oftheherd1
Senior Master
We are talkibg about fighting ability, for which the kata has some benifits, what benifit to fighting ability does doibg it in time with 19 other people give you
You claim they got a reward, what reward did they get ?
The above to give context to @Hanzou post below.
It's all about discipline and standards. If a karate school is willing to let their students get away with sloppy kata, what else are they willing to let their students get away with?
Their black belts.
The bolded is a good question. In the 2nd video you posted that school must have been willing to make a lot of compromises. The underlined is only partially correct, and that in the context to my answer to the bolded question. Black belts who can't break boards is a shame. Whether lacking power or making the holder's hands the striking point. Of course some looked to be moving the boards a little bit, but no wonder.
My point was that unless you're regularly injuring your sparring partners with leg kicks, you can't say that in a SD situation you can throw a leg kick and instantly destroy their knee. Again, it CAN happen, but it's not a given.
Oh no, I've definitely seen worse.![]()
I don't know about the karate you studied, but when I studied TKD in the 60s, we had things to actually kick, like bags and such. Most of us would practice on our own at home or a gym to develop speed and accuracy. The later was a big point with us; a part of control. We practiced control, accuracy, power/power generation, and guess what, katas.

If you can move a heavy or even light bag significantly, would that not indicate to you that you have power in you kick? If you can hit the bag where you intended, would that not indicate you can kick accurately? If you have a sufficiently accurate and powerful kick, do you doubt you could damage a knee or ankle or symphysis pubis?
If you say you have seen worse, I don't doubt it. Although I wonder if your implied meaning there is none better (which I find hard to believe) is the reason you left the study of karate? If you had previously said you just wanted to expand your abilities, I could understand and agree with that. I always thought my brief stint in TKD helped me be a little better in Hapkido. But your putting down karate, seemingly all of it, since you left karate rather than looking for another better school? Sorry, but it makes me wonder if there is more fault with the school you attended, or you as a student of karate. Either way ...


Regardless, if you are really happy with your grappling, stay with it and get better all the time. Just don't be afraid to compliment it with what you learned in Karate.