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| Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) & BJJ Forum Discuss the extremely effective art of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, No-Holds-Barred and Mixed Martial Arts with experts worldwide. |
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#226 (permalink) | |
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San Shou (Red) vs. Kyokushin (blue). I've been told the goal of shuaijiao (chinese wrestling) is to throw your opponent from the greatest height possible so as to do the most damage. Sanshou borrows from shuiajiao if I'm not mistaken - kind of follows the same scoring rules as freestyle wrestling in that you get more points for a bigger throw. Anyhow, a throw like this is just a little on the scary side...
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The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know. Slow is fast; fast is slow. Love it, leave it or fix it. Last edited by Tom Yum; 12-21-2006 at 03:02 PM. |
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#227 (permalink) | |
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A solar panel 100 miles by 100 miles (161x161km) in the Mojave Desert (USA) could replace all the coal now burned to generate electricity in the entire U.S. |
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#229 (permalink) | |
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The arguments between combatives or TMA vs. MMA always polarize into reality vs. sport, when in fact both are correct. There are reality-based or traditional systems that teach useable moves that are unfamilar to the sports world, but work because they are technically sound AND no one has seen and aren't expecting it. A really, really good example of this is the Tukong Musool system that is used by the Korean SF - the master instructor took what works from traditional Chinese and Korean arts - and these guys have proven themselves effective in close quarters well before they demonstrated it in Vietnam. Another example is the Yoshinkan Aikido system used by the Japanese police force. If I'm not mistaken, they use many open handed strikes to set up restraining locks and sweeps. Likewise most of what is used in combat sports is practiced religiously against resisting opponents and works under live fire because it is practiced as such. Boxing and wrestling work because they train against opponents that resist and strike or grapple in return; knocking someone out by a punch or by a choke is enough to stop a fight. Most TMA instructors will admit that boxing is an effective striking method and that they themselves would have difficulty handling a boxers hand speed and power. If I'm not mistaken, the Marines switched from LINE to MCMAP because the LINE system injured too many Marines during practice and that Marines killed people in civillian life when they themselves were assaulted. But to say that the new stuff doesn't work is also silly, as getting lapel choked or arm-barred are equally crippling and deadly, except you can practice them without losing training partners.
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The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know. Slow is fast; fast is slow. Love it, leave it or fix it. Last edited by Tom Yum; 12-21-2006 at 06:58 PM. |
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#230 (permalink) | |
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The arguments between combatives or TMA vs. MMA always polarize into reality vs. sport, when in fact both are correct. There are reality-based or traditional systems that teach useable moves that are unfamilar to the sports world, but work because they are technically sound AND no one has seen and aren't expecting it. A really, really good example of this is the Tukong Musool system that is used by the Korean SF - the master instructor took what works from traditional Chinese and Korean arts - and these guys have proven themselves effective in close quarters well before they demonstrated it in Vietnam. Another example is the Yoshinkan Aikido system used by the Japanese police force. If I'm not mistaken, they use many open handed strikes to set up restraining locks and sweeps. Likewise most of what is used in combat sports is practiced religiously against resisting opponents and works under live fire because it is practiced as such. Boxing and wrestling work because they train against opponents that resist and strike or grapple in return. Most TMA instructors will admit that boxing is an effective striking method and that they themselves would have difficulty handling a boxers hand speed and power. If I'm not mistaken, the Marines switched from LINE to MCMAP because the LINE system injured too many Marines during practice and that Marines killed people in civillian life when using the system for self-protection. But to say that the new stuff doesn't work is also silly, as getting lapel choked or arm-barred are equally crippling and deadly, except you can practice them without losing training partners.
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The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know. Slow is fast; fast is slow. Love it, leave it or fix it. Last edited by Tom Yum; 12-21-2006 at 06:52 PM. |
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#231 (permalink) |
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Muaythai is often called a ring sport, but its been around for atleast 1,000 years. Prior to its modernization in the 1920's, matches were fought to the death. Does this make it a combat sport or a traditional art?
Kyokushin karate holds kumite and is done full-contact, but the founder, Mas Oyama, studied Chinese kenpo as a youth and then Shotokan as a young adult. Does this make it a mixed martial art or a traditional martial art? Judo, the gentleway, was a refinement of Jujitsu designed to take out the moves that were too deadly. Is this a combat sport or a traditional art - afterall it is called the "gentle way" which to some may sound feminine. Even jujitsu means the "gentle art" even though the moves are far from gentle...
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The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know. Slow is fast; fast is slow. Love it, leave it or fix it. |
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#232 (permalink) |
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Yeah, it is. Grappling arts have as much crossover as striking ones. Heck, I bet shuaijiao probably has alot of overlap with freestyle
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The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know. Slow is fast; fast is slow. Love it, leave it or fix it. |
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#233 (permalink) | |
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#235 (permalink) |
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no uke, that was not the exact point you were trying to make. tom yum in no way claimed that mma training is useless for self defense applications. nor did he try to tell highly esteemed instructors that their way is wrong.
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#236 (permalink) | |
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#237 (permalink) | |
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The point that Tom made that I had previously written had to do with why SD teach MMA and how keeping the doors open is the most important thing. Somehow you outsmarted yourself and missed that.
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A solar panel 100 miles by 100 miles (161x161km) in the Mojave Desert (USA) could replace all the coal now burned to generate electricity in the entire U.S. |
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#238 (permalink) |
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Of course that throw looks familiar, jubaji. Its what happened to you as a child and completely explains your acute retardation.
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A solar panel 100 miles by 100 miles (161x161km) in the Mojave Desert (USA) could replace all the coal now burned to generate electricity in the entire U.S. |
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#239 (permalink) | |
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Most of the throws involved grabbing a leg/legs (single leg, double leg, fireman's carry) or leveraging the hips (souplet/souplex, hip toss, hip toss -leg sweep). I didn't learn that many throws - just a few with variations on each. I'm reading between the lines here, Boar.... Mongolian wrestling throws probably involve throwing by securing the head and or groin? I've seen a varation on a combatives-style takedown that involves pulling the groin from behind while simultaneously shoving the head forward - is this what you are referring to?
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The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know. Slow is fast; fast is slow. Love it, leave it or fix it. Last edited by Tom Yum; 12-21-2006 at 07:20 PM. |
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#240 (permalink) | |
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