Postby Gene Tausk » Fri Feb 04, 2005 4:10 pm
IMHO, the reason it is difficult to have both a martial art which stresses combat effectiveness and a "sport" version at the same time is because in many ways the two are mutually incompatible. In "sport" versions you are trying to gain points or win a match within a proscribed set of rules which force you to confine your training to within those parameters. Once set within those parameters, it is very difficult to get outside of them (although I hate to say this since it is trite already, "it is hard to think outside the box" <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" />
A good example is TKD. Modern Olympic TKD focuses on kicks waist high and above to the exclusion of everything else. Therefore, training in Olympic TKD is reduced to learning how to kick waist-high and above. Learning how to kick vulnerable targets to the leg and groin are excluded as well as hand techniques, to say nothing of learning how to roll, fall, grapple, etc. This means that in a combat situation, Olympic TKD practitioners have limited themselves to certain techniques with which they feel comfortable and proficient while ignoring a large variety of other techniques which are equally if not more effective (NOTE: I am NOT saying that Olympic TKD practitioners don't know how to fight). This leaves them vulnerable to many attacks against which they have not learned to defend themselves which can spell trouble for such practitioners.
Once again IMHO, once you start down the path of sportification, you are intentionally limiting the techniques you will study and use, which places limitations on your development of a martial art.
"Once you start down the path..." Hmmm, wonder where I heard that before?! <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
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