Power vs. Technique


© Kent Fung

A common refrain heard at many McDojo's is the hyperbolic truism that "Size/Strength doesn't matter."

Do me a favor. If you ever hear a sensei or sifu telling you this, reach out, smack him real, REAL hard, and walk out the door. Anyone who believes that has clearly never been on the wrong end of an incoming haymaker delivered by a large, beefy biker and thus has little to teach you about dealing with the realities of violence. Which is why you're at a martial arts school right? Right.

These teachers would have you believe that if you learn their techniques and practice them until they are flawless and pretty, you can defeat any big man. The idea is stupid and childish.

Still, these idiots are at least partially right, though not in the way they think. It's not really strength that matters to a fighter, but power. Strength is merely the ability to work against a lot of resistance - say, a 300 lb. barbell. But power is the ability to deliver use your strength quickly, accurately, and efficiently against your opponent.

Strength is an attribute. But power - power is a technique, just as valuable as a good reverse punch or a smooth hip throw. Bob Sapp has strength - and he's used it to become a champ on the K-1 pro kickboxing circuit. At 6' 7" and 374 pounds of muscle, Sapp should be unstoppable. Yet, he's nearly been knocked out several times by smaller opponents. (He only survived because his opponents, after getting Sapp on the ropes, would stupidly switch their game plan and hurl themselves at his vast bulk and smash themselves to bits.)

Many martial artists spend most of their time practicing what they think of as technique. They want that roundhouse kick to whip around and thwap against the heavy bag just so. They want their uniforms to snap satisfyingly when they deliver a reverse punch. And they think once they do that, the power will come. Boy, won't they be surprised when the large drunken construction worker just smiles after getting nailed with that picture perfect, whip-fast roundhouse kick!

Real power is felt, not seen. You see it when a true Taijiquan master (which is quite rare these days, even in Asia) sends a guy (not his student) flying dozens of feet with barely a shrug. You see it when a boxer somehow manages to knock out his opponent with what appears to be a loose, half-hearted jab. And you see it when you see a wing chun master demonstrate his "one-inch punch" - a stunt in which one extends his arm and positions it one inch away from the target, then seems to just flick his arm and send the target flying.

Go To Page: 1 2


The copyright of the article Power vs. Technique in Martial Arts is owned by . Permission to republish Power vs. Technique in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo


Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

1.   Dec 1, 2005 10:03 AM
You ridicule teachers that say size and strength don't matter and then say they are 'sort of' right.

I don't know about the teachers you have encountered, but mine have always understood the relati ...


-- posted by aggie80





For a complete listing of article comments, questions, and other discussions related to Kent Fung's Martial Arts topic, please visit the Discussions page.