home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!hp-cv!ogicse!reed!todd
- From: todd@reed.edu (Todd Ellner)
- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Subject: Re: Thai kickboxing
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.080803.24930@reed.edu>
- Date: 31 Dec 92 08:08:03 GMT
- Article-I.D.: reed.1992Dec31.080803.24930
- References: <1992Dec29.194931.3472@reed.edu> <1992Dec27.035210.23364@microsoft.com> <1992Dec31.024754.25064@microsoft.com>
- Organization: Reed College, Portland, Oregon
- Lines: 54
-
- In article <1992Dec31.024754.25064@microsoft.com> bobsarv@microsoft.com (Bob Sarver) writes:
- >Why is this better / more dynamic than other kinds of sparring? Are the
- >motions simpler / more instinctive than other MA? If so, does that let you
- >concentrate less on artistic perfection of form, and more on "getting the
- >job done"?
-
- What I was trying to say is that with Thai pads or focus mitts and a good
- feeder you can get a lot of the benefits of sparring without sparring per se.
- First, when you hit pads instead of hitting just air you get used to hitting
- something that provides resistance and to hitting a target in a certain place
- (i.e. wherever the feeder puts it). If the feeder is good s/he will move you
- around much like in sparring and make you defend yourself (blocking, evading,
- etc.). In other words, you hit something like you really would hit an
- opponent without having to pull your punches. You move around in a realistic
- fashion, and practice defense and offense in the same drill. Of course, all
- of this depends on the feeder. If s/he is good, and there is an art to feeding
- which I am still struggling with, s/he will work on what you need to do at
- the level you need to work and give you a good hard physical workout as well.
- [Please not that this is not unique to Muay Thai. Boxers use focus mitts, and
- many other styles of martial arts have picked up this training method].
-
- >So the padding doesn't interfere with the toughening of the shins, elbows,
- >etc? Does the padding create any bad side effects (due to the fact that
- >in the ring or on the street you won't be wearing padding)?
- 1Thai pads and focus mitts are not soft, at least not the good ones. They
- provide some mass so that your feeder doesn't get broken, and they are not
- hard like wood, but it is not like hitting an air shield or a cushion. You
- can hit a Thai pad much harder than your limb can take without pain. Then
- too a teacher of mine has said that it is better to hit something softer
- ten times than to hit something really hard once.
-
- >Also: makiwara?
- A somewhat-padded surface (often a wrapped post or a bean-bag on a wall)
- which Okinawan and Japanese stylists among others use to toughen their
- limbs.
-
- >(todd)
- >/I have gone on for some time about the virtues of Muay Thai _training_ and
- >/have said very little about the _sparring_. That is because there is very
- >/little (or no) sparring unless you actually get into the ring.
- >
- >No open sparring, without pads?
-
- Not in any school I am aware of or any training camp in Thailand that I have
- heard of. The one school I am familiar with that tried it regretted it. The
- students wanted to spar and kept bugging the instructor to let them spar
- full-contact. He finally gave in. So many of them got badly hurt that the
- school quickly dropped its Muay Thai program (Iron Tiger Karate School in
- Capitola, CA).
- --
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Todd Ellner todd@reed.edu
- "What has the study of biology taught you about the Creator Dr. Haldane?"
- JBS Haldane:"I'm not sure, but He seems to be inordinately fond of beetles."
-