Beginner's Guide to Stick Sparring - Arnis, Kali, Escrima
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- Опубліковано 10 тра 2024
- For the beginner, there's that moment where you have to swing a stick at another person's head. For most of us, that's not something we're comfortable with.
So how do you get from that stage, to the point where you're comfortable sparring and fighting? No worries, we've got you covered with a step-by-step method, and several drills to get you where you want to be. - Спорт
I love the shirt!
It garners a lot of comments when I'm wearing it.
Coffee first. Safety is like third or fourth. But seriously great video. I'm going try to implement some of these with some of my greener students who are having some of those issues. Thanks for sharing
Safety? Pfft, what's that ever done for us?
Let me know how it works out for them!
Love your t-shirt. So that's with great pleasure and honour that I officially invite you to join the Cat Fellows, a gathering of cately cat persons that love cute little ball of fur and fighting.
Thank you, friend, honoured to join such an esteemed fellowship!!
Cherry Dog Cha Cha 🙂
The dumber the name, the more it sticks :)
In this case, Cherry Dog came up with the variation, and the rhythm is five beats, like the Cha Cha.
Among possible safety gear, you don't mention padded sticks. What's your view on them?
Excellent question. Padded sticks let you swing hard while still maintaining a high level of safety. That said, I'd still recommend eye protection with them.
The level of flex in the stick bugs me, but absolutely that's a personal thing, and not something that should be considered as a general problem with them.
Minimal safety gear is good, and in many cases getting rid of the head gear would improve your technique. The ideal use of the fencing mask in Kali (et. al.) is to protect the feeder while allowing the receiver to land clean counter-attacks under pressure. In such a drill, the receiver is NOT protected, only the feeder, since only the feeder gets hit. The problem w/ Dog Brothers is that they sacrifice range for aggression, which is a recipe for self-deletion. None of their "techniques" are viable if you train with real weapons, i.e. sharp ones. It's great for building courage, which is important, but not as good for fight IQ. In short, if you have a stick (or a sword) and you let somebody tackle you, then there is something wrong with your training. Dog Brothers always try to grapple, which could get them killed in a street-fight with strangers. I respect them, but I don't fear them. Cheers.