Dirty Ground. Kris Wilder

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Dirty Ground - Kris Wilder

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you are a soldier, your job is to convert people from living to dead. Sure, you do other things as well, but that’s the bottom line. Nevertheless, you need to practice killing people without actually doing it. Consequently rules and specially designed safety equipment are used to reduce the intensity of your actions so that you may train for war with some level of safety. Like referees, drill instructors oversee the action and enforce the rules… until you hit the battlefield and use what you have learned to defeat the enemy.

      Commonly four areas are addressed to limit damage: reduction of angle, intensity, weapon, or striking area. These are the keys to creating safe training/competition.

      That all takes place in a practice hall, training course, or tournament ring, yet from a certain perspective, the same thing happens on the street. How you choose the angle, intensity, weapon, and striking areas will, in large part, affect the outcome. This is how sport and combat can overlap and is called the “critical point.” This is the place where sport can become combat and where combat can become sport. The decisions you make determine which direction your engagement will take.

      How to end a fight at grappling distance, using the ancient tried-and-true three-point military concept of ground, clear, and insert.

      Ground: Drive the opponent to the ground via any means necessary.

      Clear: Open a space, clear their weapon, or take advantage of a space.

      Insert: Insert your weapon into the cleared space.

      You probably know that we’re traditionalists, guys who study and teach martial arts that were historically designed to create cripples and corpses, so perhaps you also expect us to bag on “combative sports.” Not gonna happen. These things have their place. The athletes who participate in them are tough, skilled, and in great shape. They just do something that’s a little different than we do, or perhaps more accurately, have a different focus. Similarly, we’re not going to get into which system is better, UFC, K1, Pride, or whatever… Who cares; it’s pointless. Each form of sport has its rules and those rules are used for protection, securing victory, and ensuring continued participation and enjoyment by the participants and spectators alike. That’s what matters.

      Look at it this way. If you were a kobudoka in ancient Okinawa with a bo staff, your intent clearly would not have been to spend fifteen minutes engaged with an armed adversary. Chances are good that you wouldn’t be able to walk away from something like that, and even if you did you probably would have been busted up so badly that without modern medicine you’d have died within a week or two anyway. In combat, you don’t want to engage your adversary for any significant length of time, it’s too dangerous. You want to kill or disable him swiftly.

      The same concept applies to modern times. With rifles, artillery, aircraft, and other weapons, you end the conflict by killing at a distance. In fact, the last major time the United States Army fixed bayonets to their rifles, effectively turning a long range weapon into a close-range weapon, and charged the enemy was during the Korean War on February 7, 1951. This assault was led by Lewis Lee Millett, Sr., who received a Medal of Honor for his heroism during the engagement. In war, more distance is much better. The key to successfully shooting down an enemy aircraft, for example, is to see the other guy before he sees you and put a missile up his tailpipe before he even knows you’re there. Obviously, most of us aren’t flying around in fighter jets, but hopefully you get the point.…

      When you step onto the mat to engage an opponent in a grappling competition, the action is up close and personal. Matches take a really long time, the exact opposite strategy of what you would want in warfare. Heck, you can spend a full round in the guard or take two or three minutes trying to get an armbar, in part because the other guy’s friends aren’t circling around trying to kick your head in while you’re doing it. While all these things take a great amount of skill and are important in their own right, their value diminishes in a combative situation. In the ring, you are not engaging an enemy at your preferred distance, on your terms, and ending the fight as expeditiously as possible.

      You already know we’re not going to get into the “this art form is better than that art form” argument. However, there are differences that matter. Those differences are determined by several factors, some of which include the health of the person, their body type, their mental state, and their level of training.

      The ancient concepts of battle will be revisited and renewed. Not ancient techniques but tried-and-true, battle-tested strategies that have been proven successful. Modern interpretations of these ancient concepts and strategies will be demonstrated and explored as form follows function—environments change, and so should martial arts. The moral implications of such combative actions will also be addressed briefly. Our goal is to make these concepts usable, not to pontificate.

      Thankfully more people are involved in sports than in combat. There are more citizens than soldiers. So in the interest of accessibility, the sport aspect of grappling is used as an entry point as it is the most common experience. We have tried to put some context around the applications and even give y’all a little history lesson to prove our points. But, without exception, historical and contemporary greats have been left out of the discussion. These omissions are not an affront; they keep this book reasonable in size and focus.

      We’re style agnostic here, and we use techniques you’ve probably seen before, but what’s shown are merely examples. There is no way we can be comprehensive in a single tome. By the time you finish, you will understand how common applications can be modified for sport, drunkle, and combat environments. Take the principles you learn and apply them to whatever style you study.

      While not everyone competes in tournaments, virtually anyone could find themselves in a situation where they face a combat or drunkle encounter. If you have studied a martial sport or practice a martial art to help keep yourself safe from violence, odds are good you’ve discovered a proclivity for either stand-up fighting or grappling. Given these predilections, here’s how the materials apply.

      If you are a boxer, karateka, taekwondo practitioner, or some other type of stand-up fighter, this book is designed for you. The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) is an excellent example of the cross-breeding of stand-up and ground techniques. Mixed martial arts demonstrate that skilled grapplers can use their expertise to overcome a standup fighter/striker who has limited ground experience. This is not a disparaging remark toward the stand-up fighter, nor an assertion of technical superiority for the ground fighter, merely a reflection of a moment in time, a fact.

      MMA

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