I just don't think that there are any absolutes in life. You can only tip the odds a bit but you cannot make them absolute, and to me you point seem more like an absolute. There are no guarantees about anything let alone there being a fact or absolute truth in saying that a 3rd dan should be this and that. There is no way to guarantee it for even a small percentage of any category let alone all or even most. Even people of same build and strength can be stop or stop one another with one punch. So what’s so hard to belief that someone bigger and stronger is doing it, regardless of any training? If you get hit and it hurts or takes your wind away, being a 3rd Dan or 10 Dan makes no difference. Just because you are a 3rd Dan does not guarantee you won't be hit let alone hurt. It happens. Taking a Martial Art and being any rank or level does not guarantee anything. Yes, you hope that when the time comes that what you have been practicing helps, but it may not.
To an extent, you are correct. No, there are no absolutes in fighting and a third dan does not guarantee that you will never be hit and/or injured.
But what you describe is essentially a point fight that you were losing until you threw all technique to the wind and bums rushed her and nailed her in the chest. That is the sort of attack that one would expect on the school yard or from an out of hand drunk. The fact that she had no resource against it at that level is troubling. Sorry, but there is no way around that short of the rank being exclusively for sport.
we were doing was a controlled match with set fighting skills. I fail to see why you find it hard for a 3rd dan weak person to lose to a bigger stronger less technically skilled person.
I do not think that you realize the picture that you paint of this on the internet. You should realize that it is a bigger issue than simply a third dan losing to a bigger, stronger, less technically skilled person.
She was not trying to keep me off until help came. She was not trying to fight for her life. Hell if at the time it was a 130 pound 35 year old 3rd Dan, I think the outcome would have been the same.
Maybe if this were a SD situation in the street it would have been different
Different? Yes, she would be raped and/or killed instead of helped off of the mat.
The fact that this was a controlled match and not a self defense situation actually makes it more troubling. She is in an environment where she knows that you are going to attacker her, that you are, for fact, unarmed, and she is mentally prepared to face you. In a self defense situation, you do not have those luxuries.
If she was taken down that easily in the controlled environment by such a simplistic attack delivered by someone who, in all reality, was not interested in harming her, then honestly, I really cannot expect that she would have any means of defending herself in an actual self defense situation.
but to say she was no 3rd Dan because a color belt bigger person hit her and knock her down with the puch cause it landed really makes no sense to me.
That is
not what I said. This is a multi-faceted issue, not a singular item. And I am not extrapolating. Everything that I have offered is entirely based upon your telling.
The problem was not simply that the punch landed and knocked her down.
First, the problem was that it was delivered by an easy to read and fairly easily avoided attack and left her completely defenseless. Simple footwork and effective guarding should have gotten her out of this; what you describe is that she basically just backed up until she came to the wall and then was struck.
Secondly, by third dan, she
should have taken enough shots to the body by opponents of varying sizes and genders to be able to do more than just ball up on the floor as you described.
Thirdly, she could not effectively punch. You described her punches as being no more than minor irritants. The fact is that Karate based styles involve punching. This includes Taekwondo. By black belt, you
shouldbe able to effectively punch someone, regardless of your gender. If you cannot do this, then you are not proficient in one of the
most basic fundamentals of the style. If you cannot either punch or kick or both well enough to hurt an attacker, then your instructor should not be tying a black belt around your waste.
Also, I have trained with women who can effectively punch, so the gender explanation does not hold water.
It is this combination of things that makes the rank questionable, not simply that she took a hard hit.
And this type of scenario is exactly what would happen to a child with a black belt facing an adult attacker outside of the dojo. Which is the fundamental reason why I do not believe that children should be awarded black belts.
I realize that there are a whole host of reasons why instructors promote students and that it is not always their ability to handle themselves in a fight. I certainly have seen some of this where I train. And while I can respect that style of promotion, I do not agree with it.
Daniel