Gary
First... I am happy to have you aboard with this discussion. By hashing this out - and getting all the bugs coming out of the woodwork as well - we all learn.
Second... I'm going to play devil's advocate to your post. It is a device used in the art of debate to help seek truth. Take it for what it is.
Gary wrote:I have studied with George Mattson at the "Hut" who you mention. There we simply work with some concepts and variations and welcome in some other shared material.
George was one of the first to teach karate in America. He came over as a shodan and helped start a revolution. He published the first books on the style. He wrote the book on running a professional dojo.
It hadn't been done before.
Gary wrote:However, for many who have studied with George for years and those that are of various black belt ranks up to 6th dan. there is no throws, takedowns, locks, chokes, submissions, etc, being taught as uechi-ryu criteria.
OK. What's your point?
Oh and do people stop learning after 6th dan? If so, then I guess all those years I spent inbetween grades was a waste of time.
Damn...
Gary wrote:Having also studied with Bob Bethoney for over 20 years and Clarence Wilder,
Bob Bethoney and Clarence Wilder were two of the early point sparring champions in the United States. They were trendsetters.
Gary wrote:very few takedowns were used and primarily in sparring.
So what you're saying is that takedowns were used.
Oh and by the way, Uechi kata are not about point sparring. They are about life-and-death struggles. They are about responses to habitual acts of violence.
Point sparring in karate tournaments is a game with rules. One of those rules is you can't throw your opponent. They especially frown on throws that send someone head over heels - like what you can do when you grab someone's leg with a
shoken sukuiage uke. That is a very, very obvious application of a technique in sanseiryu, and (partially) done in Dan Kumite.
Gary wrote:Van's classes known as T.C. classes were focused upon "power principle". Although possibly he may interject his teachings of past.
Van is a revolutionary in the Uechi world. He is one of the first to point out the difference between sport and street in self defense. He is a pioneer in pointing out the "low road" movements in Uechi kata. Most of the source of that information, by the way, comes from recent research by Ledoux.
The choreographers who knew about deadly force and the body's response to it knew all about that - on a practical level. It took Ledoux and Siddle and - later on - Van to unlock the secrets of gross motor movements in Uechi Ryu.
Revolutionary. But it was there all along, Gary.
Gary wrote:Art Rebessa who frequently visited and taught some at Bethony's dojo in Brockton,
Art wrote one of the first books on kumite. He coached Uechi's earliest sparring champion.
Revolutionary!
also stayed within the basic elements of uechi karate.
He stayed within the boundaries of his expertise and the knowledge he had to work with at the moment.
So... What's your point?
Gary wrote:My point is this, all of these who i have been exposed to over years of my own training have never incorperated material from other arts as mentioned ubove.
There was no need to. It was there in Uechi all along. They just needed to do more than operate in auto pilot to tap this information. They needed to do more than what sensei said to bring this information to the next level.
Understand, Gary, that Uechi Kanei once asked Jimmy Malone and Art Rabesa to teach sparring to Uechika in Okinawa. Did you know that, Gary? If not, get Maloney Sensei to tell you the story of their trip some time.
Uechi Kanei is no dummy.
Oh and by the way, Uechi Ryu translates as Uechi's style. That was his prerogative, don't you think?
Gary wrote:To my knowledge, Judo does not incorperate punches or kicks.
There's no need to, Gary. They already exist. Furthermore, Judo has kata. Did you know that? Here's a little blurb from judoinfo.com.
Seiryoku Zenyo Kokumin Taiku in Judo
So what was your point, Gary?
I leave you with the dialogue from a movie about two real characters in life (Arthur Mendelson, and Hunter "Patch" Adams). Arthur Mendelson was one of the greatest minds of his time. Patch Adams revolutionized the doctor-patient relationship.
- Bill
Arthur Mendelson: How many fingers do you see?
Hunter Patch Adams: Four.
Arthur Mendelson: No no! Look beyond the fingers! Now tell me how many you see.
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Arthur Mendelson: You're focusing on the problem. If you focus on the problem, you can't see the solution. Never focus on the problem!
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Arthur Mendelson: See what no one else sees. See what everyone chooses not to see... out of fear, conformity or laziness. See the whole world anew each day!