Strike From Your Heel
May 19th, 2008Master Bill FitzPatrick’s Shaolin Action Principle #11
April 29th, 2008Hitting and Striking- One of the Four Ways of Fighting
April 27th, 2008Unorthodox striking techniques will take your opponent by surprise and give you the edge you need…
Begin at the Beginning
April 27th, 2008Every season, pro athletes return to training camp and start with the basics- why not you?
Is Fighting a Marathon or a Sprint?
April 21st, 2008Today marks the 112th running of the Boston Marathon. People run this race for a myriad of reasons. Among the 20,000 or so participants you’ll find professional runners who are after the six-figure prize money, men and women running for a cause, and those who simply wish to put themselves to a rigorous physical and emotional test.
A marathon (other than perhaps the final “kick” to the finish line) is an aerobic activity- long and slow. Most elite runners are slender and not very muscular looking- many look almost emaciated. They can go and go and go some more. The top finishers look as if they could turn around and easily run the 26 miles back to the starting line without breathing hard.
A real fight is more like a sprint- short and fast. This is known as an anaerobic activity. Intense activity that taxes your muscles, labors your breathing, and recruits the muscle fibers for speed and strength. How long should a fight last? 10 seconds? 30? A minute? In my opinion you’re in big trouble if a fight lasts more than a minute. Get the job done. The longer you engage, the more chance something will go wrong.
Interval training should be an integral component of your physical conditioning. Run 40 yard sprints. Do bodyweight sequences. If you’re on the treadmill or elliptical, go full out for 30 seconds, then cut back for a minute. Run through your katas at full speed. Do these intervals for 20 minutes and you’ve got yourself a workout that will give your body the explosive power of a Leopard.
Master Bill FitzPatrick’s Shaolin Action Principle Videos
April 9th, 2008I will be posting my associate Bill FitzPatrick’s Shaolin Action Principle videos each week. I suggest you also visit YouTube and study Bill’s real estate and success videos.
The End of Stretching for Martial Artists?
March 12th, 2008In a previous post I discussed a New York Times article that stated in part that stretching had little or no effect on performance or injury prevention.
One of my “missions” is to bring you the latest cutting-edge techniques for martial arts strength and conditioning.
There is a concept quickly gaining hold in the fitness world know as movement-prep. Basically it’s performing a series of slow, rhythmic movement sequences to warm up the body for full-out movement as well as stretch the muscles in a dynamic rather than static manner- a functional warmup if you will.
In the next few weeks I will be posting video to teach several movement-prep sequences.
It’s funny though- most of these “new” techniques are exercises I’ve been doing and teaching for more than 30 years!
Does Weight Lifting Make a Better Martial Artist?
February 28th, 2008Today’s New York Times Fitness and Nutrition section featured an article titles “Does Weight Lifting Make a Better Athlete”. Here’s the link to the entire article”http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/28/health/nutrition/28BEST.html?pagewanted=1&th&emc=th
Naturally, the article is slanted to “stir the pot” and ultimately gives no definitive answer to the question.
I think a better title is “Does Weight TRAINING Make a Better Athlete?”
As a personal trainer and believer in the benefits of core and functional weight training for athletes, my opinion is that the majority of men and women I see “lifting” make two big mistakes”
- Wrong program
- Bad technique
For martial artists, your body is the tool of your craft. Like the master carpenter of plumber, we must keep the tools of our trade in peak condition. Most martial arts are lacking in two areas- strength and aerobic conditioning.

The Right Program
Bruce Lee was a huge believer in weight and other esoteric methods of physical conditioning. My Teacher has always been a devotee of the now in-vogue functional bodyweight fitness programs. Bodyweight exercises, lifting boulders, training to build sinew as well as muscular strength- all of these as well as traditional weights have been a core aspect of his training regimen as long as he has been my Teacher. There are a number of good bodyweight programs on the market- check out the link on my sidebar for one I use and recommend.
Bad Technique
I am going to make a gross generalization here- ready?
- Many men try to lift too much weight
- Many women use way too little
I bet you’ve seen this in the gym- some guy trying to curl dumbbells way too heavy for him so he flings his body back and forth while making contorted grunts and groans like a wounded hippo. Two words: dumb and dangerous.
Here’s another common occurrence: you’re standing next to a stick-thin women curling 8 lb dumbbells in slow-motion with perfect form- 30 times! When asked why she’s using so little weight, she says “I don’t want big muscles- I just want to “tone”. Two more words: ignorant and ineffective.
OK, that’s my rant. Now it’s your turn to “weigh in”. Do you use weight training as part of your martial arts regimen? If so, what benefits do you get? If not, why not?
New York Times Article Claims Stretching of No Use in Preventing Soreness or Injury
February 27th, 2008Read the article belowthe photo and tell me what YOU think.
Really?
The Claim: Stretching Can Prevent Soreness and Injury
By ANAHAD O’CONNOR
THE FACTS
Stretching - long promoted as a way to prevent injury, to reduce soreness and to speed post-exercise recovery - may not fulfill its promise. Over the years, scientists have found that stretching before or after a workout has little effect on either risk of injury or what is commonly known as delayed onset of muscle soreness, the discomfort that comes a day or more after challenging physical activity.
Numerous studies have reached this conclusion. One of the most recent and extensive reports was published in October in The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The report reviewed 10 randomized studies, which over all looked at the impact of stretching before and after exercise, in repeated sessions and in intervals ranging from 40 seconds to 10 minutes. The authors concluded that stretching had little or no effect on post-exercise soreness.
Another systematic review, by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was published in the journal Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise in 2004. It looked at multiple studies and found that stretching “was not significantly associated with a reduction in total injuries,” but also concluded that more research was needed.
For now, many experts say that what may work is a quick warm-up, like low-impact aerobics or walking. It also helps to ease into an activity by starting off slow and then increasing speed, intensity or weight (for lifting).
THE BOTTOM LINE
Research suggests that stretching does not affect soreness or risk of injury during exercise.


