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- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!ames!data.nas.nasa.gov!taligent!apple!mikel
- From: mikel@Apple.COM (Mikel Evins)
- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Subject: Re: 10th Dan & Badass Karate Bullshit
- Message-ID: <74350@apple.apple.COM>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 18:34:25 GMT
- References: <Bxs2xn.AC7@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu> <74315@apple.apple.COM> <BxsE18.2t8@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu>
- Organization: Apple Computer Inc., Cupertino, CA
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <BxsE18.2t8@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu> burdickd@silver.ucs.indiana.edu (Dakin Burdick) writes:
- >In article <74315@apple.apple.COM> mikel@Apple.COM (Mikel Evins) writes:
- >
- >>I imagine that we could expect
- >>a very good fighter to keep most of his conditioning as he
- >>grows older, unless he sustains permanent injuries, and I would
- >>certainly expect him to get better at the more mental aspects
- >>of fighting, such as timing, strategy, tactics, and so on.
- >
- >Right, but while they may have a great idea of what to do, their
- >physical strength will be less (although they will be stronger than
- >their contemporaries) and hence their reaction time will also be
- >slower. Their bones will be more brittle, and their body fat
- >percentage will tend to be higher (although this latter can
- >be avoided).
-
- Welll...Okay, one of the places I was reading about aging
- and exercise was Self magazine. (I know, why was I reading Self?
- Well, becasue it had this article in it.) It claims that the
- bone brittleness problem is not nearly no bad in people
- who keep up an exercise regimen. They do recommend that
- running not be part of the regular workout as you get
- older, because it wears the joints too much. They also
- said body fat increases, but, percentage-wise, the change
- is very small in an active person.
-
- >Another point to remember is that a lot of older martial artists
- >are not full-time professionals. One of my instructors was a
- >great sparring instructor and taught me a lot. But he had a job,
- >and he had a wive and kids, and he couldn't spend as much time
- >training. Besides that, his reaction time was going down and I
- >was starting to get in on him, which discouraged him even more, so
- >now he just works on conditioning for himself, rather than sparring.
-
- Well, I have a couple of things to say about this. One is that
- I think that you can eventually learn to get in on anybody,
- no matter how good they are, as long as you are a dedicated
- student who pays attention to tactics. Another is that more
- practice time is going to translate into more progress. The
- last thing is that those tactical advantages conferred by
- experience are awfully important. It doesn't matter how much
- faster you are if the other guy knows how to consistently
- take a position that eliminates the advantage of speed.
-
- I imagine we're bound to end up splitting hairs, if we aren't
- already, so I'll concede that age is eventually going to erode
- a fighter's effectiveness. I do think, though, that the
- combination of the effects of exercise in mitigating the effect
- of aging and experience in improving a fighter's strategy and
- tactics can keep a fighter formidable quite late in life.
-
-