Jake, did you guys really practice grappling with a stun gun as you described? Lol!
*I* haven't (yet...mine's on order), but it *is* common practice at the combatives school come levels two and three.
Jake
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Jake, did you guys really practice grappling with a stun gun as you described? Lol!
I have always enjoyed watching people in hand to hand combat, i always stop to watch people fighting (and apply encouragement).
I've seen quite a few karate / kung fu guys get thier asses whooped myself. But there are badasses in every art, if they apply what they learn in the proper environment and keep an open mind. Add a little technique to an experienced street fighter and he becomes very dangerous. But i have seen alot of pure street fighters get taken to town by boxers because the strret fighters had a one dimensional game and couldn't take the fight out of the phase that the boxer wanted to fight in. All depends on the guys involved and how they train really. The attitude of the guys fighting is as important as what they train, if they are dead set to injure you at any cost they more than likely will.
The attitude of the guys fighting is as important as what they train, if they are dead set to injure you at any cost they more than likely will.
Man is that true! In my first real fight i went in confident from my baoxing training, and got my ass kicked.
There is a great quote i love: "Train as you fight, fight as you train" I like to train for technique just enough to know what it's basics is.. but after I understand it, i ask my partner to do anything different, keep going, don't stop... when i do this.. resist it.. everything you can do.. i like to keep it mixed up.Thats why I firmly beleive in introducing as much chaos as possible into martial training, the more chaos you have to deal with, that is uncontrolled situations , the more you can handle it when chaos hits for real.
To elaborate on what (I think ) Jake is saying here and to add my $.02, I have recently had the opportunity to take free self defence classes at my gym from an experienced professional MMA fighter. This has really brought home the differences in intent, and therefore in technique. The basic concept of the fight is the same, that is, any type of attack is allowed and anything flashy but ineffective is quickly weeded out. However, because of the difference of intent it's still apples and oranges.Hi Kevin,
I'd agree with your comparison of MMA as today's Ringen, with the caveat that modern urban combatives (US Army and others), which draw *very* heavily from MMA, are the actual equivalent.
Also, Orthodox Jiu-Jitsu has some similarities to Ringen, but otherwise the statement that they're "similar" hasn't really been true for at least 600 years, when JJ was still a combative for the battlefield. What you see in Ringen and what you learn in JJ have similarities, but not to the degree that I think you might be under the impression of.
Best,
Jake
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