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- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Path: sparky!uunet!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!bloom-picayune.mit.edu!athena.mit.edu!ras
- From: ras@athena.mit.edu (Richard A Shandross)
- Subject: Re: Getting to grappling range.
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.174017.24315@athena.mit.edu>
- Keywords: grappling, judo
- Sender: news@athena.mit.edu (News system)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: w20-575-53.mit.edu
- Organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- References: <1992Nov12.154446.2702@ms.uky.edu> <1992Nov15.182628.666@athena.mit.edu>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 17:40:17 GMT
- Lines: 58
-
- I'm surprised nobody flamed me on the following:
-
- In article <1992Nov15.182628.666@athena.mit.edu> I wrote:
-
- >As for kicks, I think it depends on the speed of the person's kicks, and how
- >rooted he/she is in delivering them. If the person is slow, one can get
- >directly in to grappling range by jamming the kick at its inception. If the
- >person is not stable in the supporting leg, the kick is weak and one can likely
- >take much of the impact in an unsensitive area, such as the thigh or even the
- >side of the body though the latter is a bit of a gamble. (The best bet for a
- >weak high kick is to catch it on the arm or with the hand, and keep moving
- >forward - you will unbalance and probably even topple the kicker.) Don't
- >rush in testicles first. :-) If the person is fast and strong, you can do
- >the dodging and entering trick I mentioned above for handwork.
- >
- >Rich
- >
- >
-
- It was a pretty poorly-written article. My only excuse is that I wrote it
- after 3 all-nighters in one week. So let me clarify a few things:
-
- 1. I was referring to sparring or similar two person exercises, NOT
- street fighting. In the former cases you have a chance to see how strong a
- person's kicks, stances, and structure are. That doesn't take too long to do,
- by the way.
-
- 2. When I referred to jamming the kick, I meant getting to it before
- it has power. Ideally at the leg lifting stage, where the person's momentum
- is more up than out, and if they aren't strong stance/structure-wise they are
- also pulling back a bit so as to balance themselves. Practically speaking, the
- first few inches thereafter can be ok *if* the person's supporting structure
- isweak (all too common). The kick's power is not much developed at that point,
- then, but there certainly is some risk involved. Looking at the physics:
- without a stable connection to the ground to push off of - ie, they are
- balancing as opposed to rooting/centering - the only power in the kick is the
- momentum, and it takes distance to develop that momeentum.
- Also, at the very end of a kick, where the person's energy is spent,
- one can sort of "attach" to the now-harmless striking surface and redirect it
- back towards the body.
- Meeting force with force is contrary to Tai Chi principles, and I don't
- recommend it. The point is that it's not really any force to speak of in the
- cases I mentioned. In any other case, one should yield - avoid the blow if
- possible, "roll with it" if you are struck.
-
- 3. I was definitely out of it to write that one should consider taking
- any kind of hit to the unprotected side of the body! I don't know *what* I was
- thinking; bruised ribs are not fun, and I think the kidneys are a bit more
- important than a sparring match.
-
- 4. This jamming stuff is most likely not going to be applicable when
- you are dealing with someone who's whole art revolves around kicking, and they
- have some skill in the art... TKD, Muay Thai, kickboxers, whatever.
-
-
- Jeez, I gotta stop working so much!
-
- Rich
-