I don't think you'll kick very high if you do that. You also won't be able to turn your hip over to the horizontal kicking position required for roundhouse and side kicks. If your base leg is only pivoted 45 degrees, you'll be kicking upward or awkwardly twist the knee of your base leg.REG wrote:If you want to be able to do a high roundhouse or side kick with the supporting foot pivoted to just about 45-90 degrees,
In order to turn the hip of the kicking leg over enough to perform the kick properly, you have to pivot further. At least 90 degrees, and increasing with the height of the kick.
Yes. The final extended position is the same in all these kicks, including spin kick if you pause at the height point. The stretch is the same or similar enough. The kicking leg gets a dynamic stretch while the base leg tenses abruptly in a stretch like a static stretch.In addition, I just realized another thing. lol. Aren't the front splits actually also useful in facilitating the learning of a high front kick, inside and outside crescent kicks, axe kicks (with the supporting foot going 45-90 degrees)? What about the back kick, hook kick, spin kicks, and jump kicks as well, since the supporting leg is stretched in both the hamstrings and adductors while the kicking leg is stretched in the quadriceps?