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Posted

this is the real shotokan , thanks for sharing it with everyone ..

never give up !

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Posted

Hi. I had 3 things to mention after watching the trailer:

1) About 2 minutes into the trailer, one guy (in black pants, gold shirt) was swinging punches like in a high school fight. In class, we punch in a linear fashion. Is swinging also used?

2) I noticed that sometimes a simple punch to the face was quite effective. Even when one person performed a nice-looking kick, the other person was able to front punch the face.

3) Some people were knocked down with one hit, and seemed to be in pain. This made me think that one should condition himself to be able to tolerate pain in case one is attacked. I wonder if any such training will be provided in class, but I don't think so.

"First you must know yourself. Then you can know others."

Posted
Hi. I had 3 things to mention after watching the trailer:

1) About 2 minutes into the trailer, one guy (in black pants, gold shirt) was swinging punches like in a high school fight. In class, we punch in a linear fashion. Is swinging also used?

2) I noticed that sometimes a simple punch to the face was quite effective. Even when one person performed a nice-looking kick, the other person was able to front punch the face.

3) Some people were knocked down with one hit, and seemed to be in pain. This made me think that one should condition himself to be able to tolerate pain in case one is attacked. I wonder if any such training will be provided in class, but I don't think so.

1) Sometimes in Kumite people do get paranoid and start throwing random useless punches. But just so you know, not all attacks in Karate are linear. But in Kumite competitions, swings do not get you points, as what judges are looking for is a good strong fast and accurate gyaku tsuki.

2) That is common sense, you must always take advantage of gaps and mistakes. So when in a Kumite fight, a mawashi geri intercepted with a gyaku tsuki before it could even land will not ever get you any points.

You see, in Shotokan there are generally three principles of blocking in Kumite:

*Block and strike

*Avoid (moving away) and strike

*Strike in place, which is what you mostly saw in that video.

Unfortunately I forgot the Japanese terms for these three principles.

That is why your hands must be up at all times specially when kicking.

3) That's what abdominal muscles are for. But in full contact, people are mostly knocked out due to a strike to the face. And believe it or not, you can prevent that by training your neck muscles.

"If you always put limits on what you can do, physical or anything else, it'll spread over into the rest of your life. It'll spread over into your work, into your mortality, into your entire being. There are no limits. There are plateaus, but you must not stay there, you must go beyond them. If it kills you, it kills you."


Bruce Lee

Posted
Hi. I had 3 things to mention after watching the trailer:

1) About 2 minutes into the trailer, one guy (in black pants, gold shirt) was swinging punches like in a high school fight. In class, we punch in a linear fashion. Is swinging also used?

No, but if the guy was wearing black pants and a gold shirt, chances are he wasn't one of the KUGB guys so could've trained in anything.

2) I noticed that sometimes a simple punch to the face was quite effective. Even when one person performed a nice-looking kick, the other person was able to front punch the face.

Yep, nothing wrong with a nice straightforward punch if you can land it.

3) Some people were knocked down with one hit, and seemed to be in pain. This made me think that one should condition himself to be able to tolerate pain in case one is attacked. I wonder if any such training will be provided in class, but I don't think so.
Wouldn't you be a bit disappointed in the strikers' skills if the other guy didn't fall down in pain? That's what they train to do.
Posted

The second set arrived and I can say it was worth the wait! Tonnes of full on footage and some really impressive technique, control, and yes big hits! I havn't yet had a chance to watch all of it yet - most of the first volume and bits of the other 3. Whats more is there are some trailers linked to some of the other Legend productions which are bound to be next on the list..

Posted

I think you are referring to:

1. Sen - before strike attack

2. Sen-no-Sen - same time as strike attack

3. Sen-Go-No-Sen - after strike attack

These are basic concepts. Advanced concepts are:

Kake Waza

Sasoi Waza

It's been so long, I don't recall which is which, but the above two concepts are where 1. You fake and immediately attack as the opponent reacts to the fake. 2. You fake to draw the opponent out with an attack, and after the attack, you attack - similar to sen-go-no-sen.

- Killer -

Hi. I had 3 things to mention after watching the trailer:

1) About 2 minutes into the trailer, one guy (in black pants, gold shirt) was swinging punches like in a high school fight. In class, we punch in a linear fashion. Is swinging also used?

2) I noticed that sometimes a simple punch to the face was quite effective. Even when one person performed a nice-looking kick, the other person was able to front punch the face.

3) Some people were knocked down with one hit, and seemed to be in pain. This made me think that one should condition himself to be able to tolerate pain in case one is attacked. I wonder if any such training will be provided in class, but I don't think so.

1) Sometimes in Kumite people do get paranoid and start throwing random useless punches. But just so you know, not all attacks in Karate are linear. But in Kumite competitions, swings do not get you points, as what judges are looking for is a good strong fast and accurate gyaku tsuki.

2) That is common sense, you must always take advantage of gaps and mistakes. So when in a Kumite fight, a mawashi geri intercepted with a gyaku tsuki before it could even land will not ever get you any points.

You see, in Shotokan there are generally three principles of blocking in Kumite:

*Block and strike

*Avoid (moving away) and strike

*Strike in place, which is what you mostly saw in that video.

Unfortunately I forgot the Japanese terms for these three principles.

That is why your hands must be up at all times specially when kicking.

3) That's what abdominal muscles are for. But in full contact, people are mostly knocked out due to a strike to the face. And believe it or not, you can prevent that by training your neck muscles.

Mizu No Kokoro

Shodan - Nishiyama Sensei

Table Tennis: http://www.jmblades.com/

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  • 2 years later...
Posted

killer, you wouldn't happen to be able to copy a couple of those fights from VHS onto your computer would you??

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