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We argued more than once about Rokas from Martial Arts Journey, so a little update: scissor sweep, broken leg. Nothing important, but it will be useful for future talks about methodology, safety. full contact, illegal moves, etc.:
I don't know. But I would be a little more concerned that they had trouble with the medicine used when operating on him..(Side note two hours for an x ray is fast. I wonder what country that was.)
Some techniques are better to avoid ...at least for normal people not involved in actual combat.We used a scissor take-down in our blue belt curriculum in Taekwondo. However, in this case, there were a few differences from how it's done in many of the videos above:
I was shocked to hear in BJJ that the scissor take-down is a banned move. And maybe the way we did it in TKD would be fine (there are other leg-vs-leg sweeps like tripod sweep or SLX). But I've avoided it just because I don't want to cause any issues.
- We would drop our hip first, so we are not putting our weight onto our opponent's knee.
- We would only do this in drills, not live sparring. So there was never any reason to resist it.
A twist to the right instead of the left, or a fall putting weight on the knee is all that's needed for it to go bad.Some techniques are better to avoid ...at least for normal people not involved in actual combat.
In the branch of Wing Chun I studied, there were some vicious knee locks that were practiced by some of European instructors. My old training partner moved to LA and shared an apartment with a well known European guy who trained them a lot ...and he ended up with a seriously screwed up knee (ACL replacement and some other damage, back when they couldn't do as good a job repairing that stuff).
In my group we had one or two accidents ...a lot of screaming and rolling on the ground, scary but not ultimately that serious. Anyway, I decided to just cut out all the knee locking drills and focused on other stuff. Due to my own past knee and ankle injuries from skiing, etc. I focused on WC hands and the simpler kicking moves. Personally, I like to stay upright and keep my feet firmly on the ground these days.
Only grappling leg injury we ever had was from two white belts (brother and sister) practicing a basic trip sweep and the sister resisted, hurt her knee. I nearly had my knee crumple doing a basic trip sweep.Some techniques are better to avoid ...at least for normal people not involved in actual combat.
In the branch of Wing Chun I studied, there were some vicious knee locks that were practiced by some of European instructors. My old training partner moved to LA and shared an apartment with a well known European guy who trained them a lot ...and he ended up with a seriously screwed up knee (ACL replacement and some other damage, back when they couldn't do as good a job repairing that stuff).
In my group we had one or two accidents ...a lot of screaming and rolling on the ground, scary but not ultimately that serious. Anyway, I decided to just cut out all the knee locking drills and focused on other stuff. Due to my own past knee and ankle injuries from skiing, etc. I focused on WC hands and the simpler kicking moves. Personally, I like to stay upright and keep my feet firmly on the ground these days.
It's a dangerous technique because a twist in the wrong direction can cause more damage or no twist at all can break the leg as well.Only grappling leg injury we ever had was from two white belts (brother and sister) practicing a basic trip sweep and the sister resisted, hurt her knee. I nearly had my knee crumple doing a basic trip sweep.
We had dozens of folks per year test for red belt, that's the test the scissor sweeps were used. I never saw a single injury from them.
Alot of the stuff is dangerous. You just have to understand how dangerous so that the limitations and rules can be set to make it less dangerous.Some techniques are better to avoid ...at least for normal people not involved in actual combat.
In the branch of Wing Chun I studied, there were some vicious knee locks that were practiced by some of European instructors. My old training partner moved to LA and shared an apartment with a well known European guy who trained them a lot ...and he ended up with a seriously screwed up knee (ACL replacement and some other damage, back when they couldn't do as good a job repairing that stuff).
In my group we had one or two accidents ...a lot of screaming and rolling on the ground, scary but not ultimately that serious. Anyway, I decided to just cut out all the knee locking drills and focused on other stuff. Due to my own past knee and ankle injuries from skiing, etc. I focused on WC hands and the simpler kicking moves. Personally, I like to stay upright and keep my feet firmly on the ground these days.
What you said above. In practice, resistance can be worse than futile! Apologies to any Trekkies out there.Only grappling leg injury we ever had was from two white belts (brother and sister) practicing a basic trip sweep and the sister resisted, hurt her knee. I nearly had my knee crumple doing a basic trip sweep.
You know this didn't happen in the US. because there was no litigation mentioned.We argued more than once about Rokas from Martial Arts Journey, so a little update: scissor sweep, broken leg. Nothing important, but it will be useful for future talks about methodology, safety. full contact, illegal moves, etc.:
My old instructor broke my leg in training doing that first video of yours when i eas about 11. My brother wasn't getting it quite right, so he demostrated on me and somehow managed to break my leg with it. Blamed it on me flinching when I fell.I wasn't quite sure how his leg broke because I thought he was talking about this
then I saw the video and he was talking about this
I used to train this technique, but it was always known for destroying the knee. The major difference is the height and the direction that we roll. When doing this technique low, we would always roll into our training partner and not away from our training partner. While still dangerous, having the knee turn towards the center offers a much friendlier turn. We would also never use it in sparring. It was always a drill. If we spar and go for this technique, the sparring will stop, and the drill would begin. The sparring partner does not try to resist this technique. Instead, he slowly goes with it and the technique is slowly applied.
Using it in sparring any other way runs the risk of someone turning in the more destructive direction.
Roll vs Drop. Roll sends the energy in a different direction. Dropping just locks the leg and now the weight is going downward onto the joint. You can see some weight drops here.
Always choose your sparring partner wisely.
We used a scissor take-down in our blue belt curriculum in Taekwondo. However, in this case, there were a few differences from how it's done in many of the videos above:
I was shocked to hear in BJJ that the scissor take-down is a banned move. And maybe the way we did it in TKD would be fine (there are other leg-vs-leg sweeps like tripod sweep or SLX). But I've avoided it just because I don't want to cause any issues.
- We would drop our hip first, so we are not putting our weight onto our opponent's knee.
- We would only do this in drills, not live sparring. So there was never any reason to resist it.
That sounds like an instructor who knows what the application is but really hasn't spent any time training and using it. I'm not sure why your instructor would try it on an 11-year-old child either. But that is another issue.My old instructor broke my leg in training doing that first video of yours when i eas about 11. My brother wasn't getting it quite right, so he demostrated on me and somehow managed to break my leg with it. Blamed it on me flinching when I fell.
One thing I'm starting to look at (because of this video and thread) is where the "flying scissors" and "reap" end, and a legitimate legal technique begins.Kani Basami - flying scissors throw. The problem isn't with the "scissors". The problem is with the "flying" portion of the technique.
You can execute the scissors takedown from the ground safely via Iminari roll (and a few other entries).
There's a version where you support your weight with one hand on the ground which is safe enough for demos and controlled sparring with skilled partners. (Although still risky in serious competitive sparring.) I've used it as a counter to a single leg, but only when I felt very confident that I could control exactly where my weight went. (The risk is greatly reduced in this application because you are supporting half your body weight on your hand and your opponent is supporting the other half by holding your leg.)
And there's the full flying version (as seen in the examples in Rokas's video, where you just throw your whole body into the air at your opponent and hope that you judged the distance and velocity correctly so that you end up close enough to execute the scissor and not so close so that you crash into the side of their knee with your entire body weight, locking their knee out and breaking their leg. Unfortunately I don't think there's a way to make this safe in sparring. Even if you have the skill to always execute the technique safely and correctly against a static target, the fact that your opponent is always working against your ability to control the distance means that you can't reliably ensure your body ends up in the right place relative to your partner.
I steer away from high amplitude throws in generalOne thing I'm starting to look at (because of this video and thread) is where the "flying scissors" and "reap" end, and a legitimate legal technique begins.
Personally, I find the Judo-style trip sweeps to be dangerous. I was rolling with a white belt, and the way he fell when I tripped him, he almost took my knee out on the way down.