makiwaraman Posted July 28, 2005 Posted July 28, 2005 Hi all I train in non affiliated shotokan and am told/believe our club is quite unique. As part of our training we do real self defence techniques,CQC training with and without weapons and also alot of tegumi drills.So who else does some/all of this as part of their training and what style/ club do you belong to.regards maki We are necessarily imperfect and therefore always in a state of growth, We can always learn more and therefore perform better.
1st KYU Posted July 30, 2005 Posted July 30, 2005 my club is similar to yours, we also do tegumi, self defence, cdt,....not cqc though, although i bet some of the things we do are similar.my style is goju ryu "Cry in the dojo, laugh on the battle field."
Smitty Posted July 31, 2005 Posted July 31, 2005 my club is similar to yours, we also do tegumi, self defence, cdt,....not cqc though, although i bet some of the things we do are similar.my style is goju ryuCould you tell me what CDT means?I do Goju Ryu as well. We do tegumi,but not regularly, unless you choose to do it in sparring. I try mix up my matches, and work on first my CLOSE quarters where most of my tegumi work comes in, then my distance fighting. Since my limbs aren't long, tegumi is my favorite part of sparring.
Daedalus Posted July 31, 2005 Posted July 31, 2005 Hi all I train in non affiliated shotokan and am told/believe our club is quite unique. As part of our training we do real self defence techniques,CQC training with and without weapons and also alot of tegumi drills.So who else does some/all of this as part of their training and what style/ club do you belong to.regards makiI believe you mean CQB which is the generic term the military uses for close quarters situations. CQC was an actual martial art developed by William Ewart Fairbairn and Eric Anthony Sykes two British armed servicemen. Peace and may God be with you...Deus Ex Remake
makiwaraman Posted July 31, 2005 Author Posted July 31, 2005 I believe you mean CQB which is the generic term the military uses for close quarters situations. CQC was an actual martial art developed by William Ewart Fairbairn and Eric Anthony Sykes two British armed servicemen.No my sensei calls it CQC, He has recently been on a residential CQC course, As part of his full time job. regards maki We are necessarily imperfect and therefore always in a state of growth, We can always learn more and therefore perform better.
AngelaG Posted July 31, 2005 Posted July 31, 2005 Yes we do tegumi, and I do Shotokan. Tokonkai Karate-do Instructorhttp://www.karateresource.com Kata, Bunkai, Articles, Reviews, History, Uncovering the Myths, Discussion Forum
1st KYU Posted July 31, 2005 Posted July 31, 2005 smitty- CDT stands for compliance - direction - takedown. a non-deadly force system.https://www.cdt-training.com "Cry in the dojo, laugh on the battle field."
Smitty Posted August 1, 2005 Posted August 1, 2005 Ah. I see. Thank you very much.Correct me if I'm wrong here:From what I can gather, the CDT is about redirection of force and going into some sort of lock or restraining technique?Sounds alot like Aikido.
makiwaraman Posted August 3, 2005 Author Posted August 3, 2005 I believe you mean CQB which is the generic term the military uses for close quarters situations. CQC was an actual martial art developed by William Ewart Fairbairn and Eric Anthony Sykes two British armed servicemen.Er I shall go stand in the corner you were right it is CQB, At training on monday I got to stand in front line and er sensei says CQB alouth at the back it sounds like CQC, So I asked and its CQB specifically we were doing S.P.E.A.R. Cant quite remember what that stands for but can remember the techniques. Spontaneus Protection Enabling Automatic Responce I think any one want to put me right?regards maki We are necessarily imperfect and therefore always in a state of growth, We can always learn more and therefore perform better.
1st KYU Posted August 3, 2005 Posted August 3, 2005 Ah. I see. Thank you very much.Correct me if I'm wrong here:From what I can gather, the CDT is about redirection of force and going into some sort of lock or restraining technique?Sounds alot like Aikido.not really, its not a martial art.....its more like how to escort out a bad guest, without hurting them. although VERY effective "Cry in the dojo, laugh on the battle field."
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