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TenTigers
12-19-2011, 11:31 AM
What are the best ways to condition students (especially beginners) to take leg kicks?
(I know someone has to say it, "Just keep kickin' them in the legs!")

sanjuro_ronin
12-19-2011, 11:33 AM
What are the best ways to condition students (especially beginners) to take leg kicks?
(I know someone has to say it, "Just keep kickin' them in the legs!")

BESIDES kicking them in the legs ( which is still the best way) you can hit them with padded sticks and work your way to sticks.
Swing the HB and then take the shot on the thigh or shin ( for shin blocks).

mickey
12-19-2011, 12:15 PM
Greetings,


http://uechiryu-karate.com/products_ironarm.htm



mickey

IronFist
12-20-2011, 10:50 AM
Novocaine?

mooyingmantis
12-20-2011, 12:53 PM
I use an 18" long 2x4. One end was turned down on the end to act as a handle. The "business end" loves shins, inner thighs and IT band areas on the legs. :D

-N-
12-20-2011, 01:39 PM
We do this as part of the warmup.

http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b76/Mr_Ugly/aa_GIFSoupcom.gif

You can add shin kicks, thigh kicks, and torso kicks too.

Impact should be hard enough to hear on the other side of the park.

Featherstone
12-20-2011, 02:31 PM
I have come to find a lot of the newer generations just dont have it them to do conditioning. I have to go so soft on them it make's my inner child cry.

I know this doesnt have to do with leg kicks but, we have a 15 year old that on the second night into learning how to be the head of the lion has bowed out of doing it all together.

Lee Chiang Po
12-20-2011, 06:22 PM
You can not effectively condition your legs to be kicked. You might for playing Muay Tai or whatever, but no matter how much you condition your legs I can break them with a single kick. Rather then just taking it in the legs you need to learn ways to prevent it. I would never use a leg to block a kick or just let someone continue kicking away at my legs. It don't make no sense to do that.
I have seen 2 occasions on TV while watching people fight where a chinese girl and a guy from Brazil or some such broke their own legs using slap kicks where the shin was the point of impact. I'm not saying it is stupid, but I fail to see the intellegence in such actions.

-N-
12-21-2011, 01:20 AM
Conditioning is secondary. Primary is to rely on skill and brains. The other is just in case. Maybe more so for beginners.

charp choi
12-29-2011, 03:27 PM
Some good points made already.
You can use Thai Pads for starters (the curved ones by Fairtex are nice and hard) for this then go one to blocking kicks using the shins with shin pads on then to shin on shin. Takes time but it's worth it in the long run. Or you can mix it up.

monkey mind
01-13-2012, 08:37 AM
Shin blocks? Where are you guys learning to block leg kicks with your shins? Here in Thailand I was taught to use my knee to block kicks. OK, specifically I'm talking about the head of the tibia, just below the knee joint, so I guess you could call it the very top of the shin. But mid-shin on shin is always going to be a dicey proposition & over here you can count on people having very hard shins. The head of the tibia is naturally much thicker than the shaft (shin) & much better suited to blocking. And one good block with the knee usually stops people from kicking hard to that leg.

But back to the OP, we used to stand in the guard position while our partners would hit us with from the sides with wooden staves, from the forearms on down to the legs. Mostly though we practiced proper blocking - in sparring & in the ring I never got hit with a solid leg kick. Now getting hit with knees was another story :eek:

sanjuro_ronin
01-13-2012, 09:17 AM
Shin blocks? Where are you guys learning to block leg kicks with your shins? Here in Thailand I was taught to use my knee to block kicks. OK, specifically I'm talking about the head of the tibia, just below the knee joint, so I guess you could call it the very top of the shin. But mid-shin on shin is always going to be a dicey proposition & over here you can count on people having very hard shins. The head of the tibia is naturally much thicker than the shaft (shin) & much better suited to blocking. And one good block with the knee usually stops people from kicking hard to that leg.

But back to the OP, we used to stand in the guard position while our partners would hit us with from the sides with wooden staves, from the forearms on down to the legs. Mostly though we practiced proper blocking - in sparring & in the ring I never got hit with a solid leg kick. Now getting hit with knees was another story :eek:

Yes, by "shin blocking" we ( I assume most) mean the the part nearest to the knee but of course since we have only partial control over WHERE our opponents kick will land, ALL of the shin has to be conditioned to block too.
That said I have also seen/been taught to block with the shin nearer to the foot so...

Neeros
01-13-2012, 01:31 PM
Ever since I started practicing horse stance daily my legs have gotten a lot tougher.

Fighting Eagle
01-19-2012, 09:15 AM
Have them kick each other with shin pads, later, remove the pads.