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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!bnr.co.uk!uknet!edcastle!dcs.ed.ac.uk!tk
- From: tk@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Tommy Kelly)
- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Subject: Sport Karate, Effectiveness, and all that stuff
- Message-ID: <C02u5y.F7p@dcs.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: 30 Dec 92 14:41:58 GMT
- Sender: cnews@dcs.ed.ac.uk (UseNet News Admin)
- Reply-To: tk@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Tommy Kelly)
- Organization: Laboratory for the Foundations of Computer Science, Edinburgh U
- Lines: 29
-
- I train in Shotokai (not Shotokan) and have no Sport Karate experience.
- Also, our kumite is very formal, and looks deceptively soft and ineffective.
- Anyway, it suits me, but thats just background.
-
- I recently watched -for the first time - some competition fighting and I
- must admit I was a bit disappointed.
- Knock-down fights in particular looked messy and "boxing-like". Even the
- Shotokan folks, who are arguably closer to my own style, looked unconvincing.
-
- Now I am not knocking competition at all. And I am sure that the folks I
- watched were formidable (Vic Charles was one). But still it wasn't what
- I expected.
-
- I get the feeling that there is something fundamentally different required
- from the sport karate-ka compared with the non-competitor.
-
- And I wonder how a champion sportsman would compare with a "champion"
- non-sportsman.
-
- So a question.
- It seems that the champions are all young guys. Yet they are typically
- graded lower than the masters of their styles.
-
- Q. Do you think (if he would stoop to it) that a top-graded master
- would be able to defeat a young world champion in:
- a. Competition
- b. Real combat
-
- tommy
-