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I think you'll find that in this community very few people will take the style vs. style debate bait anymore.
It is a tired conversation.
There is no better art only better practitioners. It is all about what the student puts into it and how they go about it.
Correct. Kenpo/Kempo has more tools for a student to train, but it is up to the training and the student to make those tools effective. Muay Thai has fewer tools, but they spend alot of time perfecting and applying those tools. Both give a student a framework and an idea of how to fight. It is up to the student to take those lessons and internalize them so they can use them when the time is needed.
Why I wasn't interested in kickboxing or grapling? quite simple I wanted to learn a Martial Art focused on self defense, I am not a figther or some one who wants to go inside a ring or octagon or cage so I refuse the kicks boxing and grapling. If I wanted to compete in a ring I will go for kick boxing for sure but I am not interested in this, my interest is to lear how to defend myself with sucess.
When one says "kempo has more tools" what kind of tools do they mean?
When I studied kempo, it was basically just kickboxing. Sensei was a 3rd degree black belt. However, he did say that the style of kempo he trains is not like Ed Parker kempo, which I've heard has very many different techniques.
That wasn't Kenpo then. Kenpo has a really deep curriculum and if you were just working on kickboxing then you were being sold kickboxing.
When one says "kempo has more tools" what kind of tools do they mean?
I beg to differ. I assert that if you are not being taught evasion, slipping, and maneuvering tactics then you are being taught poor Muay Thai. They have no problems evading an attack, quickly slipping to the side and giving your temple some love or driving a knee into your ribs or spine. It's all in how you train it.Muay Thai is a striking art, so is Kenpo, but there are elements to Kenpo that (when taught properly) will teach so much more, such as learning the mechanics that will help you evade an assault and position yourself where you are in a more favorable position agaist your attacker. This is a bit different than squaring off with another fighter.
To me, this is what made the difference. As a small guy, I use qinna more then any other tool I have, okay, maybe I like me some back-knuckle tooKenpo also has elements of control. You can learn how to better control an attacker's weapons (limbs) and with a proper foundation you can learn how to control another person instead of pouding the heck out of them.
On a final note, at the risk of sounding redundant, so much really does depend on the teacher. If you like what you're learning, you love being a part of the class, your teacher can reach you so you learn more, and you push yourself to practice and do well on the mat.-- that's the right art for you, regardless of what art that is.![]()
Whoa! Don't drink the kool-aid too quickly now! You post implies that Kick Boxers and Grapplers don't focus on defense! Have you ever tried to hit a Kick Boxer to try to prove this theory? How about a grappler?
Almost all of these arts started as a combative art as a means of overcoming an attacker. Some have since become sports but the fact is, if you put a muay thai guy on the street having to defend himself he can and will do so with the same level of effectiveness as someone equally trained in Kenpo or even a grappling art (Judo, BJJ, JJJ, Hapkido, whatever).
As a Kenpoka myself I would like to warn you of not tossing the baby out with the bathwater and thinking that Kenpo is the only answer (or even the best answer) to Self Defense. Every art, even TKD (has evolved into more sport these days), kickboxing, boxing, wrestling, Taijiquan, etc. if trained properly can be amazingly brutal and effective for self defense.
Thanks for clarifying
Yes, preference is an important factor: People need to train in arts they LIKE and suit their learning style/natural tendencies. Otherwise, they either stop or never become as effective as they can/should be.
Kenpo is very diferent to TKD cause in Kenpo has a little more self defense tachs in the regular class than TKD that involves kicking the most and kickin drills, Kenpo uses mora hands and low kicks and lots os SD techs.
Well... I know that when I break my TSD forms down, the bunkai and oyo bunkai are amazing.
I only say this because I keep hearing you say you feel Knepo has more SD to offer. Maybe on the surface this is easily concluded, but if you look deeply into each art you might come away with a different view.
Unfortunately most TSD/TKD schoold I have seen don't delve into their hyungs and the bunkai very much if at all. Intead they offer some one, two, three steps and some rudimentary SD techs. But, you should take each principle of each kata/hyung and find five different ways ways against five different attacks to apply these princibles and you will find that TSD/TKD has just as many SD "techniques" as Kenpo does. They are just not put out there and cannonized into the ciruculum as they are in Kenpo. This has advantages and disadvantages. Sometimes people train the techs and not the principles thinking that the techs are what will save their *** in combat. But on the other-hand, if the princibles are trained but the bunkai and oyo bunkai are not, then you have nothing as well.
Just look deeply into Bassai or any of the three Nihanji and you will find more SD techniques then you'll probably know what to do with. Look at each technique found within the Kee-Cho and Pyung-ahn forms and you will spend years before you run out of SD techniques.
Something I have found in TSD is that while the bunkai and oyo bunkai of the gup level forms will make you a effective fighter once you break into the Cho Dan and higher level forms, the bunkai becomes far more dynamic, deadly, and effective.
In my TKD dojang we do TaeGuks and practice one step sparring but not too ofthen, we don-t do any kind of bunkai. I practice more self defense in the kenpo dojo than in my tkd dojan.
Manny