Sunay Angel Sidrón-Hord wrote:Your humor does not amuse me Mr. Welch. At best I find it in poor taste.
Yeah... I guess I will learn to live with that. Eventually.
Sunay Angel Sidrón-Hord wrote:As for your other points, I think weight lifting is very helpful but it is in no way the end all be all.
Show me where the people that are saying fighters need to suppliment their workout with strength training are saying it is the "end all be all".
Not only am I doing sword work, I am also fighting with pretty high level BJJ and MMA fighters to help with my grappling. Until he moved, one of my sparring partners (if you can call what I was doing "sparring") is the pan-American super heavyweight BJJ champion. My other partner is a Vale tudor/shoot fighter that grapples at close to that level. Of course, as a plus, he will also hold you down and punch you in the head. THESE are the guys that have put my workout routine together, and they basically just laugh when I tell them about the "no martial artist needs to lift weights" stuff on the internet.
Jeffrey Hull had some real good advice in his post... O lifts with about 1/2 your 1RM is a great way to build power. A 20 min session of O lifts in a circuit is a great CV workout. These build strength, flexability and cardio. They fall below the threshhold of hypertrophy stimulation, so for the most part building strength doesn't increas size. As a matter of fact, there is very little to no correlation of size to strength. You can get much stronger, and not get any bigger at all.
You can say weight lifting is hard and you don't want to do it. You can say it hurts and you don't want to do it. I just wish people would quit saying it is worthless to add it into your other stuff. It could be worse I guess. I have read on other sites where they didn't think you needed to work out at all.
Can you put together a combat sport conditioning routine that doesn't involve weight lifting? Yeah. Would you be better off if you put it together and included weight lifting? Yeah.
Lastly, I dont know where you got "Aerobic with Anaerobic". I was just talking about the need for working out for power (lift something heavy, lift it fast, lift it 4 or 5 times for 3 or 4 sets) so you have explosive strength when you are grappling, not for endurance. Unless you are talking about the push presses. If you don't do full body cardio you will fall apart when you have to use your upper body. Just running or biking alone won't cut it.
Well, I guess
this is really lastly. Sword fighting involves not just fighting with a sword, but closing, grappling, and dagger wrestling. If you are just doing sword and not training for the others, IMO you are learning an incomplete art.
"A sword never kills anybody; it is a tool in the killer's hand." Lucius Annaeus Seneca 4BC-65AD.