Taekwondo actually is a deadly serious killing system. Most Taekwondo practitioners today do not realize the deep history Taekwondo has had in warfare.
Taekwondo techniques were added into U. Military Martial Arts programs because of the styles effectiveness. Punches to the body are allowed, but not to the head.
At that point, the first fighter to score — with any technique — wins. Below are 10 punches used in TaeKwondo with the purposes and mechanics of each detailed. Anyone with martial arts or military training know that weapons aside, three factors decide a fight. They teach the foundations of all three; mental, physical, and technical, TaeKwonDo is no different. The start of physical training is painful for any sport, including martial arts.
Tae Kwon Do require great flexibility to execute flash kicks. Half of its physical conditioning involves stretching. Real stretching.
There will be pain and boredom involved. TaeKwonDo practitioners will count forward and backward to twenty repeatedly like Sesame Street. Stretching develops flexibility and speed. Loose joints move faster, kick higher, and allow fluid body motions. The body gets used to a quick abrupt movement and strengthens the ligaments and tendons. In a real street fight, TaeKwonDo and other martial arts practitioners perform simple fight moves faster without hurting themselves.
Stiff joints cannot perform actions that the brain require. If it does, it could result in an injury. TaeKwonDo practitioners also practice basic kicks and punches repetitively. It develops endurance and muscle memory. Real Street fights do not have three-minute rounds. Though real fights rarely last that long, there are cases of running street fights that require a lot of endurance.
Regular martial training develops cardio-vascular health and stamina. The second factor in winning a fight is mental strength. Paralyzing fear will pretty much guarantee you will lose a fight. Combat soldiers train daily to overcome deadly situations and move in the presence of fear. There is a lot of big talk about adrenaline and how it makes a person stronger and faster.
Adrenaline does not overcome mind-numbing fear. It contributes to it. TaeKwonDo practitioners consistently spar with each other for training and to prepare for friendly competitions. Constant exposure to a controlled fight develops mental fortitude in a real one.
Full Contact competitions train the body to strike with intent to harm. There is a subconscious will in our brain that prevents our body from striking without hesitation. It is the reason crazy people and drug-induced individuals exhibit exceptional strength in unarmed combat. That part of their subconscious thought is not functional.
There is a hypothesis that the hesitation is our moral conscience controlling our primal killing intent. Recent studies believe it is simply the body protecting itself from harm. Striking an opponent does damage, true, but it also damages at the point of impact of the striker. The subconscious believes punching a wall or a face will harm the fist in the same way.
Only exposure and experience in actual fights can overcome it. TaeKwonDo full Individuals fight full contact matches wearing headgear and body armor. Participants strike with intent to maximize power and speed. It is one of the closest controlled simulations a person can have to a street fight. Pain tolerance is also more of a mental fortitude than a physical one. Continuing to perform hostile actions in the presence of fear is one thing, but continuing in the presence of pain is another.
Every TaeKwonDo training sessions start with long bouts of stretching. Other than improving flexibility and preventing damage to the body, it also develops tolerance to pain itself. The point gap. Taekwondo fights are automatically suspended if one fighter gains a point lead on the other. That gap is considered too big to claw back and fights will usually be stopped at the end of that round.
Video replays. Coaches may request a video replay if they feel their fighter's technique hasn't been scored or if they think their fighter's opponent was improperly awarded points. The decision is made by a panel of taekwondo judges who watch an instantaneous video replay.
If coaches lose the challenge, they must surrender their video replay card to the referee. Facebook Twitter Email.
How is taekwondo scored?
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