I think it also depends on how familiar one is with the kenpo knife system to begin with. Many only deal with the prescribed knife defense techniques in the brown cirriculum, etc., and attempt to extrapolate from their and devise a certain understanding of kenpo knife work.
"What EPAK knife system? Where in EPAK does it teach you to use a knife? I know that there are a few knife techniques that give you some ideas and that "some" of the weapons teachiques can be be use for different weapons. (ie storm works against lance or maybe rod work for storm. You got to play with that one
My own experience has been very limited in practing against FMA'ers, but I
have seen over and over a fundamental difference in how kenpo knife fighter deals with a knife attack vs. how a FMA'er knife fighter deals with a knife attack. But, my understanding of the kenpo knife system is also far greater than my understanding of FMA systems, so obviously my opinions are skewed.
I agree because EPAK does not have a knife system.
The knife system in kenpo parallels that of empty handed kenpo. The blade is not the primary weapon you need to deal with. The man is the primary weapon. Without skeletal control, you will be in a game of cat and mouse, blade against blade, and in this game the FMA'er excels, and he will dice you like an Easter ham. Kenpo is an attacking system, it works to dominate the spinal ring and control variables. Cuts are not designed to cut, but to kill. To the kenpo knife practitioner, the strategy to "defang the snake" is largely a potentially a dangerous one in a truly hostile environment - it simply takes to long to effect a kill.
I agree and disagree with this statem. I agree that you need to control your opponet and not focus to much on the blade. However, the way EPAK is laid out it is not an attacking system, it is a very good SELF DEFENSE SYSTEM. Now, i am not saying that with the correct instruction or entries that EPAK can not work as a attacking system because it can and once again works very well. I made the particular transistion with my movement about 3 years agao. From my perspective the EPAK techniques provide you with some pretty goof ideas but that is about it.
Mechanically, I have never seen FMA capable of delivering the physical power the kenpo can deliver.
( I would be glad to introduce you to Dan Inosanto, Zach Whitson or Al McLuckie and I promise you that thier power is scarey)
Now at first, one would argue that a knife fight does not require power, and it doesn't if cutting flesh is your only consideration. But, as I stated before, the knife is only part of the threat.
I think you may want to play with some PT Kali guys.
Lack of bracing angles, quick and darting footwork, and any in ability to control the skeleton may render one in trouble if the attacker is using his mass - not a typical thing in the concept of the knife "dual", which is a dominant paradigm in martial arts from historically bladed cultures.
Bracing agle with do nothing for you with a blade in your throat.
I believe we should take nothing for granted. Many knife against knife practitioners train as though the knife is the only thing they have to deal with, or worse, they deal with a single attack.
I am 100% with you here. Man FMA folks pay too much attention to the weapons and hardley ever train empty hands or against several attackers. This is what I think EPAk is great at!
As another example, a close quarter, fast, shanking prison-type attack is not only tough to deal with, but requires that you take on a rushing mass that is not so different from a tackle. Even if superior blade work provides allows you to deliver a fatal cut, you still have 150 - 200lbs of meth-driven mass coming at you like a freight train (who says the attacker is cunning and strategic?).
I see your point and I will agree that the kinife is very dangerous to deal with. In my opinion and I have head this from many top level people (I am not one of them) the blade is the most dangerous of all the weapons.
The thrust of my post here is skeletal control. Domination of the physical mass is the priority in kenpo, empty hand or knife. Of my brief experiences playing with others familiar with FMA work, "playing the game" with them got me killed nearly every time - they out parried me, out cut me, out maneuvered me, and simply played the cat and mouse game better. When adhering to kenpo principles, if my first motion stuffed their attack, they became meat with me being the butcher.
CAn you give me some details here. Maybe your doing something that I could learn from.
Once you've initiated action and if you're successful at thwarting the first cut, stab, etc., then any second motion should not be an option available to them. Out of Range, in Range, Contact Penetration, Impact Manipulation, Contact Manipulation, Contact Maintenance, Release, and Extraction - same strategy as the empty hand. The power generated via the neutral bow and proper footwork, coupled with proper use of 12 Points (more on that some other time) and an intent to kill, should dominate their action. No retreat or side stepping should be able to match your conquest for their spine.
I know that against a train PT Kali guy you better be on your game here because they are trained to counter and the recounter attacks and do it very very well.
So, its a different approach I believe. Its may seem pretty hairy because it requires 100% commitment. Also, it requires absolutely correct basics in one's kenpo. Small errors in empty handed kenpo become enormous errors when we're dealing with the blade. For that reason, the kenpo knife system isn't formally introduced until many years into the kenpo journey, in so far as our group is concerned.
What group?
So, one is not better than the other, I don't believe. But one should measure apples to apples. The FMA systems abound, and there aren't alot who have spent several decades in the kenpo knife system proper. As a result, many attempt to bring the knife into kenpo by hybridizing it with what is clearly the most prominent knife work around - FMA arts. Bear in mind, though, there are significant differences, and the kenpo knife system has been proven 100% effective in scenarios as deadly as deadly gets.
I am still at a loss for this EPAK knive system that you are refering to. What lineage to you train under if I may please ask?
This is a great discussion. I will hold true to the knife as I learn it from my kenpo teacher, but am very interested to hear the FMA side of things from a kenpoists perspective. Great topic. Thanks for posting.
Salute,
Steven Brown
Universal Kenpo Federation