Hello, I was wondering why you chose to train in FMA's over hapkido,
wing chun or judo? I ask this in the hopes of getting some,friendly well informed and educated advice. In my area I have the opportunity to train in wing chun, hapkido, judo or a fma which blends kali, eskrima,Arnis,pentjak-silat, penatukan,sikaran,dumog and some thai and western boxing. I cant think of the name of the school right now nor do I know what all those filipino styles/words really mean. Ive heard that it is a very well rounded martial art (stand up,clinch, some groundwork and weapons.)Any and all advice/ comments given will be greatly appreciated.
Thank you , Danny Vega
wing chun or judo? I ask this in the hopes of getting some,friendly well informed and educated advice. In my area I have the opportunity to train in wing chun, hapkido, judo or a fma which blends kali, eskrima,Arnis,pentjak-silat, penatukan,sikaran,dumog and some thai and western boxing. I cant think of the name of the school right now nor do I know what all those filipino styles/words really mean. Ive heard that it is a very well rounded martial art (stand up,clinch, some groundwork and weapons.)Any and all advice/ comments given will be greatly appreciated.
Thank you , Danny Vega
I train primarily in a system called "Sikal" which blends many of the same elements that you're referring to from Kali and Silat. The reason I chose it was primarily for the Silat aspects. There are thousands of systems of Silat that run the whole gamut of martial arts types - i.e.: some specialize in punching and kicking, some in locking, some in sweeps/takedowns/throws, some in groundfighting, etc. - most of them deal with weapons. The Silat in the Sikal blend, though, is primarily an infighting system that uses strikes to disrupt the opponent's balance and set him up for sweeps. It suited my body and mindset very well and that really attracted me to it.
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