Very acrobatic and dramatic. All martial arts strive to the same end from different approaches. This is very good for loosening joints and keeping things flowing. Great fir ladies given their him anatomy. Great for the begginers and children who cannot really concentrate on dynamic and in depth detailed training.
For 1987 and an ITF breakaway style, that is pretty standard. They follow the hard and fast method, ie, they are trying real hard and going real fast. Many original old school Taekwon Do clubs still train like this even today. I know because I came from one, Before joining the ITF. These types of clubs still produce some Tuff, and hard students, and though they may lack the technical polish and shine, they don't hold back when Shit gets real.
Why did you rush through all of the movements. Not one technique was completed before moving on to the next one. You obviously have the ability, I just find it confusing that you didn’t implement them in your patterns.
That's the way it was done back then. I got my Black Belt in 1989. Looking back, I call it the hard and fast method. You tried real hard and went real fast. Technique was an afterthought. Nowadays it's all about the technique. There was no pads, and we actually hit each other, often quite hard, you'd control what you could, but if you got hit, it was your fault for not blocking it, or getting out of the bloody way.
@@danielsena006 I never said anything about madness or lack of thought, I just said we use to call it the Hard and Fast Method, of doing Patterns. We tried real Hard and went real Fast. That's just how we did Patterns back in the 1980's. Our Sparring however, and I mean "Ours" the club I belong to, if you got hit after about green belt, it was your fault for not blocking or getting out of the way. Other clubs may have been far different, but that's the way I was taught. Obviously a Black Belt would not go full on against a Blue belt etc but they would definitely keep them on their toes, and make them work. It wasn't until we rejoined the ITF, that we slowed down our Patterns and gave more thought to the Technical details of each movement. Our Sparring also changed, in that we became more "Ring Savy" or Tournament smart. Rather than try and blast each other with every kick or punch, we now moved around and outsmarted, out maneuvered and out pointed our opponent more.
Very acrobatic and dramatic. All martial arts strive to the same end from different approaches. This is very good for loosening joints and keeping things flowing. Great fir ladies given their him anatomy.
Great for the begginers and children who cannot really concentrate on dynamic and in depth detailed training.
This was 1987, I hope the quality improved over the years. The Hyungs are performed terribly.
let's your example please.
For 1987 and an ITF breakaway style, that is pretty standard. They follow the hard and fast method, ie, they are trying real hard and going real fast. Many original old school Taekwon Do clubs still train like this even today. I know because I came from one, Before joining the ITF. These types of clubs still produce some Tuff, and hard students, and though they may lack the technical polish and shine, they don't hold back when Shit gets real.
Show us how its done master jimmy
Why did you rush through all of the movements. Not one technique was completed before moving on to the next one.
You obviously have the ability, I just find it confusing that you didn’t implement them in your patterns.
That's the way it was done back then. I got my Black Belt in 1989. Looking back, I call it the hard and fast method. You tried real hard and went real fast. Technique was an afterthought. Nowadays it's all about the technique. There was no pads, and we actually hit each other, often quite hard, you'd control what you could, but if you got hit, it was your fault for not blocking it, or getting out of the bloody way.
@@pv6304
Não. Não era assim "naquela época".
Me gradué para 3 Dan em 1987 e os padrões/tul eram bem definidos, não essa loucura aí.
@@danielsena006 I never said anything about madness or lack of thought, I just said we use to call it the Hard and Fast Method, of doing Patterns. We tried real Hard and went real Fast. That's just how we did Patterns back in the 1980's. Our Sparring however, and I mean "Ours" the club I belong to, if you got hit after about green belt, it was your fault for not blocking or getting out of the way. Other clubs may have been far different, but that's the way I was taught. Obviously a Black Belt would not go full on against a Blue belt etc but they would definitely keep them on their toes, and make them work. It wasn't until we rejoined the ITF, that we slowed down our Patterns and gave more thought to the Technical details of each movement. Our Sparring also changed, in that we became more "Ring Savy" or Tournament smart. Rather than try and blast each other with every kick or punch, we now moved around and outsmarted, out maneuvered and out pointed our opponent more.
I swear this non contact sparring is scarier than full contact. Pad up, gum shield and do it properly. Less risk of losing teeth and eyes.
no sine wave what so ever. Must be WTF or some mcdojo TKD
zu schnell
저런 거 할 시간에 움직이는 사람을 치고 받아라... 그걸 기본으로 하고 기술을 익히고 힘을 기르고 체력을 길러라. 그게 당신들이 사람들에게 그렇게 떠들어대는 실전 무술이다.
무술의 방식과 수련에는 정해진 것이 없지만 움직이는 사람을 치고 받지 않으면 어떤 조동아리로 떠들어도 본질적 무술의 기술이 될 수 없다.
Too much head movement sloppiness were is the race terrible