We are pleased to announce that from Monday 2 August 2021 we are re-starting our sparring sessions which were cancelled in February 2020.
We are looking forward to seeing many of you back from Monday. Time and location on the Schedule Page.
We are pleased to announce that from Monday 2 August 2021 we are re-starting our sparring sessions which were cancelled in February 2020.
We are looking forward to seeing many of you back from Monday. Time and location on the Schedule Page.
Due to the current outbreak of Coronavirus we have to cancel the next 3 sessions of Monday sparring (e.g. 23 march, 30 March and 6 April – which is Easter Monday). This is due to the closure of the North Cambridge Academy. We will update you as soon as we have more news.
Thanks to our collaboration with Anglia Ruskin University Kickboxing Club we are proud to announce that all Saturdays between 24 October and 12 December inclusive we will be running extra weekly sparring sessions, open to all fighters interested in extra practice. Sessions will be held at the usual Fenners Gallery within Kelsey Kerridge where we are already training on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sunday and they will available to all CARISMA members.
A couple of weeks ago I was having a chat with a friend who started white collar boxing in a local Cambridge club late last year. He described his first day in that club in a way that many would depict as a horrifying experience. He was asked to enter the ring to spar with 5 established, fit and trained athletes from that gym, just to see “what he’s got”. Result was, unsurprisingly, that he had a black eye and bruised nose. In my opinion the above described event could indeed be a good approach to check who really has the guts to step into a ring without necessarily being prepared for that kind of confrontation; it’s also a great way of losing, by the dozens, potentially good students and future promising fighters, by discouraging them to continue training.
As a martial artist and a coach I find this kind of attitude very much old school and outdated; I like to teach, instil and apply what we could define as a dignified approach to sparring beginners, a methodology that encourages a novice student to starts her first steps into sparring without unnecessary risks of getting hurt.
Sparring is about putting in practice what technical lessons are teaching: techniques, combinations, foot work, attacking, defending and blocking; it all gets mixed together at fast pace and without precise order. At first this is all very confusing and often overwhelming; for some people sparring triggers nearly irrational violent instincts while others simply freeze and get frustrated, feeling incapable of delivering decent performance.
We must assume that any decent martial arts club will have a bunch of senior students and members who are skilled in sparring and fit for fighting. Some of them are perhaps competing at local, regional or national level. These people have both the skill and the fitness to potentially hurt, seriously hurt, a beginner if just they wanted to. However it makes very little sense to do that; I educate all of my students to avoid exploiting the advantage they have on beginners.
A dignified approach to sparring beginners is simply about setting your skills at a level that is slightly better than the beginner you are training with and showing her how you can score on them starting from a fairly soft level of contact. Pressure of contact can and should be increased as and when applicable. This methodology ensures that the advanced student is winning the round and maintains its technical superiority while it offers a list of advantages to both people sparring:
In some cases the dignified approach to sparring beginners becomes difficult to maintain because:
In the above cases we usually approach the problem with a few words of advice; if the beginners still misbehaves out of logical control we suggest increasing the pressure until it is enough to win the round and educate her.
So if you are a beginner you can be assured that your first sparring sessions will not be traumatic and testing what “you have got” but be aware that there are usually many people in the club that can potentially harm you so respect for your opponent is always a must.
I would like to remind you that sparring is on today Monday the 8th of August (6:30pm to 8:30pm) at the Gym at Manor Community College.