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Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts

Friday, 3 May 2013

Cynthia Rothrock: Best Advice for Beginners in the Martial Arts

“I was nervous as anything,” Cynthia Rothrock said of her first tournament, after which she started to laugh. “I was an orange belt competing against black belts in forms. I was doing the most basic forms, and they were so advanced.”

Rothrock ended up placing second in that event. It was but the first in a string of victories, for she went on to win the world forms championships from 1981 to 1985. In 1982 she became the weapons champion in the men’s division, as well.
She has also succeeded in other areas. She was one of the first women to appear on the cover of national martial arts magazines, and she was one of the few female martial artists to become a star in the action movie genre.

Beginning the Martial Arts
“I started at 13 years old,” Cynthia Rothrock said. “I had some friends in tang soo do, so I gave it a try. When I was younger, I tried everything — piano, music lessons, other sports — but the martial arts were the first thing I really stuck with.”

Since that time, she’s earned a black belt in tang soo do and taekwondo. She also holds instructor-level rank in three Chinese arts: northern Shaolin kung fu, wushu and eagle-claw kung fu. It seems she definitely found something she could stick with.

Despite all her experience, however, Rothrock still gets fidgety before performing in front of groups. “I always get nervous,” she said. “It is sort of a nervous energy starting the form — but then I tune right in.”

Joining a Competition
Cynthia Rothrock offers beginners some simple advice for dealing with butterflies in the stomach before kata competition: Make sure you know your form 100 percent. When you compete, don’t perform any kata you’re still working to perfect. Always do one you know well.

Although forms competition is great for kids, Rothrock believes youngsters should avoid full-contact sparring events. “Point sparring is good for kids as long as the tournament [officials are] in control and looking out for the children’s safety,” she said.

If you decide to get involved in tournaments, she added, always remember that competition is just one small part of the martial arts. If you lose, ask yourself why. Nine times out of 10, the answer will be that you weren’t fully prepared.

Picking a School
Back in 1973 when Cynthia Rothrock started in the martial arts, choosing a style was tough enough. These days, with the hundreds of schools operating in large cities, it’s even tougher. So how does a person choose?
“Find a couple of styles you are interested in,” Rothrock said. “Watch the instructors. [Watch] how discipline is handled. Talk with the instructors. See if you can take a couple of classes for free. Check out a couple of different places before you start at one.”

Martial arts training is never easy, she said. You’ll feel uncoordinated at first, but you shouldn’t give up. If you practice, you’ll get better, and the results will be extreme, she promised. You’ll get stronger and stay in shape — and one day the training may save your life.

“When you take a martial art, try to learn the true art and keep the tradition,” she said. “Each style has something different to offer.”

Finding a Role Model
Having a mentor or a martial artist you look up to can help you through the tough times in your training, Rothrock said. For many years, her favorite was Jackie Chan.

“When I was taking classes in New York, we had a Chinese instructor who taught on Sundays,” she said. “After the workout, he’d take everyone to Chinatown to see kung fu movies. I’ve always looked up to Jackie Chan and still respect him very much.”

Rothrock is also a big fan of Chuck Norris: “He is a great martial artist who has made it big in film and television,” she said. “He is the most friendly person out there.”

Starring in Movies
Cynthia Rothrock’s own acting career blossomed for many years — despite obstacles posed by on-again-off-again complaints about violence in movies and the fact that studios are reluctant to invest money in projects with female martial artists.

“There are far fewer [roles] for women in action movies,” she said.
But she never let that hold her back. In fact, she viewed it as just one more challenge. In much the same way that she was able to break down barriers and become a world champion in forms and weapons, she broke down barriers and became an international film star.

That observation led her to give a final tidbit of advice to young martial artists who dream of doing big things in life: “Don’t give up,” she said. “The results can be extreme.”
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source  Blackbeltmag

Thursday, 8 November 2012

Boxing Techniques That Bruce Lee Adapted Into Jeet Kune Do Techniques For Avoiding Attacks




Lamar Davis has studied and skilled in Bruce Lee’s art of Jeet kune do for more than thirty years. He has been certified as a full/senior instructor by some of Bruce Lee’s unusual students. 

In this elite jeet kune do video, draged from his DVD album Jeet Kune Do for the Advanced Practitioner, the second-generation Bruce Lee student give details and show cagey strategy in JKD moves which Bruce Lee found in boxing techniques.


“The majority of these actions Bruce Lee took from boxing,” Lamar Davis give details in this exclusive video.

If the opponent fires lead-hand punches toward his head, Davis clarify, you have the choice of perform one of the fundamental boxing techniques modified for JKD moves known as a “slip” or “outside slip”. The move is straightforward: move to the outside of the hand’s forward curve — or skid to the side, out of its pathway. 

In boxing method there is such a thing as an “inside slide,” but the jeet kune do expert notify against it. “I favor to slide to the outside of the arm just because you’re a little bit safer if you slide to the outside,” Lamar Davis explains.

If a punch is approaching straight towards your face, you have the choice of sudden straight back. Along with boxing techniques made to order for JKD moves, this selection is called a “backward snap” or a “snap back.”

Boxing procedures Used By Jeet Kune Do Techniques Practitioners for shun the Hook

“An opponent must fire a hook at my head,” Lamar Davis says, “in which case, I bob. When I bob, I curve my knees, I go down straight down, I take my hands up to safeguard my head and I gaze at him the full time.”

The “incorrect way” to bob, Davis says, is to curve your torso forward and gaze downward during the movement. “When I perform that, I can’t see everything,” he makes clear. “I don’t know what’s going on up [above] for a split second — not a good thing. That’s a fine time to grab an elbow or a hammer fist to the backside of the head or the upper backbone.”
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Friday, 26 October 2012

Martial Arts Entertainment


The initial record shape of martial arts enjoyment is most likely in 2000 B.C when Emperor Huang Di created shuai jiao (Chinese wrestling), as a competitive sport for his troops. History has since showed how to use martial arts and aggressive sports as a resource of entertainment has grow around the world. There have been numerous kinds of viewer competitions wherein men and women have come to blows each other for prominence, medals, money, service and liberty.

 
Now a days, media—movies, television, video games and the Internet are the sources through which people associate martial arts entertainment. Current martial arts medium can most likely be dated back to 1790 when the very last Chinese emperor, Chien Lung, bring together all the top opera troupes for his anniversary. After their acts, Chien Lung pulled out the finest players to make the Beijing opera, which included more martial arts moves and acrobatics into the opera. Today as we know it, without any Beijing opera, there in no way would have been a Chinese kung fu film business and no martial arts entertainment.


 Bruce Lee And His Movies
Bruce Lee is perhaps the mainly powerful martial artist in history because he basically launches Chinese martial arts to the world. He motivated millions to practice martial arts within a short span of time... read more








Chuck Norris And His Movies
In the film “Way of the Dragon” (1972; aka Return of the Dragon), since being flattened up by Bruce Lee Chuck Norris has had a victorious A- and B-film career. But he’s famous for his 196-episode TV show, Walker, Texas Ranger (1993-2001), the longest-running..... read more






Jackie Chan Movies
Jackie Chan is the second largest international martial arts movie star of all time, was firstly publicized as the next Bruce Lee, but his film-icon status was covered through his creation of kung fu humor. Jackie Chan, with his floppy hair..... read more





Jean Claude Van Damme Movies
Jean-Claude Van Damme is the first and merely martial arts film star from Belgium and the first European actor to build it big in Hollywood as a martial arts film star. With a kickboxing/karate record of 20 wins and two losses...... read more





Jet Li And His Movies
 To conquer Hollywood, Jet Li is the first actor from Communist China and is the third biggest international martial arts movie star of all time. Jet Li accomplished this deed by stand out in what at the time was cultural illegal...... read more







Tony Jaa And His Movies
Before his breathtaking breakthrough role in Ong-Bak (2003), Tony Jaa on track out with a little bit parts in Thailand and as an unaccredited .... read more







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