G95champ Posted April 6, 2003 Posted April 6, 2003 What about Sumo and Fencing? (General George S. Patton Jr.) "It's the unconquerable soul of man, and not the nature of the weapon he uses, that ensures victory."
Guest Posted April 8, 2003 Posted April 8, 2003 Are you counting weapon forms as "forms" or just empty hand forms?
TheSod_88 Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 I personally don't like forms. Thats probably why I favor Boxing, Muy Thai, etc. lol!
SevenStar Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 not true. judo does have forms. They are single technique forms, but they are still called kata nonetheless. Judo also has multi step katas, like the pinning kata, but they aren't required knowledge until you reach 2nd degree brown belt.
SevenStar Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 if by chinese fast wrestling, you are referring to shuai chiao, it has forms also - the single technique variety that judo has. If you count the wai kruu - muay thai has one form.
The_Ryno Posted April 12, 2003 Posted April 12, 2003 If you're differentiating "forms" and Kata, there are no martial arts that have no forms, every martial art has proper ways to move the body to set up and execute strikes, throws, etc.. To illustrate this, show me one technique that has no name. "It's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's the size of the fight in the dog."
SevenStar Posted April 12, 2003 Posted April 12, 2003 he's differentiating them. kata is a japanese word - in chinese styles, they are called forms.
ninjanurse Posted April 12, 2003 Posted April 12, 2003 While JJ has no expressed "kata", each "board" is a series of techniques done in order. When done properly it resembles a kata and since it is done the same way each time could be considered a kata. "A Black Belt is only the beginning."Heidi-A student of the artsTae Kwon Do,Shotokan,Ju Jitsu,Modern Arnishttp://the100info.tumblr.com/
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