Hanzou
Grandmaster
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2013
- Messages
- 6,770
- Reaction score
- 1,330
- Thread Starter
- #481
Superior in what way? I think this is an excellent question. One of my favourite topics to think about is, what makes a martial artist and what makes a fighter? Is there a difference between the two, and if so what is it? Can one be a martial artist and a fighter simultaneously?
When it comes to traditional martial arts, this term is used loosely. What constitutes as traditional varies from style to style, and person to person. In my eyes, traditional martial arts training involves hardcore conditioning, such as bone conditioning and hardcore stretching. Wouldn't that make the physical fitness of the TMA practitioners, by these standards, superior for fighting? Furthermore, the end goal of TMA practitioners and athletes in combat sports is different. Athletes competing in fights, whether it be professional MMA or Amateur Boxing, in reality, are just athletes. Their goal is to win, whether by points or by knockout, not to kill or injure. The athletes are just athletes, and of these few athletes, only a few of them would classify as real fighters.
These boxing bouts and MMA matches are just rehearsals for the reality of the dangers in the world; where there are no rules or referees. TMA practitioners, again by my standards, take this into account. They understand that there is a difference between a fight and sparring. By all these standards, TMA practitioners seem superior, don't they?
But the quality of TMA has dropped. It's maddening to see. We have these so-called martial artists and fighters with insane superiority complexes, bullying anyone who dares to touch weight training. For some reason, physical strength is despised and made fun of in the martial arts community nowadays, even though it should go hand in hand. They don't practice sparring and preach inner peace, even though they don't have the strength for battle.
The reason combat sports athletes are kicking *** right now is that TMAs have dropped. They are an embarrassment to their history, and I have seen very few schools that teach what needs to be taught. Martial arts were created so that the weak could become strong and defend themselves; now weakness is encouraged with participation trophies, "no contact sparring" and other crap. However, there is no doubt in mind, that real TMA practitioners, the ones that came before us and our ancestors over a century ago would floor almost any modern athlete except for the fact that MMA is a thing now that makes the athlete "fighters" of this generation more flexible than any other fighters in history.
That really depends on what time period you're talking about where TMAs supposedly dropped in quality. I'm of the opinion that most TMA stories are pure BS and folktales. Mainly because the basis of their stories don't mesh with reality. The Kung Fu masters of Shaolin didn't do much to dislodge the Manchus from China. The Okinawan Te masters didn't do jack against the Samurai of the Satsuma clan. The guy that Jet Li's Fearless is based on never fought anyone, and more than likely died of food poisoning.
So when someone comes along and says that TMAs used to be amazing, I just nod in agreement and try not to roll my eyes.
For example, here's a couple of Kung Fu masters from the 1950s;
This was about 70 years ago, and the technique looks like garbage. I'd put some BJJ white belts in there with about 6 weeks training and they'd put both of those guys in the hospital. Yet those are Kung Fu "masters"?
Here's some footage of those famous "rooftop fights" in Hong Kong;
Again, nothing really all that impressive.
The truth of the matter is that when western Boxers and Wrestlers entered China and Japan to challenge the martial arts masters there, they wiped the floor with them, and this was back in the late 1800s and early 1900s. I mean, compare those fights above to someone like Jack Johnson, Sugar Ray Robinson, Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis, etc. It wouldn't even be a contest.
You know how Kano reinvigorated Japanese Jujitsu? He combined it with western wrestling. He took that knowledge and used it to best traditional Jujitsu and replace it with a more modern system.