
Strength
Training and Martial Arts
Strength training in the Martial Arts community has been misunderstood
for many years. Too many overweight masters of none and jacks of all
have advocated everything from no strength training at all, to various
forms of high level spiritual training, which while being somewhat
questionably beneficial for the spiritual side of a martial artist's
training; has nothing to do with real life applicable strength skills.
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For years I have watched people in many schools advocate no forms of
conditioning whatsoever, yet tell people that the material being used
is so deadly that with a swipe of the hand, they will down a larger
opponent bent on doing you harm. Say what??
Unfortunately the influx of Asian Kung Fu movies over the past 30 years
has done nothing but add to this problem. Too many people have this
idea that if you get a hold of certain material, that the material
itself will allow you to defeat armed attackers without you breaking a
sweat or training hard.
I have forsaken tradition weight training as it has become nothing more
than people lifting pieces rather than train their whole being.
Many "old school" methods of training have been rediscovered by serious
strength athletes all over. Many have found that serious training in
body weight exercises can help to add not only strength, flexibility
but carry over into endurance as well. Real training hits on many
levels
of fitness, not only the strength aspect.
Various old school equipment has also been resurfacing. Kettlebells
have seen a resurgence over the past few years due in part to two
Russian Kettlebell
instructors Valery
Fedorenko and Pavel
Tsatsouline.
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These are
pretty much a
cast iron ball that has a handle attached to them. They are not
balanced and require much more core strength to lift and move rather
than a chrome plated dumb bell set that you see in most run of the mill
gyms. For more information, I suggest checking out my friend Steve
Cotter's website. I am a big
fan of his material. He is a
great man, and martial
artist as well as being one of the biggest innovators of Kettlebell
training for martial artists. You can also check out the Kettlebell
material from my friend, David Whitley.
Mike
Mahler also has incredible
material designed to increase your
strength as well as size using Kettlebells.
Kettlebells

Indian clubs and maces have been making their way back into the
training regimes of some. The work of wrestling legend Karl Gotch has
also been resurfacing. Karl Gotch is called "the God of Wrestling" by
the Japanese. Jake Shannon has 2 of the best dvd's which contain pretty
much some of the hardest material to train on, and much of it requires
nothing more than yourself and your muscles. Check
out Jake
Shannon's website which is
geared to wrestling and boxing, but has
tremendous
carry over to anyones training program.
Encyclopedia
Of Bodyweight Conditioning
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I am also a big fan of weight vests. I recently bought one from WeightVest.com.
I got a 60 pound plate loaded vest. I can load it with
as little as I want, or fill it up and have a honking 60 pounds to loaf
around with. I showed it to a training brother and he was like a little
boy at xmas...Funny how us MA'ers seem to drool at the strangest gear.
Kettle
Bells
Kettlebells
look to many people who see them for the first time a
cannonball with a handle attached. Over the last 5 years there has been
a resurfacing of this old school strength equipment along with the
training that goes along with it. Kettlebells(KB's)
are not balanced
like a traditional dumbbell or barbell. Picking them up requires you to
use more of the core muscles than it would picking up a dumbbell or
other object that is balanced. When performing any action with these
balls of iron, one will realize the whole body power and coordination
that is being trained right from the beginning.
There are five basic motions that one should utilize within their
training modus operandi.
- Pressing
- Pulling
- Squatting
- Lower body
pulling
- Core Structure
Training
1.
Pressing-
You can do all sorts of pressing motions with Kettlebells(KB's).
You can do One Arm or Double Military style presses
overhead. Alternating Single Arm or Double Arm presses from a supine
position on the ground. You can press the KB's overhead and work from
the "Position of Compromise" as referenced by Steve Cotter, in his
groundbreaking DVD's Steve Cotter's DVD - The Martial Art of
Strength
Training Volume 1and Steve Cotter's DVD - The Martial Art of
Strength
Training Volume 2. For those of
you who want to gain size as well
as
strength, you need to check out Mike Mahlers
The Kettlebell
Solution for Size and Strength DVD.
2.
Pulling-
One can perform Single Arm Bent-over Rows, Double Arm
Bent-over Rows as well as Alternating Rows.
3.
Squatting-
Single Arm front squat(with one KB), Double Front Squat,
Hack Squats and the rather challenging Overhead Squat.
4.
Lower Body
Pulling- The first exercise
one usually learns is the
Swing,
which is the core move within the KB training clan. The Swing can be
performed with both arms in the beginning. It can also be done with one
arm later on as well as alternating the hands when the KB is at chest
or head level. One can then do the same with two KB's in the Double
Swing. Next would come the Clean. First done with a single KB and then
later as a Double. Progressing would lead one to One Arm Snatches, and
then to Double Snatches. Deadlifts can be added to this section of
training with different ones being the Suitcase Deadlifts, and the One
Legged Deadlifts.
5.
Core
Structure Training- You can
really train the core with
performing
Bent and Side Presses that were made famous by strength athletes of
yesteryear. Sandow, Cyr and others frequently posed for photos
performing various lifts with heavy Kettlebells
and other heavy
objects. Other exercises in this category are the Windmill, and the
Turkish Getup.
Combining the above list into various training routines is not all that
difficult though one should progress from using a single KB
to Double KB's
slowly.
Always seek out advice from your Primary Care Physician before
beginning this or any other exercise training program.
If this kind of training interests you, please check out both Steve
Cotter's and Mike Mahler's
excellent training material using
Kettlebells as well as their other personal training programs using
bodyweight as well as equipment. Steve Cotter endorses Professional
Grade Kettlebells. Not only is Steve Cotter one of the worlds top
Kettlebell instructors, he is also an excellent internal Kung Fu
instructor. Mike Mahler endorses Lifeline
Kettlebells.
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