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This past month I had to complete some physical exams to get licensed to fight in California. I drove down to a medical office in San Pedro, south of Los Angeles, where I could undergo all the exams- general physical, cardiological, opthamalogical, and neurological- in one location. The athletic commission requires fighters my age to take far more rigorous (and expensive) cardio and neuro exams than they do younger fighters. Ostensibly the commission wants to ensure that the old guys can make it through a fight without having a chest-buster, or are not too punch-addled to compete. The real effect of the policy, however, is that it imposes retirement on the older fighter simply by making the cost of getting licensed too great. In any case, I was able to scrape the necessary money together to pay for the exams, pass them, and get licensed. I want to thank everyone who responded to the recent sale and bought Bohemian shirts. Your support made my paying for the exams possible.
Anyway, something interesting happened while I was checking in at the doctor's office.
These principles, or "laws" as I've called them, began to take form in the early 1990's after I became head wrestling coach at UC Davis. At the time UCD was a non-scholarship program competing in the tough Pacific-10 conference, among the nation’s top two or three wrestling conferences. The absence of scholarships, coupled with the athletic department's ongoing threat to cut the wrestling program, made it difficult to recruit top wrestling talent. In a conference where high school state champions are commonplace, I took over a team comprised primarily of young men whose greatest wrestling accomplishment was placing in their high school league championship.
In order to be competitive in the Pac-10 it was clear I not only had to develop the team physically and technically, but because nearly every opponent was vastly more accomplished, I had to nurture their fighting spirit and competitive resolve as well. Drawing on my own experiences, observations and research, I assembled a list of several qualities I deemed essential for success in the combative arena. I dubbed the list "Lajcik’s Laws" and made them the foundation for all our training.
Over time, as the wrestlers began to embody the "Laws", their improvement was nothing short of profound. One sterling example was the team's 118-pound wrestler, who had a record of 1-19 his sophomore season, the year before I arrived.
This past month I had to complete some physical exams to get licensed to fight in California. I drove down to a medical office in San Pedro, south of...
Tim hits the screen in the martial arts action feature "Hand 2 Hand".The film, written and directed by Jino Kang, premieres Sunday, July 25th at 4pm...