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Fighters Mind Fighters Body - Four Star Review by Martial Edge |
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Fighter’s
Mind Fighter’s Body is a comprehensive training manual aimed at the
competitive martial arts fighter with hundreds of exercises available
to pepper your training programme. Lesley Jackson finds out more as she
falls on her nose trying a plyometric hand-clap press up.
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Fighter’s Mind Fighter’s Body |
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Publisher: Bushido Publishing (2007)Pages: 330 pages Languages: English RRP: $39.95 (£25.00) |
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Book Review:
“Become stronger, faster, tougher” - Tony Li has presented us with
an all-encompassing guide to becoming the ultimate fighting machine,
whereby you will learn to fight harder, faster and smarter and if,
after you have mastered the eye-watering plyometrics exercises,
possibly fly as well! After reading this comprehensive and thorough
training manual, you won’t be short of ideas to flavour your training
programme although you will need to make sure you are part of the
book’s target audience and are physically strong enough manage some of
the exercises suggested.
Although Tony Li is credited as being an instructor of the
Vietnamese martial art Hiep Tihn Mon and often draws his exercises from
this source, such as the interesting “frog breathing”; this book is
relevant to all people wishing to fight competitively. There is a
massive bank of exercises to choose from, nearly two hundred pages
worth in fact, which are usefully divided up into the various body
concentrations relevant to the different genres of martial art be they
striking, kicking or grappling. Like all good scouts, Tony Li’s best
advice in preparing for a big competition is to be prepared, “The one
trait that has separated champions from losers is an unwavering
dedication to mental and physical preparation, and it always pays off.”
The training programmes included in Tony Li’s text range from the
beginner to the advanced and although he is quite resolute in his
dedication to training for a big event, he also errs on the side of
sensible as he advises readers to stick to the relevant programme
suitable to your level of fitness and to build in the active recovery
to enhance performance; whilst the opposition not in the know can
over-train themselves into defeat. Technique is also emphasised, “It’s
not enough to just have a needle; you need to know how to use it,” as
well as a useful training log and CD rom.
However, as useful as this book is, there are some details which
must be taken into consideration before spending a chunk of your money
on it. First of all, this is a book aimed primarily at men. There are
no pictures of women at all, apart from the obviously female hands
massaging Tony’s tired shoulders on page 80. Also, there is an emphasis
on testosterone levels, which is of course important if you are a male
fighter but no discussion on how this would be relevant to the female
fighter. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t have a problem with a book aimed
at the male athlete (after all, we wouldn’t question a book aimed at
women), but some indication on the cover who the intended audience is
would be useful.
As well as the physical, there is also some discussion on the mental
aspect of a fighter’s well being which is relevant but slightly skewed
in places. There is, of course, a need for a fighter to be mentally
tough and Tony rightly links the mental aspect to a fighter’s
performance, “...avoid making an artificial distinction between
‘mental’ and ‘physical’. Ultimately, they’re one and the same.” Some of
the tips he offers are very useful, such as developing the
pre-competition “poker face” and to, “Smile if you can between rounds.
If you can muster the energy, skip the stool and stand.” However, when
applying the fighter’s will to win to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs,
Tony’s argument doesn’t quite work as, “A person seized with passion
will forgo Maslow’s needs.” This would work up to a point but the idea
of the hierarchy of needs is to establish what a human being desires
and what they need for survival. So yes, when a fighter’s red mist has
descended and is gripped in the will to win, he or she may well forgo
the immediate desire for food or a designer handbag but without air or
water, you will be dead and that won’t help you win a competition.
Having said all this, ‘Fighters Mind Fighter’s Body’ is a
comprehensive training manual with a lot of good ideas for exercises to
make you a stronger fighter. The recipes at the back are a nice
addition as well; I personally can vouch for the Chinese Beef and Broccoli, yum!
Review by Lesley Jackson of http://www.martialedge.net
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