Pinan Sandan Bunkai - Neck Crank and Head, Hip and Knee Throw
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- Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025
- This video is the second video looking at applications from Pinan Sandan with the famed "Hands on hips" technique. This video look at a neck crank and Kubi nage which translates as neck throw but is commonly known in English as Head, hip and knee throw.
Hi my name is Daniel Pyatt and welcome to my RUclips channel. I practice Karate, Aikijujutsu, Ryukyu Kobujutsu and Kenjutsu. I do videos every Friday so if you like and enjoy this video then please subscribe to get loads just like it. I love hearing your thought and comments so please go crazy below :).
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I love this throw. I drop to my knee doing it. It gives you a better position for getting into full mount quickly. I had never seen the neck crank before, thank you.
I agree its a personal favourite throw (to execute not to recieve ;) ) Really glad you liked it and found it useful
Thank you very much! I would be very interested to see your interpretations of the first part of pinan sandan with the double Gedanbarai / Uchiuke.
I will definitely share in more detail one day soon 👍🏻
Appreciate the video thanks Sensei.
@@Kiwigeo8339 really glad you did 👍🏻
Wow he's is good
Great stuff, Daniel. Thank you!
Heath White thank you Heath, most appreciated
really like the way you doing bunkai
keep up the good work!!.
feby kurniawan thank you really glad you like it
Nice
Nice content and bunkai! Osu!
@@andrewschmitz9756 thank you so much for your comments 🙏🏻 appreciated
Muito bom 👍✌
Obrigado ;)
It is not realistic enough. Nobody attacks with on hook only and with slow speed. If you let a decent boxer punch you at full speed in series and you can pull this technique off, maybe it would be more believable.
Box a fighter, fight a boxer. In reality don't seek a technique allow the opportunity to come to you. If we taught everything in this way we'd never learn anything.
This throw is used all the time in Sanda/Sanshou kickboxing. Internet tough guys think they know shit.
I tend to treat katas as a framework to build on rather than a single sequence of rigid techniques. Most katas can be interpreted in multiple ways in terms of bunkai.