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Samantha said:I'm slightly confused. I study kenpo, and although I am still a beginner, we only ever talk about breaking the knees in self defense situations. We do a lot of sparring and kicks below the waist are completely illegal. Did you mean opponents in real life or in sparring?
It's one of the main targets we are taught to strike in a self defense situation.
Using the stance changes it would be fairly easy to use your knees/other parts of your leg as weapons against your opponent's legs. We use our legs to attack the femoral artery in the inner thighs and also to attack the backs of the legs, thighs, calves, ankles or behind the knee joint.thesensei said:Just curious who uses these. They are fairly common in Kenpo, and I know that just about every style uses knees to check attacks, but who actually uses them as weapons against the opponent's legs?
Hehe...and you would know, how??ppko said:we use both there is nothing like hearing someones leg break sounds like wet wood.:EG:
I used to be a center ring referee for a MMA group some of the places that we did shows at got pretty ruff (bars and such) we were trying to make our way to the exit and some guy and his friends decided to start some stuff one of them punched at me I took him into a armbar and went into my leg break from there needless to say his friends no longer wanted to fight.thesensei said:Hehe...and you would know, how??
LOL
As a practitioner of an Indonesian art, I've got to second this statement.Knee strikes are extremely common in both the Thai, Indonesian and Filipino martial arts. It is truely a devistating short range attack.