Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
David_Knight wrote:Examples of kicks and strikes from Paulus Hector Mair's manual can be found here: http://www.paulushectormair.com/CQC_PHM.htm
LynGrey wrote:where is the round kick... i see that more often than the straight kicks, they work in better in combinations.
Jake_Norwood wrote:LynGrey wrote:where is the round kick... i see that more often than the straight kicks, they work in better in combinations.
Lyn,
I'm not sure that there is much of a history of round kicks (I'm assuming we're talking about roundhouse kicks here). I've seen (and used) hooking kicks, stomping kicks, and frontal snap-type kicks in sparring with a variety of weapons, but despite (limited) training in martial arts that integrate roundhouse kicks I have yet to see an opportunity to use one that wouldn't compromise my situation considerably.
Jake
Jake_Norwood wrote:Lyn,
I appreciate your knowledge and your comments, but not especially your tone. Of course this is online communication so I might be reading you wrong. If so, please forgive the error. If not, please take a look at what you're typing first. I'm not a dummy, but we're working from a different set of terminologies here. I don't expect you to know the Ringen names for things, after all.
Also I'm confused--you say that you don't see round kicks, but then you say they're in every manual you can think of. I assume we're talking about the same set of manuals, but maybe not.
In which case the kind of kick you're talking about is, in fact, in ringen. Strikes to the legs, in particular, are very common when looking at kicks in Ringen.
Best,
Jake
Jake_Norwood wrote:I'm glad the TKD/KM comparison got a little bit of a response. They are very, very different arts, but they both use striking for similar reasons--striking is, ultimately, a deterrent. TKD has become essentially boxing or a points game, which separates it from KM considerably. KM uses strikes for two reasons, based on my (admittedly) limited exposure: 1, to set up for a throw or joint attack (this is what strikes are for in Ringen) and 2, to hurt the other guy. Of course simply causing pain is a very civilian/modern soldier consideration, which has it's utility in convincing the other guy to leave you alone (or, in a rarer military context) to submit somehow to your instructions. But it's purpose *isn't* to destroy, debilitate, incompacitate, or otherwise really jack the enemy up. So that's where I was going with that.
KM, by the way, is probably the most practical of all of the current "martial arts" for street use. Certainly moreso than the US Army's BJJ-based Level-one combatives.
Jake
Return to “Unarmed Skills Discussion”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||