Friday, July 25, 2025

Opinion: how do you criticize or judge other styles of karate and kata you don't know?

  


By Edward Boot 2 O. Dan from shotokan

A friend recently shared this video (see below the youtube link) of a facebook page known as "dumbass martial arts" which contains, what could be said, an enthusiastic kata performance by a young black female belt in some Kind of karate competition. First of all, I mean that no way I'm intentionally pulling this person, karate style or his instructors. But I've seen a great reaction against this kata from some anonymous people on Facebook...

"it's a very famous kata called" I need to make a dumpster but I can't

"
😳 what a damn disgrace to karate! 😡

Whoever told this woman to do stupid things like this is okay, she needs her belt removed "

" what was that?! Kata or was it giving birth?

... Additionally I want to make it clear that, I don't like this kata performance of this young girl either If I was judging this kata, I would have failed all the kata without help for the very badly executed hook hit in about 15 seconds. And that movement alone, I believe, speaks for itself in relation to the performance of the rest of the kata.

But this made me think; my judgment, like others towards this woman and her kata, poses some great questions; who are you to judge someone else's karate or kata, especially for a karate style that never trained in all of her Life? What do you qualify to judge someone kata you don't know? Is it a really " bad " Kata ", or don't you just get the kata or the karate style it comes from? This theme refers mainly to belts black that, in one moment or another, will be put in position to judge a kata in a tournament they do not know, or will be asked what is your opinion on that kata, again not knowing something about it Not even the style that comes from.

Judge and criticize a kata you don't know
I've had this discussion with some belts black many years ago. How do you judge or criticize a kata you don't know, or a karate style you don't know? In the past, in my old dojo, I often had to look and criticize the students who practiced seipai, a kata gōjū-Ryu that I know absolutely nothing.

When you criticize a kata / karate you don't know, what I summed up (in addition to another belt black I used to train with) is that it's not so impossible to criticize someone else's kata from a different style of karate that you don't know It matters what karate style you come from, I think these are the three most common things that go from one style to another of martial arts, and in no particular order, and this is what I seek when I judge someone else's karate not Be:

1. The essential
2. Attitude
3. Execution


To briefly review the list. No matter what karate style you come from, most likely you can say at belt level black if anyone has good "basic concepts" (Kihon) or not. Whether you're watching someone of Japanese origin, Okinawan, Korean or other kind doing martial arts, you can know if someone throws a crooked blow, with a folded doll or a folded arm (like the hook hit I mentioned previously on this one Article). Video). Another example is a quick shot; no matter the taste of karate you do, a quick kick is a very basic concept that changes style in style; the leg extends and retract completely with a perfect mechanical movement or the person drops the foot To the ground like a sack of potatoes? The point is, no matter what style of karate you do, it's easy to know if someone doesn't have good basic concepts according to all these criteria that I will add and more We also have to remember that, most of karate, comes from the same well. There are drastic variations between karate styles, but many of the basic and basic elements of karate don't change too much.

There's a thin line between Hollywood and Okinawa.

The next theme is the attitude; the person wants to be there? You can see it in a person's face, especially in a competition, if they want to be there or not (like a child who hates karate being forced to do it for a non-negotiable father). This is something I use to judge a good kata in general. Attitude is not only intensity, although they go hand in hand. Now the woman in the video has a good attitude, and obviously takes very seriously the competition and training. So it's not that bad in that look. However... a person can also have too much attitude? There's a thin line between Hollywood and Okinawa. The performance of this kata, in my eyes, is a little exaggerated. Excessive facial gestures, the constant kiai, make the kata look silly. The unfortunate part is that there are karate competitions that are based on theatricality. If it looks good on the big screen, that's all that matters, and traditional karate is too boring for them.

The last point on my list is execution. Now this is a little hard to explain. But when I see a kata, I'm looking for some magic in it. You can tell when someone is really good at karate. And when they execute movements, they have that fierce speed, concentration and agility that accompany an intense training. The woman in this video; she is too tense. She is so tense and focused on the theatricality that makes her execution of the movements careless. The quick combinations of blocking, the blows, everything lacks that clear and clear execution because she is simply too tense.

Where things become confusing.

This previous list I like to follow in general, but it's not the end of all media to criticize other karate practitioners. One of the areas where it is difficult to judge a martial arts performance is when you see someone perform something like a kung fu routine. I don't know absolutely anything about kung fu; kung fu isn't even "karate", indeed it's a word that doesn't necessarily describe martial arts. Who am I to judge or criticize someone who practice kung fu or any Chinese martial art? This is where I think we have to draw the line; the "modernized" Martial arts that originate in, let's say Japan, Okinawa, Taiwan, Korea and even the Americas, I think they can also be criticized in general. But to ask someone to see some chinese origin, this is where I think you can't even compare both.

Another point on this topic; even with similar territories, sometimes it is better to have a competition where judges are of a single style of karate. Even with my previous list, there is still a small level of injustice; returning to my original example with seipai, I don't know that kata; if i tell someone that their blow is twisted, well, maybe there's a move in that kata where you Doll is leaning 30 degrees. For this kind of scenario, it would be better to have only people of that martial arts style judging their competitors. A great debate is whether karate will ever reach the Olympics. If karate comes to the Olympics, will we ever be really the " best kata practitioners in the world "?"? or would it be better to subdivide the " best kata " by different styles? As long as there is competition, these questions will arise and, in any case, I only see that it will become a greater problem in the future

Who cares if it's not good?

My final comments on the subject; we must remember that karate is a journey for the practitioner and only for the practitioner alone. If this woman enjoys karate, she loves to do kata and compete, who are we to tell her we don't like her kata? I'll say again; I don't like the performance that the woman put in the original video published previously; I think the performance is exaggerated, too theatrical, the basic is of poor quality and I even wonder where this kata came from and who taught it. But at the end of the day, if this person loves karate and is happy to do what he's doing, then who are we to say something? Me, karate practitioners and trolls on Facebook include?

Finally, I would like to extend an open invitation to the woman in the video or her instructor in this video to leave a comment or write me about this kata. You're welcome to challenge me and tell me why this kata performance is good. Personally, I would like to know more about this kata, style and its origin. Because, for me, this kata doesn't look quite good. In fact, it looks like a traditional kata that was very modified and changed to adapt to the teatralización of tournaments. Maybe it's even a kata invented for an open division...


 

 

 


Very strange Karate Kata

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