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zanshin said:and being large is actually a big disadvantage since it gives you better reach and better punching and kicking power through mass.
I think you mean advantage![]()
LOL, yes I meant advantage.
zanshin said:Kung Fu consists of too many styles to be pigeonholed.
Yes, an estimate is about a thousand different styles. You could probably put a lot of them toghether though, and end up with five to ten groups of Kung Fu, each with a fundamental different approach.
zanshin said:I also think that when it comes to close combat being large is invariably an advantage, all other things being equal.
I have seen martial artists that would be considered "overweight" but who has stamina and a high pain threshold outperform small and agile ones.
Rules of Kyokushin;
1. The more pain you can withstand the greater potential you have as a kyokushin martial artist. The faster you can progress, and the more effective you can fight.
2. Speed equals power. The faster you can throw a punch correctly with enough weight behind it, the better it is.
3. If you can not "read" the opponent, you will loose. Being able to read the opponent, move with him, and correctly time your counter attacks, the better.
If you can combine these three aspects, you will with training become a great kyokushin martial artist. Fancy tricks and moves are for show, not for fighting, so they do not matter as much.
Though in martial arts movies, all that matters are fancy tricks and moves, because they look good on the screen
