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  • Great Training Tip!

    For those of you who have little cash or time on your hands...and if you train solo a lot...I've found just the thing to make training in Arnis fun. It's simple, it looks like something out of The Three Stooges, but it works.

    Step 1) Get some thin but strong rope, an arnis stick, and find a tree with a branch at about eye level...or any other place where you can hang up a target.

    Step 2) Cut off about 3 feet of string or more, depending on the height of the object of which you will be hanging the stick from.

    Step 3) Tie a portion of the rope around the center of the arnis stick...then tie the other end to the area where you want the stick to be suspended.

    Step 4) Make sure the arnis stick is hanging well-balanced. The stick should be hanging horizontally in mid-air.

    Step 5) Grab another arnis stick, and hit either one of the ends of the hanging stick, and do your best to counter the on-coming strikes of the spinning stick.

    I picked this up in the Philippines a while back, but I always underestimated it's value. To be perfectly honest, it looks ridiculous to the average martial artist. But, many Filipino masters have used this method and it has proven successful for many of them. The late Edgar Sulite used this method of training as a child. Many Filipino masters who developed their own systems had a lack of time and this proved as an effective training tool for many of them.

    Of course, this will not replace training with a partner. You need both to be an accomplished fighter. However, I can say in full confidence that this simple method has improved my speed, reflex, and footwork. Remember to use proper fighting form at all times. Don't hit the stick like you're swatting a fly...hit it with the proper body mechanics. This isn't a power drill...this is a reflex-honing drill. Don't hit it too hard...hit it with just the right amount of contact. Train distance and the angles of attack. Also, as in all Filipino arnis drills, don't just stand there and whack the stick..MOVE MOVE MOVE! Footwork is key when using this method.

    God Bless....Kick Ass,
    Mike

  • #2
    I do something similar, but for me it's more for knife training.

    I've hung a tennis ball from my speedball by a length of thick elastic. It's actuall one of those straps with hooks on both ends often used to secure things to the roof of cars. I don't know about elswhere in the world but here in Britain we call them bungies or bunjees (not sure of the spelling)

    The speedball is at about six feet and the tennis ball hangs to around the level of the abdomen/solar plexus. It simulates an oponent with the tennis ball being the knife and the speedball being the head.

    You stike the tennis ball as if you were striking an attacking arm and try to counter to the head. The dificulty is that the ball being on elastic has a mind of its own and will come flying back towards you from any random angle. And the speedball literaly weaves out of the way of your counters like a boxer!

    You really need speed to strike the tennis ball as it comes towards any part of your body and need footwork/body angleing to move out of the way. You also need patience as hitting the moving speedball isn't as easy as you'd think!

    Imagine being struck in the neck by a speedball trying to kill you with a tennis ball... it can happen lol

    Keeper

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    • #3
      Sounds great!! But one question...what exactly is a speedball? Is it like a double end speed bag ball? Sorry I'm not sure...I wanna try it tho.

      Originally posted by Keeper
      I do something similar, but for me it's more for knife training.

      I've hung a tennis ball from my speedball by a length of thick elastic. It's actuall one of those straps with hooks on both ends often used to secure things to the roof of cars. I don't know about elswhere in the world but here in Britain we call them bungies or bunjees (not sure of the spelling)

      The speedball is at about six feet and the tennis ball hangs to around the level of the abdomen/solar plexus. It simulates an oponent with the tennis ball being the knife and the speedball being the head.

      You stike the tennis ball as if you were striking an attacking arm and try to counter to the head. The dificulty is that the ball being on elastic has a mind of its own and will come flying back towards you from any random angle. And the speedball literaly weaves out of the way of your counters like a boxer!

      You really need speed to strike the tennis ball as it comes towards any part of your body and need footwork/body angleing to move out of the way. You also need patience as hitting the moving speedball isn't as easy as you'd think!

      Imagine being struck in the neck by a speedball trying to kill you with a tennis ball... it can happen lol

      Keeper

      Comment


      • #4
        speedball... thing that boxers use. It hangs above head-hight you hit it and it rebounds off the platform above it. The idea is the hit it with rapid hammer-fist type punches really fast so you can hear a rythm. one hand after the other. Watch Rocky you'll know what I mean. Tried to post a pic of it but I don't have enough time to figure out how to lol

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        • #5
          yeah, I have used speed bags to practice my dstance and timing.
          they work pretty well for me. I have used a doubl end bag also, but I prefer the overhead type.

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