>I tried again and was able to view the clip. I actually
>think it looks like it could be a good workout. I'm not going
>to knock anyone's form, because I'm sure mine gets pretty wild
>sometimes, too. Heck, I did Cardio Kicks for years before I
>read on here that Cathe didn't have good form! I don't care!
>I always got a good workout, because I was swinging and
>kicking right along with them. With Amy's workout, it looks
>like she has a lot of very fast combos, which I'm sure makes
>it harder to maintain good form. JMHO!!
>
To be honest with you, I have done many martial arts inspired workouts and I have yet to see an instructor who has excellent form AND execution. Look at a simple front snap kick. Most instructors execute the kick like this: lift knee (chamber...sort of they almost always forget to remind folks to prep the foot also. Are you kicking with your instep, ball or heel...that does make the difference between a kick and a broken ankle if one was to actually make contact), extend leg (kick,) bring leg in as you lower.
A front snap is a four count kick (as is a side kick, a round house kick and a back kick): chamber, extend, bring leg back in fast (snap out, AND snap leg back in) lower leg to fighting stance (which ever stance you threw the kick from in most cases.) I have yet to see different stances combined with these very basic moves allowing movement and traveling as one might in an actual martial arts class.
I was actually thinking about getting certified to teach kickboxing because I was sick off all of the poor instruction out there, but when I got the materials, my jaw dropped when I saw the blackbelt who was teaching this course demonstrate some of the poorest form and execution I've ever seen. I sent the course back; but that did explain to me why there is so much excessive leaning back on front kicks,(there is no need to lean far back unless you are getting out of the way of a strike or weapon) side kicks being executed like round house kicks, backs hunched, sloppy floppy arm movements (all in the name of keeping it loose). And why don't instructors teach real blocks? A true high block, low block, inside to out or outside to in forearm block, a palm block, a knife edge block, a knee block or a kick block?
I had one of the very first kickboxing inspired videos called 'Original KIA Aerobics', that demonstrated moving attacks and combined it with moving blocks to defend yourself from the exact attack moves you had just used. It was sort of gritty and unpolished seeing that at the time it was an orginal, but I liked the idea. The moves were executed slower because they were complete, and the traveling moves kept you low in a deep squat to maintain strong balance and power in the thighs as you moved. Too bad the producers of this workout didn't continue.
Sorry for the rant. I've been studying martial arts for 31 years now and I guess what I'm trying to say is that it appears that few fitness instructors demonstrate even the most basic of martial arts moves correctly in a fitness class, and lets face it, it takes hours of working drills on each move to become proficient at executing them correctly. What we really get is THEIR own take on how to use these moves in their class so just be careful, listen to your body and like the rest of the workout, make it work for you.