just check this out murag bag.o ra na sha nga martial arts nga ning sikat or i dunno
YouTube - Krav Magá
just check this out murag bag.o ra na sha nga martial arts nga ning sikat or i dunno
YouTube - Krav Magá
although sensei jun rey saavedra came from comjukai but before he came from comjukai he already know the art of aikijujutsu under his sensei "bach" a japanese and half korean a practioner of real budokan and now sense jun rey now teaches Daitoryu Aikijujutsu under the Fujiyama dojo in canada and hombu in japan.
The most dangerous martial art is one that claims their style to be the deadliest...
The most dangerous martial art is one that claims their defensive techniques to be impenetrable...
The most dangerous martial art is one that claims their strikes are near-impossible to block...
.... they are very dangerous....
they are very dangerous to the martial artist because it gives him a false sense of security...
Here's an article I found in the net which might be good for some thought.
The Most Effective Martial Art on Earth
by Rob Redmond - June 16, 2009
Every martial arts magazine must apparently run an article on a regular basis that asks which martial art is more effective. Two martial arts are compared, and the various pros and cons are assessed. Then the author ducks the whole issue and writes a cop out about how neither is really more effective – it just depends on what your goals are.
I’m here to tell you that there is one most effective martial art on earth for hand to hand combat without weapons. Are you ready to find out what it is?
The most effective, dangerous, viciously cruel martial art is everything that is banned in an MMA fight.
I am frequently asked what I think of MMA compared to Shotokan. I don’t really think you can compare them. Professional MMA seems to be populated mostly by people who have lived tough lives and have nothing to lose.
Amateur karate competitions seem to mostly be populated by middle class suburbanites with everything to lose. If they lose a tooth, they can’t close the big business deal the next day. Please don’t hurt me!
Because of the demographic differences between the amateur karate point circles and the professional MMA ring set up for television – there is no way to draw any comparison. I’m sure if MMA were undertaken by suburbanites and there were more heavily muscled tough guys doing Shotokan that the reputations of the these two arts would be reversed. Certainly I would never succeed in MMA. I might break a nail.
I can see it now. “Dang! You broke my nail! What do you call that move? Throw a shoe at Rob and he breaks a nail blocking it? Cruel! So cruel! You owe me an apology.”
I am also frequently asked about the recent success of a competitor in MMA circles who supposedly has a Shotokan background. Look, I’ve never seen anyone in an MMA fight doing anything that I learned in a Shotokan dojo. I’ve seen the new, powerful competitor Ryoto Machida, and nothing he does resembles anything you’d see in a Shotokan ring to me. He’s a kick boxing wrestler just like the rest of them.
What I am interested in are the things that the MMA associations ban. That’s where the gold is. See those hand pads? Bare knuckle punches must be something to be a little worried about. I have read before that MMA fighters wear the pads to protect their hands, not the target, but I’ve tried them out, and they provide a significant damping effect. Not enough that I want you belting me in the face with them, but I’d pick that over your two bare knuckles breaking my bones, that’s for sure.
What else is banned in MMA? Gouging out someone’s eyes? Biting him? Taking a long toenail and using it like a velociraptor claw to cut open your opponent’s leg? I notice that they never grab foreign objects like chairs or broken bottles. That must be very effective as well.
What else is banned that might be something you’d want to remember?
The same is true for karate competitions. If you are trained to spar in a competition, you are basically training to safely engage another person. What is banned in the competition? Those must be the truly effective techniques.
The corollary must also be true. Relying on that which is allowed in a sporting competition for your self defense is foolish and unlikely to succeed. A round kick to the head is more likely to induce anger and annoyance than a knockout. Most knockouts both in MMA and karate competitions are accidents. Sitting on someone and punching him with short-range blows to the head is more likely to bruise up his arms and cause him to cry “uncle” than to result in an efficient move you can use for self-defense.
If you look at the inverse of what you are training to do, no matter what it is, you will find there the things that are truly effective. You see, humans already know what “works” as far as fighting moves that end fights quickly. People used those moves on each other in competitions long ago, there were horrible injuries, and now they are banned.
If you are in desperate need to defend your home and family from immediate danger, have no weapons available, and are in horrible fear for your life, you might decide that hand to hand combat is your only option. In such a case, you may find that what is banned in an MMA competition to be very effective indeed – but maybe not the toenail thing.
deadliest?boxing ang pinaka...bsag c bruce lee nka ingon na boxing ang pinaka deadliest...
The MOST dangerous martial art is the one that you practise for about a year and you then think you are invincible!! Very dangerous, very lethal,...... for the practitioner.![]()
deadly kung sakto pag gamit... bisag kinsa guro maka patay man og tawo, e choke, gi pa nindot lang na nila mga term sa martial arts, mga guillotine choke og uban pang mga moves daw na effectivo.
kuyawa sa krav maga uy! ... pas-pas kaayo og kamot..kuyaw kaayo ikay ma bali-an.. ^_^..
pero sa capoeira ko..
deadly jud na,, sa mataghapan lang kai usahay dili kalikai,, bisag unsa na martial arts tingali deadly,,, depende sa pag gamit,,hehehe nice kung depensa lang,, pero kamu lang bahala,,,ahahah
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