This is said by a lot of people. I've expressed this opinion before, but I don't think you can do both on an elite level.Not enough hours in the day.
Elite?? Nobody with any sort of real life is going to have time to be "elite" in much of anything outside of their job.
How about simple proficiency? Do we all have to be elite? Is a martial art not worth taking if you cannot be elite? Is the elite athlete the yardstick? If you are an olympic trainer, absolutely it is. But very, very few schools, even WTF schools are sending anyone to the olympics. Very few gyms send anyone to the olympics. There is a very limited number of people who have any hope of the olympics, in TKD or anything else for that matter.
It all gets back to what you consider to be traditional martial arts. I get the sense that for many traditional martial arts just means typical commercial studio fare: a little bit of forms, a little bit of self-defense, some light sparring. Any real hoshinsul practice is thrown into the "Oh, that's hapkido" realm, so it's not done or thought of at all.
Really, is that such an awful thing? Granted, it is not my preferrence, but is it awful? Most people cannot realistically handle much more than this. And this is the market that such schools are designed to cater to.
Most schools along those lines can offer more focused training in any of the above, and if the student sticks around, they will find their niche. Most students quit after black belt, but really the colored belt grades are supposed to give the student a more well rounded look at things and from there, they can focus in on sport, SD, breaking, or forms. Some people may do all of the above at different life stages if they stick with it long enough.
Granted, I teach a different art now than taekwondo (hold a 2nd dan in TKD though), but you couldn't complete my curriculum AND spend 2-4 hours a day on sport sparring. JUST CAN'T BE DONE.
In fact, most people spending 2-4 hours a day sparring are not
elite either. Most pro athletes are not 'elite' and their chosen sport is
all that they do. It takes a lot more than just hours logged to become elite in anything.
I'd love to see a full breakdown of what traditional martial arts means to the taekwondo people on MT. That would surely go a far ways to determining whether there's sufficient time to practice both or not.
The word traditional is one of those hard to define words. Given the newness of taekwondo, I would venture that traditions are still sorting themselves out.
One view is that a "traditional" school is focused mainly on practical usage of the art and on the forms and breaking that are traditionally associated with karate based arts.
I still practice taekwondo and teach beginners and kids classes, but my main training focus these days is in hapkido, mainly because it is more of what I was looking for.
To me, a traditional would look a lot like a traditional karate school if it is more self defense oriented and a lot like a traditional kendo school if more sport oriented.
I would think that the karate school would be self exclamatory, but allow me to explain the kendo school analogy.
In a kendo school, there is a great degree of formality. The atmosphere is formal. The sparring is even very formal. Kata are expected to be done with precision and power. Different schools focus on the kata to greater or lesser degrees, some even offering a greater degree of bokken work, but the sparring is universal between them. Due to the bogu worn during sparring, the calisthenics and endurance work in kendo is
very important.
Likewise, I see a traditional taekwondo school in the same light. Heavy emphasis on the basics through the keub grades, formal atmosphere, and mostly practical self defense and light contact sparring through the keub grades, with just enough sport here and there to whet the appetites of those who might want more at a higher level, say around second keub.
That way, students are not fast tracked into sport sparring; it is held out as a reward to those who stick it out and become proficient in the basics of the art first.
Daniel