Sport
Karate and the down fall of traditionalism
By
J.James
As of late I have been talking a lot
about sport karate vs traditional training or Budo style training and how it’s
not a good idea to change your views and practice in training. Ironically I
have been doing this as we are now part of a provincial Karate group that does
a lot of WKF Karate training.
The thing that has bothered me is how
this involvement in sport has change the way that traditional Karate people are
training and they are creating a new tradition and new mentality in their
training, and I am actually not a fan of this. Also the “Sport” style is a
merging of styles…again, not a fan of this practice….next the sport body now
gives out Dan ranking…again…not a fan of this. I love watching different styles
like Goju, Uechi and Shito do their Kata, but the idea that they should all
compete against each other in a Kata competition is ludicrous and silly.
I have to explain that I am a
traditionalist and I was trained and programed to view Karate as a specific and
traditional art. Because of this I have a hard time watching Karate change, I
admit it…it’s very hard for me to watch WKF stuff and view it as nothing more
than TAE KWON DO, which in itself is not wrong, but the whole thing is a bit of
a slap in the face to traditionalists because we pride ourselves on repeated
aesthetics that make our style unique. The sport Karate tries to create a
generic system that allows all styles to participate but in my mind it causes a
“Vanilla” version of Karate.
If you think that this sounded harsh
towards the WKF rules, well wait for it. The interpretation of Kumite by the
WKF rules is a total divergence from the traditional intent of Kumite and by
definition the WKF rules are NOT Karate…which is why Tae Kwon Do fighters
often, as in the case of Karate Team Canada, end up on the “Karate team”. I am not saying that they are not athletic,
the WKF athletes are in great shape and can move fast, but the rules that they
play with is creating generic version of Karate that waters down or sands down
the corners that create the uniqueness of each style. Have you ever watched a
Goju person do one of their Kata or a Uechi person perform their Kumite. Its very
distinct and very beautiful, how about a Shotokan person doing Kumite or doing
Kata…again, a very beautiful aesthetic is created. Now train them to all move
the same, turn on a weird TKDesk side stance and kick box for points…not so
beautiful anymore.
The bouncy stuff aside, using the
Sport Karate rules of needing to make multiple points takes away from the
ideology of traditional Shotokan Karate! So what exactly are the difference and
why between Shobu Ippon style tournaments and the WKF tournaments. Well let’s
look at the rules first and by the rules I want to first explore the Kumite
part…then the Kata and you will see how it changes the soul of Budo Karate,
then we will define the Sport Karate world vs the Budo Karate world!
In
Traditional Shotokan tournaments or Shobu Ippon tournaments the participant is
looking for the perfect technique, the application of perfect timing, power,
control, distance and correct movement to create the feeling of “ikken hissatsu”
or one punch one kill. The idea is that one movement earned you the fight, your
reverse punch to the face/body was so sufficiently created that your fight
would be over in real life. You have reached perfection in your technical
application.
To
be fair the JKA and many traditional tournaments do use a “Sanbon Shobu” event
or “first to two points” kind of set up for some events, but the more
traditional is the Shobu Ippon or perfect one point event. To score a point the
attack must “land” or be targeted to Jodan or Chudan (Head or body) and points
are equal if you target the head or the body. The movement must have the
following criteria; proper execution of power, distance, timing and correct
posture, concentrated mind and spirit and proper frame of mind and execution to
the proper target.
You
can get an Ippon also if you counter powerfully, knock your opponent off balance,
you catch your opponent so well that they cannot defend themselves or you use a
combination and all the attacks land. You can also put together two ½ points or
Waza-Ari into a full Ippon to win the match.
If the techniques are not perfect,
lack some of the requirements the attacker may be issued a Waza-ari or half
point. Because of these rules the Ippon focus makes the individuals focus more
on execution of the perfect technique over just throwing massive amounts of
unfocused techniques at their opponent. The idea is striving for better Waza
and the perfection of the mind and body in doing so. Sounds kind a hookey but
its true, that’s what Kumite should be.
Now WKF rules are a lot different, First
off you can score an Ippon which is worth 3 points, a Waza ari worth 2 points
or a Yuko worth one point. How you score these points is very different. Yes
you need good form, sporting attitude, vigorous application, good timing and
distance but Ippon is only awarded for a throw or fallen opponent or a head
kick! Waza ari is scored with Chudan kicks and the Yuko are given for punching
or striking……never mind if they are perfect or not. In order to win you must
have a “Clear lead of eight points” or the time runs out, then the person with
the highest number of points wins.
When you are doing the WKF rules you
are trying essentially to tag your partner more than they tag you, and use
techniques that are more flashy and exciting like head kicks to do so or sweeps
and throws then tag your partner so you can gain more points. The focus is
taken away from perfection of form and functionality and put towards scoring
points. Watching the WKF rules tournament I can say that the focus is definitely
removed from perfection of Waza and replaced with a tag style mentality. Also,
some of the competitors score a higher amount of points then play keep away to
run out the time for the match; both of which take away from the true Budo
spirit of Kumite.
Kata
competition is another world as well. With Kumite I can see opponents from
different styles competing against each other…Kumite is Kumite after all. However
we now run into a different issue in judging Kata. I have been doing Karate for
37 years (maybe a bit longer) and I can confidently tell you that I have no
hope of judging a Goju Ryu Kata or Uechi Kata with any kind of confidence or
competence! I also may feel that I can
recognize different Kata from Shito and a few other styles but I have no business
judging a person’s form in a style that is different than my own, nor does a
Goju, Shito or Uechi person have any business judging a Shotokan guys Kata.
The JKA outlines 10 major criteria for
judging Kata and right off the hop they basically say you need to KNOW the kata
to judge the kata. The first criteria is proper sequence of movements. If you
have never studied the Kata then you don’t know if they are doing the right
movements! Goju/Uechi/Shito practitioners that do Kata at the WKF training
level have a plethora of Kata open to them that I have never seen or trained in
and I would not feel comfortable judging these kata.
The next few criteria for Kata in JKA
rules tournaments are athletic in nature; levels of strength, Contraction and
expansion of the body and proper seep, power and accuracy of technques,
posture, balance, stance and accuracy of use of the “weapons”. Flow and
synchronization during team kata all make up the basic criteria for the Kata. Watching
JKA kata for me is also a form of dramatization of the characteristics for each
Kata. Empi needs to look different than Jion ext. I personally love good
Shotokan Kata, its dynamic, explosive and shows great form….and its something I
am used to. I get very uncomfortable watching other styles Kata as I know I am
critical of them and bias against them, and I also don’t see the aesthetics I am
looking for in the Kata.
WKF Kata rules are much the same but there
are issues with the application of the Kata rules. First off, and most
importantly….the competitors can choose from any of the Ryu Ha style Kata. And I
have seen Shotokan style competitors start dipping into different Ryu ha kata
in an attempt to stand out as different. The result is a “Shotokanized Goju
Kata” or other styles Kata. This looks strange to both Shotokan and the other
Ryu Ha’s membership. My feeling is that you should be selecting from your own
styles Kata base and not trying to do a different Ryu Ha’s Kata. Also, I know
of several “Shotokan” style members who do only Kumite and don’t even know a
Kata from their own Ryu ha….you are not a black belt in Shotokan if you cannot
do Shotokan kata! Nuff Said on that!!
To score points in Kata performance
for WKF you need proficiency in three different areas. First is conformance…..Are
you doing the standard Kata from an accepted Ryu Ha! In other words did you
pick a kata or make one up! The WKF traditionally has been very lenient in this
regard. If you pick a known Kata or can demonstrate it comes from “SOME” group
then you can do it. The old required Kata are out the window and now you can do
almost any Kata….regardless of your back ground.
Technical Performance is Much more
important than picking an appropriate Kata! The judges look at stance, techniques,
Transitions, timing, correct breathing, focus and Technical difficulty….like
diving! So as long as you look great…..you get points. Next up and more important
to WKF in my view is the Athletic performance. The “performer” must show proper
strength, speed, balance and rhythm. Never mind that they don’t know the Kata
the judges will look at what kind of athlete you are while doing the Kata.
Having watched high end JKA
competitors and regional competitors as well as WKF rules competitors the two
things that I can say about Kata competition is first off EVERYONE DOES UNSU TO
DAMN MUCH! What is with doing Unsu for every match or Sochin as a close second.
The JKA syllabus has 26 Kata in it, you surely can find a unique Kata to do for
the tournament other than the one that EVERYONE is doing! And secondly the JKA
guys blow the athletic types at WKF out of the water when it comes to showing
proper execution of power and timing!
One of my other pet peeves is the “Fibered
up” requirements for the Kiai in WKF tournaments to sound like the person is
trying to pass building material while doing Kata! For me this also smacks of
TKD style forms were the practitioner Yells and yells trying to show spirit and
showing a complete lack of knowledge as to what Kiai is used for and should
sound like!
The
last WKF rules tournament I went to I saw some very intricate WKF Kata being
done from what I can only guess is Shito ryu, but the Kata was unimpressive and
looked like a dance with no real applicable movements. Yet the person doing the
dance won first place. I think Kata has to look a specific way and the student
doing this Kata has to understand it as
being training for fighting not performance art!
The next thing that I noticed after
years of using only hand pads and a mouth guard was the LEVEL of foam gear that
was being used by WKF rules competitors. JKA rules or Shobu Ippon rules states
that you must have a mouth guard and hand pads to compete, that’s it. I have competed
with this gear for a long time and never been seriously hurt during matches.
The focus on control and single perfect techniques helped stop a lot of us from
flailing and hurting each other. Extra foam was always seen as a bit of an
insult, meaning you did not have the right level of control! After hundreds of
competitions I can only remember one or two accidents that lead to injuries.
WKF rules state that you need
special hand pads, mouth guard, shin/instep pads and in some cases chest and
head guards. The limited time I have seen competitions using this kind of Foam
dipped in plastic I have seen more cuts and pulled skin, more impact related injuries because people now
lack the control that we ask for in Shobu Ippon tournaments. Also I see more
flailing and praying for points at this level and a call for more head kicks as
ways to score points has led to more injuries due to dangerous techniques that
the Shobu Ippon rules.
In WKF rules more points are scored
with dynamic head kicks or using poor controlled moves than the JKA rules that
see more points from Gyaku Zuki and other more controlled attacks. This is the
key difference created by the point scoring system. If we focus on control,
better form and functionality over tagging someone for points we will be much
safer. This is why I discourage most students from doing the WKF rules
tournaments in favor of sticking to JKA rules or Shobu Ippon rules Kumite.
I get a lot of “this is traditional
Karate” style arguments or “This is how multiple styles compete against each
other” kinds of arguments. The truth is that just because you have a picture of
a founder on your wall does not mean you are doing something that the founder
would even recognize as traditional. WKF rules training is so very different
from what we are taught in the JKA and the JKA was founded on the principle
that tournaments were needed to draw in more students. The WKF took the JKA or
traditional rules and made them more sporty, for some this is fine, for the
rest of us this is confusing and counter to what we teach in the Dojo.
I always ask myself if the practice
or application of rules at a tournament comply with my ideology of what Karate
is. Does it enforce the idea that your style must be applicable in a real
situation or does it encourage a style that is not applicable and trends
towards a sport environment and application that would require a compliant
attacker. In other words does your kata look real and would it be useable in a
defensive situation and is your Kumite training real or just patty cake sport
Karate? Too often the answer is that its fancy and it won’t be useable, its “creative”
and fun but not applicable…you just left the realm of martial art for the arena
of sport Karate.
My focus when I teach and train in
Karate is to work on Budo Karate or what I call Showa Karate and to apply the
principles of this to everything I am doing. Budo Karate people can use sport
as a tool to learn and apply, but only if the rules are set up to reinforce
this principle in training. Non-Budo Karate lives in the sport field and they
play patty cake or tip tap to score points. They don’t have a true
understanding of Budo because the rules leach this ideology out of the training
itself.
Training in Budo/Showa Karate is
challenging, rough, repetitive and challenges the mind and body. It looks
simple but teaches lessons like patience, persistence and proper Karate waza.
The application is often seen as brutal and direct, the relentlessness of
training is criticized by many as overly harsh and often instructors are seen
as task masters who push students to perform thousands of repetitions of a
single movement before moving on. The sport coach is doing fun drills and
setting up students to work on dynamic things and constantly giving positive feedback.
The honest truth is that traditional artists will be very good at the few
techniques that they work on, they will have great form and application of the
movement is almost a reflex. The sport persona will have fun and use much more
dynamic movements, but fail to gain the deeper understanding of movement and application.
However the training is much easier to sell and Dojos are full because of this.
However in a real life situation the traditional student can upholster the
basic waza they train in and use it.
Kihon practiced until its reflexive is the martial way!
Okay, so why am I so dismayed at the
WKF/Sport Karate and why is it not okay in my mind. Two things….One its not
traditional Budo, which is what the Karate systems were essentially trained as.
Budo Karate is a special kind of
training. It does not matter if its JKA, Other shotokan, Shito ryu, Goju ryu or
other styles, the ideology of the training is the same. You train to improve
your mind, your system is done in such a way that its applicable and you train
to perform realistic and repeatable movements. I think of people like Mario
Higoanna Sensei who is a Goju instructor, his Karate is Budo! My lineage is
budo as well. We don’t suffer sport Karate types well and we see the holes in
the training and methods. Once sport is gone so is the student!
We are really facing a whole
generation of sport Karate students who will be lost to Budo/Showa Karate if we
do not act to counter this. As instructors we need to focus on more traditional
Shiai training for our sport outlets and we need to build our students
understanding of Budo/Showa Karate with more focused training and talk to them
about the training being about mind, body and spirit not just gaining medals
and we need to educate the public about the execution of one perfect technique
over playing Tag with our students at tournaments. Now after all of that, WKF
rules may not be my cup of tea, and its truly the spirit of the training that
is important. I feel that tournaments are a good thing, you just need to adjust
your thinking and focus on budo training with traditional rules that make sense
and are geared towards your ideology. More sport Karate is not the answer, more
Budo/Showa Karate is!