
Originally Posted by
Griffin Lambert
There are effective techniques with in each system but often it has a lot more to do with the fighters themselves. Obviously a system designed to kill your opponent or seriously injure him would have an advantage over any fighting thats adapted to to sports rules. The mentality of a military style would give it an advantage as well. In mma you don't have to worry about dying. In any military combat situation death would be a possibility and I think that mind set would be a game changer. Try not to think about style vs style. There are great techniques in many systems but it doesn't make one better than the other. It's all fighting.
Generally speaking I would agree however there are literally hundreds of martial arts styles that do not teach basic fighting principles like a good fighting stance, good footwork, how to use angles, as well as positional dominance in the clinch and on the ground. In these instances, it is not about a different way of doing things or even of an incomplete style but rather these styles are dated and fundamentally flawed.
For example, defense as taught in my old TDM classes that I used to take as a teenager, was trained as a series of choreographed drills. During no time were kickboxing or boxing fundamentals (ie, this is how you hold your head, this is how you check a kick) ever explained or even utilized during these drills. Though some of that stuff would be touched upon in sparring in general our striking was fundamentally broken. We were wired for specific defensive scenarios and we didn't have basic defensive principles from which to handle an ad hoc fighting scenario.
There is such a thing as bad martial arts.