One Month of Weekly Tae Kwon Do or Kickboxing Classes for One or Two at Red Tiger Martial Arts (Up to 60% Off)
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Students age 16+ learn discipline and develop fitness levels during weekly tae kwon do or kickboxing classes
Choose from Four Options
- $39 for one month of weekly tae kwon do classes for one ($85 value)
- $75 for one month of weekly tae kwon do classes for two ($170 value)
- $49 for one month of weekly kickboxing classes for one ($120 value)
- $95 for one month of weekly kickboxing classes for two ($240 value)<p>
Students age 16 and up learn discipline and develop fitness during tae kwon do and kickboxing classesSee the schedule here.<p>
Tae Kwon Do: One Name, Two Disciplines
When learning tae kwon do, you might be studying only one of two versions of one of the world’s most popular sports. Here, Groupon takes a look at how tae kwon do evolved to its current forms.
Known as “the way of the foot and fist” in Korean, tae kwon do is one of the world’s most popular martial arts. Based on a combination of karate and an ancient Korean self-defense style called tae kyon, the sport as we now know it was originally developed in South Korea in the 1940s by Choi Hong Hi, a founder of the country’s military and an eventual war hero. Choi Hong Hi wanted practitioners of his martial art to balance mental and physical discipline, so his version heavily incorporates repetitive patterns of punching and kicking known as hyung, moves which are as calculated and rehearsed as they are reactive and defensive. Another version of tae kwon do, sanctioned by the World Taekwondo Federation, puts less of an emphasis on spiritual growth, instead highlighting the physical aspect, especially kicks. Because of the high physical demands, WTF fighters usually wear pads around their head and torso for protection from competitor’s blows and stray bees.
When Choi left South Korea for Canada in the 1970s over political disagreements, he moved his style’s governing body—the International Taekwon-Do Federation—there as well, leaving the WTF to continue its approach in South Korea. As a result, the WTF version is arguably the more popular iteration of tae kwon do in the world today. Since Choi’s passing in 2002, leaders of both the ITF and the WTF have met to consider joining the two branches, but the differences largely remain intact, forever sparring for worldwide supremacy.