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Thread: Kicking Form

  1. #1
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    Kicking Form

    If you train your kicking combos such as:

    - front kick, roundhouse kick,
    - roundhouse kick, side kick,
    - side kick, turn back kick,
    - inside crescent kick, turn hook kick,
    - ...

    What style are you training? Should you have those kicking skill no matter what style that you train? Should those kicking skill have no "style boundary" at all?

    If you just link all those kicks in a sequence, you will have a kicking form as,

    "front kick, roundhouse kick, side kick, turn back kick, inside crescent kick, turn hook kick".

    This new kicking form can be one extra form for whatever your original system may be. There should be no conflict with your original style at all. If you add this into your

    - Taiji system, you can call it Taiji kicking form.
    - XingYi system, you can call it XingYi kicking form.
    - Bagua system, you can call it Bagua kicking form.
    - ...

    This way, the word "style" will have little meaning. What if you also add a throwing form (form contains all throws) and locking form (form contain all locks) into your Taiji, XingYi, Bagua, ... system? What will happen to the future generation for the TCMA if we take this approach?
    Last edited by YouKnowWho; 09-28-2011 at 08:09 PM.

  2. #2

    Thumbs up

    if you are yin style ba gua, it incorporated luo han shou (shaolin style)

    there are a lot shaolin kick or leg methods.

    if you are cheng ting hua ba gua, you have a lot of throws from shuai jiao.

    if you are Sha/Jiang or Liang style, you have a lot of tan tui kicks.

    personally, I like mantis kicks

    there is a set of 7 kicks in a row. it is called 7 plum flowers or mei hua qi duo.

    --

    kick and kick away, low mid turn/spin rear whatever you like in a combo.

    --


  3. #3

  4. #4

  5. #5
    Greetings YouKnowWho and SPJ

    There are lots of kicks one can do. The problem is that the kung fu of Chinese style kicking is dying out. Who trains their toes now days? In relation to the development of the toes, I posted up a link to training the toes a few years ago under the title Tan Tui Related Material. There was no discussion or feedback like, "We train our toes in a different manner" The saying "The hands are like two doors.." falls upon deaf ears; instead, we observe people initiate combat with a rear leg high kick, only to get stomped into the ground. The theory of kicking and the training methods are more important than the kicks themselves (which isn't to say kicks are unimportant) and it is those two things that are dying out first.

    mickey
    Last edited by mickey; 09-28-2011 at 07:30 PM.

  6. #6
    Kicks should be trained with a partner during some kind of sparring. If alone kicks should be trained against a bag. Not a form. Throws can only be trained with a partner otherwise you will never learn them properly. A throwing form is no different than a form for forms sake. You are better off doing conditioning to make yourself stronger for partner throwing. Why does tcma make a form out of everything?


    Of course if you are not doing martial arts to actually gain skill than do the kick and throw form. If you are just doing martial arts for exercise than do the kick form.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by RWilson View Post
    Why does tcma make a form out of everything?
    It's only for "teaching" and learning "purpose". It's like a text book. If a kicking form contains 20 moves, you can link it anyway you want as long as the sequence makes logical sense. It's a challeng task to create a 20 moves kicking form that one kick can flow into another kick smoothly. It's much easier to "remember" a form that contains 20 kicks than 20 complete different kicks in random order.

    In another thread, WC guys was talking about not enough throwing and locking in the system. If we have "universal" kicking form, locking form, and throwing form for every system, the individual style can concentrate on the uniqueness of the punching only. This way all TCMA systems can be qualified as "complete".

    When we talk about punching,

    - person A may say that he likes to use "snake engine" for that punch.
    - Person B may say that he likes to use "core engine" for that punch.
    - Person C may say that he likes to rotate his Dantien clockwise for that punch.
    - ...

    The moment that we start to talk about roundhouse kick, arm bar, single leg, those discussion about "different engines" and "internal power" suddently quite down. It just seems to me that style are more common in those area of kicking, locking, and throwing. So why can't we have "universal" kicking form, "universal" locking form, and "universal" throwing form for all the TCMA styles on this planet?

    The new Yang Taiji system will now contain:

    - 108 moves long Taiji form.
    - 20 move kicking form.
    - 40 moves locking form.
    - 80 moves throwing form?

    X + A + B + C > X

    Is this a good idea?
    Last edited by YouKnowWho; 09-28-2011 at 09:07 PM.

  8. #8
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    Of course, it's usually most beneficial to train kicks with partners or with pads and heavy bags. But there's nothing wrong with training them for form by air kicking, too, just not overdoing it. Kicking air helps to develop the ability to recover if your kick misses, and to develop the basic habit of fast retraction (if your kicking style retracts kicks). You can do that by yourself, without any equipment, and for free. Because you don't always have partners or training equipment at hand. Some people seem to have an extreme, black and white, either/or approach, as if training kicks to develop proper form -- outside of all the other work that goes into them -- is somehow harmful to being a MAist. You can develop form kicking pads, bags and drilling, but air kicking involves different muscles and works your balance in a different way. Nothing wrong with all-around development.

    As for developing a specific long form for it, for myself personally, I don't think it's really necessary, other than maybe two-or-three-kick combos of your own. You develop your own way of using them, anyway. My preference now is not to overkick, but to use them in conjunction with other skills. But if someone wants to develop their own form, I suppose it could help for coordination purposes.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 09-29-2011 at 12:16 AM.

  9. #9
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    Why does tcma make a form out of everything?
    Throwing a kick in the air doing basics or while shadow boxing is not a form, it is a way to consistently train the break down and steps of a kick so when they throw it on a bag, pads, or sparring they know how to do it. Which, ironically enough, is something the sport fighting crowd could take advice from considering some of the attrocious kicks I have seen them throw. Throwing a kick on a bag or pads without correct form and technique is still throwing a shh***itty kick, period.

    I train my students with kicks in three aspects:

    1. Basics- This is where the student is taught the proper mechanics of a kick, in line, with instructions on stance posture, chambering and re-chambering, where the kick lands, what part of the foot or shin they are kicking with, ect.

    2. Mitt Work/Bag- The student takes what they learned from basics and applies it to hitting a solid object.

    3. Sparring-The student takes what they learned and applies it to trying to kick a moving object that is trying to hit/kick them back. This is truly where distance and timing is learned.

    Here are some vids of kicks from my gym:

    Snapping Roundhouse:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvmOSBYTLwM

    Power Roundhouse:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJTSn...eature=related

    Punches/Kicks:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fyAukizmKU
    "The hero and the coward both feel the same thing, but the hero projects his fear onto his opponent while the coward runs. 'Fear'. It's the same thing, but it's what you do with it that matters". -Cus D'Amato

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Iron_Eagle_76 View Post
    Throwing a kick in the air doing basics or while shadow boxing is not a form, it is a way to consistently train the break down and steps of a kick so when they throw it on a bag, pads, or sparring they know how to do it. Which, ironically enough, is something the sport fighting crowd could take advice from considering some of the attrocious kicks I have seen them throw. Throwing a kick on a bag or pads without correct form and technique is still throwing a shh***itty kick, period.

    I train my students with kicks in three aspects:

    1. Basics- This is where the student is taught the proper mechanics of a kick, in line, with instructions on stance posture, chambering and re-chambering, where the kick lands, what part of the foot or shin they are kicking with, ect.

    2. Mitt Work/Bag- The student takes what they learned from basics and applies it to hitting a solid object.

    3. Sparring-The student takes what they learned and applies it to trying to kick a moving object that is trying to hit/kick them back. This is truly where distance and timing is learned.

    Here are some vids of kicks from my gym:

    Snapping Roundhouse:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvmOSBYTLwM

    Power Roundhouse:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJTSn...eature=related

    Punches/Kicks:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fyAukizmKU

    I agree 100% but the OP did not say shadow boxing. He said link the kicks into a specific order(form) and do them. Then he said make up different drills which sounds like shadow boxing but is still forms. Shadow boxing is completely random and not the same as a form at all.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by RWilson View Post
    I agree 100% but the OP did not say shadow boxing. He said link the kicks into a specific order(form) and do them. Then he said make up different drills which sounds like shadow boxing but is still forms. Shadow boxing is completely random and not the same as a form at all.
    Gotcha man, thanks for the clarification. If someone is doing forms or kick sequences only they may have pretty kicks but not much of anything else. In Pai Lum we have kick sequences which combine all kicks such as Front Thrust, Side Thrust, Roundhouse, Crescents, Hook, Donkey, ect. And these are good for teaching mechanics and form, but still there has to be a solid target to hit.

    Just like in boxing, boxers may do shadow boxing but still need to hit bags and do mitt work. Same principle applies for kicks.
    "The hero and the coward both feel the same thing, but the hero projects his fear onto his opponent while the coward runs. 'Fear'. It's the same thing, but it's what you do with it that matters". -Cus D'Amato

  12. #12
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    Neither shadow boxing nor pad work is 100% random. Combinations are prearranged patterns of movement.

  13. #13
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    learn the kick usually in line drills. use the kick on pads/bags. combine your kicks with free play (shadow boxing) so to work on combinations and set ups, ie: become comfortable throwing those combinations and working with the transitions to become efficient and powerful. use those kicks in sparring. you may want to use kicks to set up punches, such as; left head kick, right leg kick, right straight punch, left hook, etc.

    if you are alone and want to practice kicks, you can work on the heavy bag, you can isolate a kick and drill it repeatedly. imo if you were to use a 'kick form' the best benefit you can gain from that is a repeated use of kicking transitions, from one kick to another. this approach is not too far different from shadow boxing in the sense that you are connecting your techniques, the main difference though is that you are working over and over on the exact same combo, working that combination to a level of perfection. but then this is usually done int he form of a very small form, such as just a simple combo; low right leg kick, front left kick, right head kick, over, and over and over. then when you try this in sparring after doing this small form on a bag and in the air, you will have explosiveness and precision, since you have done that combo so many times before. by doing this method you will improve that combo in a way you never could if you did not repeatedly do this combo ten thousand times.

    combine every kick in one long form? i dont think it is necessary to do that though. however small personal 'form combos' i think are a good benefit for punches or kicks.

    a lot of people who do cma will refer to isolated combos as forms. but its the exact same thing.
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by wenshu View Post
    Neither shadow boxing nor pad work is 100% random. Combinations are prearranged patterns of movement.
    precisely so holmes
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    If you train your kicking combos such as:

    - front kick, roundhouse kick,
    - roundhouse kick, side kick,
    - side kick, turn back kick,
    - inside crescent kick, turn hook kick,
    - ...

    What style are you training? Should you have those kicking skill no matter what style that you train? Should those kicking skill have no "style boundary" at all?

    If you just link all those kicks in a sequence, you will have a kicking form as,

    "front kick, roundhouse kick, side kick, turn back kick, inside crescent kick, turn hook kick".

    This new kicking form can be one extra form for whatever your original system may be. There should be no conflict with your original style at all. If you add this into your

    - Taiji system, you can call it Taiji kicking form.
    - XingYi system, you can call it XingYi kicking form.
    - Bagua system, you can call it Bagua kicking form.
    - ...

    This way, the word "style" will have little meaning. What if you also add a throwing form (form contains all throws) and locking form (form contain all locks) into your Taiji, XingYi, Bagua, ... system? What will happen to the future generation for the TCMA if we take this approach?

    YouKnowWho:

    One problem with this is that "Style" is what separates Chinese from Korean, Japanese from Russian, Tibetian from Indian etc etc.

    Each style has a different approach or entering strategy, uses a different theory and when and how to apply them.

    Now a Round Kick (Round House) is the same for all styles however, each style may use a different type of energy:

    Korean Styles mainly pivot off the ball of their supporting foot and use more waist twist and snapping energy.

    Chinese Styles mainly pivot off the heel of the supporting foot and use more kinetic or body power.

    Some style may favor a straight forward approach where other styles may favor angles etc.

    If there was no style..... then we would all be doing the "World Martial Art" style and everyone would be the same we would all be robots with no form of self expression or expansion.

    ginosifu

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