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Unknown - Saturday, October 13, 2012
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Until recently, most people who enjoyed fighting sports concentrated on one type or another, such as boxing, taekwondo, karate, judo, jiu jitsu or a host of individual rather than mixed martial arts. The aim of the game was to take your skill to the highest level. If you could do this you could acquire the coveted black belt and show your prowess in competition.
Once Asian martial arts became a permanent fixture in European and American sporting activity, people began to wonder which was the best one. Since no such competition had existed before, someone had to invent it, and thus MMA came into existence. Spectators could now see their hunch about who would win in a fight between karate and judo played out for real in the ring.
With a skill set and a mind set a million miles away from fighters of the past, a new type of competitor wants the best of everything. This new kind of fighting has no time for tradition and cares only about efficiency, selecting the best technique from any style and adapting it to the task at hand. With MMA there is no complex system of etiquette and not a lot of meditation, just raw and fast solutions to the problems your adversary puts in your way.
Of course, the traditional individual sports such as kung fu or aikido have never gone away. They have merely looked on as the landscape changed. Paying audiences and television rights forced a crossover of their formerly closed environments.
For those ready to put in the training and place their neck on the line, a handsomely paid career is now available. But for the average Joe, some terrific fitness training and the thrill of competition can be just as alluring. Most exponents are amateurs.
The beauty of such a multi faceted system is that you literally never run out of things you can improve. One day you could be working on kicks to the head and body, the next day you could be learning to escape from a strangle hold. The only thing that this new way of working has in common with the old is that training never gets easier.
To be a mixed martial arts you must learn to develop the facets of each system. Success is not guaranteed. Only time and dedication will provide you with the suppleness, strength and coordination to succeed.
Once Asian martial arts became a permanent fixture in European and American sporting activity, people began to wonder which was the best one. Since no such competition had existed before, someone had to invent it, and thus MMA came into existence. Spectators could now see their hunch about who would win in a fight between karate and judo played out for real in the ring.
With a skill set and a mind set a million miles away from fighters of the past, a new type of competitor wants the best of everything. This new kind of fighting has no time for tradition and cares only about efficiency, selecting the best technique from any style and adapting it to the task at hand. With MMA there is no complex system of etiquette and not a lot of meditation, just raw and fast solutions to the problems your adversary puts in your way.
Of course, the traditional individual sports such as kung fu or aikido have never gone away. They have merely looked on as the landscape changed. Paying audiences and television rights forced a crossover of their formerly closed environments.
For those ready to put in the training and place their neck on the line, a handsomely paid career is now available. But for the average Joe, some terrific fitness training and the thrill of competition can be just as alluring. Most exponents are amateurs.
The beauty of such a multi faceted system is that you literally never run out of things you can improve. One day you could be working on kicks to the head and body, the next day you could be learning to escape from a strangle hold. The only thing that this new way of working has in common with the old is that training never gets easier.
To be a mixed martial arts you must learn to develop the facets of each system. Success is not guaranteed. Only time and dedication will provide you with the suppleness, strength and coordination to succeed.
About the Author:
You can learn more about Naples Mixed Martial Arts by viewing our official website. To get additional details on Naples Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and the associated training and techniques, click the links on our homepage.
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