Originally posted by kingoftheforest
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From my general observation of the Chinese arts, the power seems 'rooted' in lower stances than boxing, taking advantage of the ability to explode upward and outward to its target (using much more leg power) rather than straight in.
That's why the small instructor in the video I posted is able to move those larger guys with ease, I assume.
Originally posted by kingoftheforest
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Lots of flexibility.
Jiujitsu and Muaythai may be more external martial arts and sport-focused today, but at different points in history they were arts that killed the enemy or opponent on the battlefield. Jiujitsu was used for Samurai whom lost their swords; muaythai was used by thai soldiers whom lost sword or staff and evolved from a weapon art (krabi krabong). And both arts are rich in history, where practitioners used their hands to kill.
The million dollar question: how do you keep a traditional art alive and deadly that is not used in the battlefield or watered down but applied in competition?
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