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by Cass Magda
In the late 60's and early 70's the JKD clan was on the cutting edge
of martial arts development in America. Bruce Lee's students were sparring
full contact, and emphasized conditioning in their training. They had
vigorous training similar to boxers and used equipment like hand pads,
jump ropes, and kicking shields. They wore protective equipment and went
'all out' in the sparring. This is typical today but unheard of for martial
arts karate people in the 60's and early 70's. Some well known tournament
champions of the day took JKD ideas and introduced them as "kickboxing"
to the American public in the 70s. Today the term kickboxing is in common
usage. However, JKD was never meant to be a ring sport. Although it may
have been the precursor to American kickboxing today, it always trained
with the idea of self defense for the street.
The structure of JKD is like kickboxing in some ways and yet much more.
A boxer or kickboxer uses his weak side forward. The jab is used as a
setup, a minor blow to set up the major blows. The foot jab is used in
much the same way. The lead jab and the foot jab are never used as the
primary blow. The jab is used as a tool to work his way in, then deliver
the other punches to knock the opponent out. Conversely, JKD puts the
strongest side forward. The weak side is put back for more power so that
there are two strong hands now instead of one like in boxing. The lead
leg and arm tools become the primary striking weapons. They are closest
to the targets and the most coordinated and most accurate. The lead leg
and arm will most often be the first tools the JKD man hits, blocks or
grapples with. He will have the most confidence with his strongest side
first engaging with the opponent. The JKD man doesn't want to slowly work
his way in and exchange punches. The boxer-kickboxer also uses the jab
as the measuring stick to know his distance. He uses the jab as a probe
to determine his opponents skill and possible counters. Although JKD can
and does use these similar tactics with the lead hand and leg when sparring,
self defense happens quickly. There is no time for probing, testing, setting
up and working your way in to try to deliver your knockout. It is a frantic,broken
rhythm scramble for survival. The JKD goal is always to finish it as fast
as possible, by any means.
In JKD the strongest most coordinated side of the body is used to throw
the tools-the various strikes such as punches, kicks or finger jabs to
the eyes. This is a strong and suprising first line of defense. The kicking
is done from mobile, constantly shifting footwork. The lead leg low shin
kick or knee kick is used to attack as well as intercept the opponent's
forward movements. With the shoes on, this technique is especially painful.
The fascinating 'trapping hands' of JKD support this structure well and
it is 'hitting' that is the most important aspect. If the punch is blocked
a JKD man traps the hand or arm only to hit again. If there is no resistance
then he just keeps on hitting. JKD people also like to use the 'straight
blast'. The straight blast is a trademark JKD tactic. It consists of a
type of repeating alternating punching along the centerline that is useful
to off balance the opponent and hurt him enough to clear the situation
for a followup of some kind. The followup could be an elbow, a knee, a
break, or a choke. If he uses a submission, it is to hurt or stop the
man as quick as possible to end the situation, not try to control him
and put him into a fancy lock. The strong side forward ,pushes,pulls and
keeps the opponent off balance while constantly pummelling him with hits.
These special tactics makes the art of JKD different than the kickboxing
type sports.
The American martial arts scene has caught up with many of Bruce Lee's
JKD ideas concerning contact training. Contact and realistic training
has grown. Modern full contact karate styles have adapted the training
methods and techniques of western boxing in order to survive in the ring,
echos of Bruce Lee's ideas as far back as the 1960's. Muay Thai in America
and Europe has fertilized kickboxing with its powerful concepts of kicking,
elbowing and kneeing. The UFC, Extreme Fighting, Vale Tudo and Shootfighting
have added the specific idea of submission to kickboxing and have a spectator
format that is exciting and incredibly enjoyable to watch. They kickbox
then grapple all the way to the ground continuing to strike. The original
JKD concept of totality in combat for self defense expressed as a ring
sport. Of course, JKD shall remain today and for the future as a useful
street savy method. It's structure and continued development remains true
to the original ideals..."totality in combat" to deliver self
defense that is simple, direct and non-classical.
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