Jared_Guinther wrote:
I train in Krav Maga, an Israeli hand-to-hand combat system. It's not a traditional system, unlike Kung Fu, traditional Karate, aikido, etc. It has no Katas, no philosophical rituals, and technically, it's not a "martial art." It's a practical self-defense method that's simple, fast, and most importantly, effective! It's all based on gross motor skill as opposed to complex motor skill. I've been training in it for a year now and it's the system that I'm going to stick with.
Watching the trends though its been interesting to see how things fluctuate. Take for example Dan Inosanto, he was JKD's purveyor, then he went strong on Kali in the 80's and 90's, now he has his own brand of Silat. It seems like most of the different styles out there had different specialties. What I tend to tell people into karate for example is that it was build by peasants to fight samurai, and when you think about it - its moves are quite application specific that way. Things like Filipino Martial arts - Kali, etc., some of the better Silats, Win Chun, Kuntao, are built more for very quick and hard midrange fighting, Krav Maga and Systema both seem to remind me of the later, although Systema has its obvious leanings on Aikido. What I have been able to see of Krav Maga looks good though, like seeing the bil sao blocks, invading the center, changing the center, forarm strikes to the neck, etc.. It really does seem to come down to the teacher and what they tend to throw in. I'm with you on the practical - that's paramount in my books too.
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