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Kevin Holmes wrote:Thanks for the responses/correction in my misconceptions. I hope that one day there will be a full revival. Is there any other chapter besides Columbus in Ohio?
Jaron Bernstein wrote:Kevin Holmes wrote:Thanks for the responses/correction in my misconceptions. I hope that one day there will be a full revival. Is there any other chapter besides Columbus in Ohio?
It might be a bit of a trip, but you are welcome to train with us. We have 2 special events (a 1.0 and a Meyer seminar) in early 2007 in addition to regular weekly practice.
Jaron
Columbus study group
Jeff Hansen wrote:Now, here is where the difference in intent shows up. the MMA guy teaches to go for an arm lock, from which there are a number of options , the most obvious and easiest of which is to lean back and pivot to stess the shoulder and IF (that is the difference right there) you really want to hurt them, you can kick your feet out and break the shoulder. A fairly simple and effective technique.
However, looking at it from a Renn. MA point of view, I don't have to achieve a lock to neutralize my opponent for a period of time to apply graduated pressure or switch to a better hold to force a submission or to decide whether to go further and break the shoulder. To me, everything after he grabs the wrist is a waste of time and energy. The arm is extended... strike the elbow and break it!
This is the essence of what makes mixed martial artists so dangerous. Although the fighter himself trains in everything he may conceivably have: a Boxing coach, a Muay Thai coach, a Wrestling coach, a Judo coach & a Brazilian Jujutsu coach; with each coach trained exclusively in a single fighting system & each system having had centuries to develop & refine itself.
Dave Nathan wrote:
I'd like to see someone try to stab me while they're stuck in my triangle choke as I control both of their arms. Would they grab their knife and stab me with only the use of their toes? Haha, I hope not!
Jason Taylor wrote:Dave,
I'll admit a lack of patience to read all 12 pages, so I apologize if this has been covered.Dave Nathan wrote:
I'd like to see someone try to stab me while they're stuck in my triangle choke as I control both of their arms. Would they grab their knife and stab me with only the use of their toes? Haha, I hope not!
I see your point here--however, I wouldn't be too cocky about your unarmed chances on the ground against a knife-wielding opponent with skill.
I think this might be getting off-topic a bit, so I apologize if so--I try to avoid thread drift. However, your example assumes you have already locked in the triangle choke before they draw their knife. If your opponent is carrying a fixed-blade or a fast draw folder, then I give him good odds to be able to use it. A Swiss Army knife, not so much. But a real honest-to-goodness fighting dagger would be easy to get to and employ in this situation (which is my attempt to bring things back to the topic, I suppose). And most BJJ sparring I've done ends up with one of us in the other's guard, because that's what MMA guys usually train for (at least in my experience). Get the guard where you're safe, then submit. No submission without position. Etc.
In someone's guard, however, I can virtually always get one hand free, just by struggling if nothing else--and if not, by standing, leaning back, etc. Once that one hand is free, the guy with the daggeer can easily use it--if not to the body, then to the legs. This is bad enough, IMO, to cripple and likely end the fight through blood loss.
My point is not to discredit MMA, because I've sparred with those guys, and they are very, very good at what they do. What they do is hit, kick, and grapple with remarkable effectiveness. Is MMA perfect? No, but nothing really is anyway. However, RMA comes from a different scenario, and it doesn't discredit it to say so. MMA has one purpose--one-on-one unarmed confrontations. The rules don't weaken it, though they don't necessarily make it stronger. RMA isn't just for the battlefield, but it does have a serious weapon element lacking in MMA schools. These weapons are often obsolete (though not knives or clubs/maces, which one can always improvise), but nonetheless, the focus is different. I'm sure you'd admit pure MMA guys would show limited effectiveness in a rapier duel against a pure rapier fencer, right?
This is not entirely directed at you, BTW, but at the forum in general, because I've seen a lot of different opinions I'm responding to.
BTW, I wouldn't say that military/battlefield combat arts don't use groundfightig because they were clueless about the guard, etc. That seems like assuming that the warriors of the past were naive and unsophisticated. They probably didn't focus on that because, in many cases, you wore armor, and getting back up was tough, and you were likely to get stabbed in the process (as has been noted).
Just my thoughts on the matter. I always figure that anybody who fights for a living probably is pretty savvy, and the guard position isn't really all that hard to see having been looked at and discarded as "too dangerous for our parameters," i.e., weapons and multiple opponents assumed.
Sorry for rambling.
Jason
Jaron Bernstein wrote:"I'm sure you'd admit pure MMA guys would show limited effectiveness in a rapier duel against a pure rapier fencer, right?"
Actually, I would disagree with that. Against a modern sport fencer who only knows sport fencing, if a good MMA fighter can just get past that point and into hand range, the sport fencer (however athletic otherwise) is toast. The rules (and subsequent training) of sport fencing almost assure that outcome.
Against someone who does historical fencing (which I like to think of as MMA with weapons added to the mix) it would more variable. If the MMA guy has no rapier skills, then foyning fence is scary to behold. So he gets skewered through the eye from 4' away. But If they do get past the point (something that is very feasible BTW) and into hand range then it comes down to who has better unarmed skills. The theoretical RMA curriculum has a full arsenal of unarmed material every bit as sophisticated as modern MMA (many of the techniques are identical even). However, our reconstruction of ringen (as in people who can use ringen in "live" sparring at the same skill level as top MMA guys use their art) lags behind our reconstruction of the armed aspect.
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