae Kwon Do as a pragmatic art
I agree with your post 100%, but I just have to ask:
why are you swinging dead cats around?
That is the point that I've wanted to make this whole time, but I couldn't find the right words to say it.
I have nothing against the sport side of things. I think that TKD practitioners should have the ability to compete. I just think that the rules of the competition should not limit the strikes that are taught in the art itself...that's what never made sense to me. If TKD didn't have hand strikes at all, then I could see the ruleset as being valid for a purely kicking art.
As cheesy as the movie was, watch Best of the Best. To me, that's how TKD tournements should look, even though the tournement wasn't strictly for TKD.
I happen to agree. However, the question I think those at the top who are setting the rules ask is...what makes TKD with full contact and punching to th ehead different from Muay Thai or Kick boxing? If we add in throws and sweeps, how then is it different from MMA (sans grappling) or San Shou?
One thing that comes with TKD is that it is th eonly martial art that I know of that is not only tied into the prioe of a nation and whose government took a serious interest in developing and promoting the art.
here in America, where I sit, the government doesn't care how I fight (so long as I'm not breaking the laws)...Korea looked at TKD as part of alrger move to reclaim some national pride after years of cultural rape by the Japanese and internal civil strife and war.
Because of that influence, there was much pressure to distinguish and spread TKD...and to remove all so-called Japanese influence. I think from early on, TKD was destined to become an Olympic event, and a commerical venture...as well as a viable martial art. These movements had consequences (not necessarily as bad as we sometimes make them out to be mind you), but there should be no doubt that we are where we at becuase those who created this art and those who had the greatest stake in its development wanted things to go this way.
The only way we can significantly change that is if we become major stakeholders...I'm not sure if that is possible though.
Peace,
Erik
And I agree that if we were stakeholders, we would have more say. I just don't fully understand how the board members hold the offices that they have now: were they elected or appointed? How can we change members?
I think that the big key is to be what you are, Erik, a humble practitioner. Taekwondo is what it is, and I, as a forty one year old white American guy, has zero chance of becomming president of the KKW or WTF. And I'm okay with that. There are so many martial arts available that if I should want something different than what taekwondo offers, then I can simply find it, and in my area, relatively easily.I guess that's one of my points. In a way, TKD was never about us (non-Koreans), but we've become a part of it. The people in charge at the highest levels got there because 1) they were/are Korean and 2)the new someone. Personally, I've got not problem with that....but then again I'm not looking ot be anything more than a humble practitioner. Things will go the way they go and I will continue to train hard and will do so as long as I get something out of it. When I no longer benefiot from TKD practice...I'll go do something else.
However, for the vast majority of TKDists 9regardles of organizational affiliation) to have some say...nationalism has to be separated from TKD...I just don't see that happening.
Peace,
Erik
Very true, and that is both good and bad, sometimes both. This year, I'd say more bad than good. The only consolation prize is that the public at large is so ignorant of things martial arts, and that the Taekwondo wasn't televised.Really, the main issue I have with the whole situation is that things that happen on a public stage color the way the public sees the martial art.
Valid commit!Slingblade, I agree kicking does generate more power than a punch. However, I have seen people knock the breathe out of their opponet with a punch despite the hogu.
One of the blackbelts at our school can punch hard enough that I'm glad I have the hogu! If I had to pick, I'd rather him kick me than punch me.
Daniel
Not entirely true; the face and head are legal targets, admittedly only for kicks, but as such, WTF practitioners must learn to defend their head and face, either via blocks and parries, or via distance and evasion. Distance and evasion work equally well, if not moreso, against punches.
Daniel
I happen to agree. However, the question I think those at the top who are setting the rules ask is...what makes TKD with full contact and punching to th ehead different from Muay Thai or Kick boxing? If we add in throws and sweeps, how then is it different from MMA (sans grappling) or San Shou?
One thing that comes with TKD is that it is th eonly martial art that I know of that is not only tied into the prioe of a nation and whose government took a serious interest in developing and promoting the art.
here in America, where I sit, the government doesn't care how I fight (so long as I'm not breaking the laws)...Korea looked at TKD as part of alrger move to reclaim some national pride after years of cultural rape by the Japanese and internal civil strife and war.
Because of that influence, there was much pressure to distinguish and spread TKD...and to remove all so-called Japanese influence. I think from early on, TKD was destined to become an Olympic event, and a commerical venture...as well as a viable martial art. These movements had consequences (not necessarily as bad as we sometimes make them out to be mind you), but there should be no doubt that we are where we at becuase those who created this art and those who had the greatest stake in its development wanted things to go this way.
The only way we can significantly change that is if we become major stakeholders...I'm not sure if that is possible though.
Peace,
Erik