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by Bob McKown on 15 November 2010 - 17:11
Your so obviously talented and keen eyed for judging for heavens sakes why arent you a world class judge? or a top flight world competitor?.
I guess the old adage applies here " those that do, do, those that don,t, teach!"

by Phil Behun on 15 November 2010 - 18:11
by Bob McKown on 15 November 2010 - 18:11
Sorry to hear you lost two dogs last month, And good luck with the young dog. If I want to learn more about competition I certainly won,t learn it here on the net. I,ll learn it at my club and competition,s and from those that trial.
by loureed on 22 November 2010 - 17:11

by Phil Behun on 22 November 2010 - 19:11
by Bob McKown on 23 November 2010 - 00:11
How many "Pro,s" does it take to train a dog???............ All of them because if you ask any one of them all the others are doing it wrong cause there not "pro,s"...

by Phil Behun on 23 November 2010 - 00:11

That's what makes this "pro" good at what he does,,,,,,,,,he notices things that others don't.
by Bob McKown on 23 November 2010 - 00:11
I,m not insulting any one but the lame excuse that because someone got a better score then they should of is pretty school yard for a adult don,t you think.
When I competed in the Martial arts and taught I would on occasion have a student complain that during Kumata or forms some body would get a score they did,nt deserve or the judge liked so and so better then me and it,s not fair.
My answer was always the same Don,t worry about what so and so did or got or what judge liked who. Do the best you can and let your ability speak for it,s self. Some times the judging breaks for them and some time it will break for you... It,s the way of the world.
Ability over attitude always shows the best.
The only thing I compete against is the last score in my score book.
Sorry about the pose,I guess i,m not "pro" enough to notice. Thanks for the critque. Was there a fee involved? lot me know what your pay pal account # is.

by Phil Behun on 23 November 2010 - 01:11
by Bob McKown on 23 November 2010 - 01:11
Either spelling is proper depending on your studies history. Kata is generally used in Traditional forms competition Forms generally used in a mixed competition again either is proper.
Example:
Soft style Chinese forms.
Traditional Japanese Kata.
Hyung also refers to specific forms.
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