Fighting Ranges of Jeet Kune Do, Part 1 Near­ly every­one has - TopicsExpress



          

Fighting Ranges of Jeet Kune Do, Part 1 Near­ly every­one has heard of the four ranges of com­bat: kick­ing, punch­ing, trap­ping and grap­pling. They are per­haps most often asso­ci­at­ed with train­ing in jeet kune do, in which stu­dents seek to acquire dif­fer­ent skills from dif­fer­ent arts to pre­pare them­selves to fight in any sit­u­a­tion. Yet there’s anoth­er set of ranges — only three this time — in JKD train­ing. They are the high, mid­dle and low ranges. If you train to strate­gi­cal­ly use them, you can trans­form your­self into a smarter fight­er and your oppo­nent into a blither­ing fool who gets taken out of com­mis­sion more quick­ly, more eas­i­ly and more effi­cient­ly. Fight Smart Phys­i­cal­ly, Bruce Lee was not a big man. At about 130 pounds, he had to make sure his tech­niques and strate­gies were the most effi­cient and real­is­tic ones known. JKD-concepts instruc­tor Ralph Bus­ta­mante is in the same boat. “I’m at 150 pounds right now, and this is prob­a­bly the heav­i­est I’ve ever weighed,” said Ralph Bus­ta­mante, who’s cer­ti­fied under Bur­ton Richard­son and has trained with Dan Inosan­to, Richard Bustil­lo and the Macha­dos. “For me to pull some­thing off, I have to real­ly get the tech­nique down, but tech­nique alone is not going to get me where I want to go.” That’s where the three ranges come into play. The guid­ing strat­e­gy goes some­thing like this: When your oppo­nent attacks you in one range, that means he’s focus­ing all his atten­tion on that range. There­fore, the log­i­cal choice for you is to coun­ter­at­tack him in a dif­fer­ent range. “When a per­son is doing some­thing in one range, he’s for­get­ting about the others,” said Ralph Bus­ta­mante, who teach­es JKD in Santa Clari­ta, Cal­i­for­nia. “If you’re in trou­ble in a fight, you should address those ranges that he’s not think­ing about.” Def­i­n­i­tions In a con­fronta­tion, your oppo­nent — even if he’s untrained — can eas­i­ly attack you in any of the three ranges. Using the high range, he might throw a punch at your face. Using the mid­dle range, he might throw a hook to your bread­bas­ket or a knee to your ster­num. Using the low range, he might launch a kick at your thigh or knee. The key to using JKD’s three ranges lies in pro­tect­ing the body part your oppo­nent attacks by evad­ing, inter­cept­ing or block­ing, then coun­ter­at­tack­ing to a dif­fer­ent range. Sounds sim­ple, doesn’t it? “It takes a lit­tle train­ing to be able to use the ranges,” said Ralph Bus­ta­mante, who has trained in the mar­tial arts for more than 30 years. “First, some­body has to tell you they exist. Peo­ple with no expe­ri­ence don’t know they can attack a dif­fer­ent range. It’s like they have a rule book that says what they can and can­not do in a fight. But con­stant­ly being exposed to the fact that you do have an alter­na­tive and train­ing so you under­stand what that alter­na­tive is all about gives you an edge.” Why don’t more mar­tial artists know about — and use — the ranges? “A lot of peo­ple have been exposed to them, but they seem to push them to the side,” Ralph Bus­ta­mante said. “I think it’s because they want to crash heads — they want to com­pete with each other at the same level. That’s not the most advan­ta­geous way to do it unless you’re doing tour­na­ment fight­ing. On the street, you have to be ready to mix and con­fuse your oppo­nent, and you can do that by address­ing the dif­fer­ent ranges.” Denial The aver­age mar­tial artist hopes — and trains — to defeat his oppo­nent with whichev­er skills he knows best, Ralph Bus­ta­mante said. That can work well if your oppo­nent is good at one range (say he’s a boxer) while you’re good at anoth­er (a skilled muay Thai thigh kick­er, for exam­ple). But what if you and your oppo­nent hap­pen to be good punch­ers? You could end up slug­ging it out in a no-rules box­ing match. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, this is often the prod­uct of con­ven­tion­al train­ing, in which stu­dents spar with prac­ti­tion­ers of the same style: Box­ers box with box­ers, taek­won­do prac­ti­tion­ers kick other taek­won­do prac­ti­tion­ers, etc. Pre­sent­ing an attack­er with some­thing he’s not used to and, there­fore, not good at defend­ing against, makes more sense. “I’ve dealt with some kick­box­ers who were good at what they do,” Ralph Bus­ta­mante said. “But when they try to deal with the dif­fer­ent ranges, they’re thrown off. It takes them by sur­prise because it’s not in the range they’re famil­iar with.” When the three ranges are used suc­cess­ful­ly, shocked mar­tial artists are often filled with dis­be­lief. “A lot of times, there is denial,” Ralph Bus­ta­mante said. “They can’t quite under­stand it. They want to try again, and gen­er­al­ly they lose again because they’re not even com­pet­ing on the same level.” With a typ­i­cal tour­na­ment match or mixed-martial arts fight, it’s rel­a­tive­ly easy to deter­mine your oppo­nent’s style before you tan­gle with him. But on the street, how can you know? “You don’t ever real­ly know what the per­son is going to do,” Ralph Bus­ta­mante said. “If he’s a street fight­er, he could pick some­thing up from the ground, and that throws every­thing out the door as far as want­i­ng to go over and do some box­ing with him. How­ev­er, most will rush you and take you to the ground.” Oth­ers will try to punch your head. The best thing to do, Ralph Bus­ta­mante said, is stay away from your oppo­nent and try to get an idea of how he fights. As soon as you deter­mine his style — that he’s a head­hunter, for exam­ple — that’s your cue to go for his mid­dle or low range. “The first thing you should think is, ‘What is he doing?’ because what­ev­er he’s doing, you don’t want to do,” he said. (To be continued.) Resources To down­load a FREE Guide titled “Dan Inosan­to on Bruce Lee, Jeet Kune Do Tech­niques for Grap­pling and New Direc­tions for JKD Training."
Posted on: Sun, 30 Jun 2013 05:38:45 +0000

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