Flying, Spinning and Jumping Kicks - Are They Practical?
Author: Calasanz Martinez
Date Posted: February 10, 2009
Martial art styles like tae kwon do, tang soo do, wushu and some
forms of karate instruct their students on how to perform flying,
spinning, and jumping kicks. A martial arts movie without a good
number of these kicks is boring. Flying, spinning, and jumping kicks
are what make martial arts movies fun and demonstrations exciting.
Tournament competitors pepper their forms with a series of these
kicks along with breath taking acrobatics. While these kicks are
very flashy, the reality is that they have very little practical
application.
When martial artists are young, they all want to learn flying,
spinning, and jumping kicks. It's a great way to impress those around
you as you "wow" them by breaking boards with a flying side kick.
A martial artist first learns his or her basic kicks in a standing
position. Eventually, as the basic kicks become natural and can
be executed with ease, the instructor will incorporate more dramatic
kicks into the class.
Jumping kicks require the student to execute one of the basic kicks
while jumping up from a stationary stance. Flying kicks involve
getting a running start and execute the kick in mid-air. Spinning
kicks are executed while pivoting on one foot and whipping the entire
body into the direction of the target. All of the basic kicks can
be executed in with either a flying, spinning or jumping variation.
For self-defense purposes however, these kicks are very impractical.
Remember that a street altercation is very stressful and chaotic.
What works best on the street is something simple and direct. If
you want to learn how to defend yourself on the street, spend less
time training flying, spinning, and jumping and more time with some
good hand techniques and low kicks. As far as your upper body is
concerned, simple elbow strikes, eye gouges, palm heel strikes and
a little boxing is what I recommend. When it comes to your lower
body, knee strikes and low kicks to the knee, instep, groin, and
stomach are much more effective than a jumping spinning anything.
Fancy kicks are full of problems. First of all, they lack power.
Secondly, flying, spinning, and jumping kicks require more physical
preparation, so they are easier to telegraph and allow the opponent
time to react. Kicks thrown in the air lack the stability of a lower
kick and the kicker is much more vulnerable to falling to the ground.
As far as older students are concerned, training in this manner
can lead to a lot of injuries and a short lived martial arts career.
If you're looking for practical street survival techniques, then
stick to the basics. Save the acrobatics for the tournaments!
About The Author
Calasanz has been teaching martial arts and self defense for over
30 years.
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Article Source: JKD Street Combat
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