Hi all,
just wondering what your opinions are of fitness training in modern day martial arts. Due to the nature of our sports, there always seems to be an element of 'no pain no gain' sort of attitude. Obviousy this is an intense sport and requires training that prepares you for the requirements of a ring fight. So hard training is needed but I am sure that a more scientific approach could be implemented, rather than that of the 'old school'.
Coming from a background of other sports such as triathlon, and seperate running and cycling events, I am aware of the basic components of fitness training.
However, I have encountered many coaches that seem to lack any form of understanding in terms of fitness training. Its basically, train hard and train harder all the time. If it hurts, do it and then do it some more. There is no point training for hours and hours because it becomes counter productive. Overtraining and boredom are the problems with training too much!
Having trained in Thailand and seeing the way they train, I personally feel some of there regimes leave a lot to be desired. NOT in terms of their skills training, the Thais have been doing this for years and have excellent skills training as we all know.
The camp I stayed at seemed to do the same running twice a day, then the same skipping, pad work, etc. Day in day out, 6 days a week with Sunday off.
Suprised they dont just train every day! I was only there for a few weeks so maybe I am being a little hard on them. Maybe they do vary stuff a bit but I was not there long enough to see it. The body gets used to routine and craves variation.
Looking at programs my instructors have put together for my fights and collegues fights, it seems like they have lots of good ideas but just lack any knowledge of fitness training like tapering towards a competition. Training in this way just exhausts me because I just become progressively more tired after each day. The body needs rest to recuperate! I am sure we all know this though...
Have seen stuff like doing exercises between rounds etc. The whole point of the rest period is to allow the heart rate to reduce and for lactic acid to be removed so that the next work session can be carried out hard again. Therefore in the rest, you should just walk, jump around or shadow box a little to keep things moving. By exercising in this period, you cannot train as hard in the next session, so you will not overload the body as much and not get as fit.
During training for 1 fight that was 3 x 2 mins, our instructor was obsessed with doing 5 x 3 mins so we should find the 3 x 2 easy. Do you see runners applying the same philsosphy? No. I should train for the 400m coz then the 100m sprint will be easy. Most certainly not. Of course they run all different distances to keep stimulating the body to overload, but will not make a habit of any 1 practice. Training longer means less intense, its common sense. Really, I would suggest doing longer rounds to start with working on the endurance side, then moving towards shorter more intense bursts as the fight approaches. Rounds/sprints of all out 30secs to 1min will bring on further gains in fitness. The harder the work, the more rest is needed. So all volumous running, weights, etc should be cut back in the final 1 or 2 weeks.
Also, why should we all do the same training? We are all different and different people need different levels of rest. I realise this is hard to do in a class situation and is not really worth it but for induvidual fighters more attention should be paid to specific needs.
What do you guys think?
P.S
I have never seen a thai stretch before training. Only thing I have ever seen is that thing they do in the corner between rounds, where they pull their knee right up or their coach lifts their leg up really high. Dont know if this is because they are naturally flexible? They dont seem to pull muscles much like us foreiners. But then they start at like 8yrs old. Anyone know why?
just wondering what your opinions are of fitness training in modern day martial arts. Due to the nature of our sports, there always seems to be an element of 'no pain no gain' sort of attitude. Obviousy this is an intense sport and requires training that prepares you for the requirements of a ring fight. So hard training is needed but I am sure that a more scientific approach could be implemented, rather than that of the 'old school'.
Coming from a background of other sports such as triathlon, and seperate running and cycling events, I am aware of the basic components of fitness training.
However, I have encountered many coaches that seem to lack any form of understanding in terms of fitness training. Its basically, train hard and train harder all the time. If it hurts, do it and then do it some more. There is no point training for hours and hours because it becomes counter productive. Overtraining and boredom are the problems with training too much!
Having trained in Thailand and seeing the way they train, I personally feel some of there regimes leave a lot to be desired. NOT in terms of their skills training, the Thais have been doing this for years and have excellent skills training as we all know.
The camp I stayed at seemed to do the same running twice a day, then the same skipping, pad work, etc. Day in day out, 6 days a week with Sunday off.
Suprised they dont just train every day! I was only there for a few weeks so maybe I am being a little hard on them. Maybe they do vary stuff a bit but I was not there long enough to see it. The body gets used to routine and craves variation.
Looking at programs my instructors have put together for my fights and collegues fights, it seems like they have lots of good ideas but just lack any knowledge of fitness training like tapering towards a competition. Training in this way just exhausts me because I just become progressively more tired after each day. The body needs rest to recuperate! I am sure we all know this though...
Have seen stuff like doing exercises between rounds etc. The whole point of the rest period is to allow the heart rate to reduce and for lactic acid to be removed so that the next work session can be carried out hard again. Therefore in the rest, you should just walk, jump around or shadow box a little to keep things moving. By exercising in this period, you cannot train as hard in the next session, so you will not overload the body as much and not get as fit.
During training for 1 fight that was 3 x 2 mins, our instructor was obsessed with doing 5 x 3 mins so we should find the 3 x 2 easy. Do you see runners applying the same philsosphy? No. I should train for the 400m coz then the 100m sprint will be easy. Most certainly not. Of course they run all different distances to keep stimulating the body to overload, but will not make a habit of any 1 practice. Training longer means less intense, its common sense. Really, I would suggest doing longer rounds to start with working on the endurance side, then moving towards shorter more intense bursts as the fight approaches. Rounds/sprints of all out 30secs to 1min will bring on further gains in fitness. The harder the work, the more rest is needed. So all volumous running, weights, etc should be cut back in the final 1 or 2 weeks.
Also, why should we all do the same training? We are all different and different people need different levels of rest. I realise this is hard to do in a class situation and is not really worth it but for induvidual fighters more attention should be paid to specific needs.
What do you guys think?
P.S
I have never seen a thai stretch before training. Only thing I have ever seen is that thing they do in the corner between rounds, where they pull their knee right up or their coach lifts their leg up really high. Dont know if this is because they are naturally flexible? They dont seem to pull muscles much like us foreiners. But then they start at like 8yrs old. Anyone know why?
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