KU Quick Tips - Straight Punch Tegumi

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  • Опубликовано: 4 сен 2024
  • This KU Quick Tip focuses on Straight Punch Tegumi, a drill to train checking and trapping your opponent's linear strikes in a repetitive, back and forth practice. Many similar exercises exist, with different methodologies designed to achieve specific outcomes. This exercise addresses receiving a straight punch as a Habitual Act of Physical Violence (HAPV), but could in reality be used to intercept a shove, grab, or any linear strike. This is a brief summary of some of what we hope to achieve with the drill in Koryu Uchinadi.
    Cody Stewart is a martial arts instructor of Koryu Uchinadi Kenpo Jutsu under Hanshi Patrick McCarthy. KU is a style of karate that utilizes impacting, clinch, throws, chokes, joint locks, and groundwork within a traditional Japanese budo framework. Emphasis is on civil self defense against habitual acts of physical violence (HAPV) and how all of the defensive themes are embodied in kata movements.

Комментарии • 39

  • @ovariosinflamados26
    @ovariosinflamados26 6 лет назад +8

    I practice filipino martial arts and we have very similar drills called hubud lubud. Very cool stuff!

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  6 лет назад +3

      Great observation, there are indeed vast similarities here! The human body, how it works and how to manipulate it, is universal to every art, so naturally each art will find similar practices to accomplish these aims. Cheers!

    • @kenkongermany7860
      @kenkongermany7860 3 года назад

      Jepp. And trained this way it is in both MAs completly useless. The start is promising, but then suffocated in the usual three count.

    • @ovariosinflamados26
      @ovariosinflamados26 3 года назад +1

      @@kenkongermany7860 I find that it is a good training tool to develop many things like hand eye coordination, speed and reflexes among other things. That drill is not how one would fight but just a training tool.

    • @kenkongermany7860
      @kenkongermany7860 3 года назад

      @@ovariosinflamados26 Common explanation. In m.e. by replacing the three contacts on a stiff arm with three contacts on three pumped attacks or by moving the attacking retracting limb in a wide range to install short sticking ( some of the "side changes" in hubud lubud) and other "above beginner"-changes the gap to fighting becomes smaller... .

    • @ovariosinflamados26
      @ovariosinflamados26 3 года назад

      @@kenkongermany7860 Interesting. I'd like to see some examples of what you just explained. I'm always down to try new techniques.

  • @smalough
    @smalough 7 лет назад +2

    Great video!

  • @adriansluf
    @adriansluf 5 лет назад +1

    @Fred Dedobi: I think, I understand what do you means with"do you....real...fight". I do many boxing in the ring when I was young fighter. Fighting on the street. The Attacks on the street had no definition. My mind was very dificult to control. After thees experience, I need more cotrol about my reaction. Everybody need method, tactics, to be a good fighter. AND I THINK, THEESE EXAMPLES OF PRAXIS AND EXPLANATION OF THIS YOUNG MASTER can be VERY IMPORTANT TO CONTROL ITSELFS (Own body). And After Understanding that, the practicer (both Partner) take a protection (hand shoes, helmet...) and essay to ATTACK WITH REAL PUNCH and DISTANCE. I promise you, These explanation CAN be a very good idea to be a good fighter. Just FYI: the Master of this Young master is the old Sensei McCarthy, WHO was a real fighter at the 70th's

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  5 лет назад +1

      Thanks Andria. I agree completely that you need to learn tactics, control, skills, etc. first, and then build on those into more realistic scenarios, and eventually into completely random engagements with full effort. Cheers.

  • @Jameskeith1972
    @Jameskeith1972 3 года назад +1

    Is tegumi like push hands or chi Sau? Is it a sticking or sensitivity drill to develop reflexes?

    • @staticjump
      @staticjump 3 года назад

      Same thing

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  3 года назад +1

      Indeed very similar. Tegumi are a set of partner practices that cover clinching, checking/trapping, sticky hands and sensitivity, timing and precision, etc. Realistically there is nothing you can't put into a similar framework of back and forth repetitive partner drills to rack up the reps.

    • @Jameskeith1972
      @Jameskeith1972 3 года назад

      @@monsterprone353 thank you for the reply!

  • @LeonardoGuilherme98
    @LeonardoGuilherme98 3 года назад

    Parece muito com o Kung fu

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  3 года назад

      Indeed there are similarities among all martial arts. Thanks for the comment!

  • @ponnarajashekhar760
    @ponnarajashekhar760 6 лет назад +1

    what is your style? or do you simply practice Koryu Uchinadi under Sensei Patrick, your style flows like a wave of Ocean , thanks for making Karatedo great gain, it's the best martial art for short distance figjting .

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  6 лет назад +1

      Yes, my style is Koryu Uchinadi and my instructor is Hanshi Patrick McCarthy. Sorry for the delay in the response. I've been taking a break from RUclips for a while.

    • @adriansluf
      @adriansluf 5 лет назад +1

      @Ponna...Please don't confuse a "Style" (Ryu=japanese for streaming) with "Koryu Uchinadi 'style'". The meneaning of style is here a princip but not streaming. Correct Cody Sensei?

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  5 лет назад +3

      @@adriansluf Sensei McCarthy originally intended for the research he has done and organized concerning kata, Habitual Acts of Physical Violence (HAPV), tegumi, structured drills, etc. all to not be a style on their own (since they are common to all styles), but rather to serve as practices that could be seamlessly incorporated into any practice to supplement and enhance it. Cheers.

  • @ittokaos
    @ittokaos 7 лет назад +5

    looks like wing chun pak Sao drill

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  7 лет назад +5

      I believe you will find similar practices within many traditions. There are only so many effective ways to go about checking & trapping. :)

    • @mysty0
      @mysty0 5 лет назад +1

      @@monsterprone353 it didnt randomly spawn in 20 different locations, Okinawan Karate is derived from Southern White Crane. Anyhow, thanks for the upload

  • @mihailungheanu4631
    @mihailungheanu4631 3 года назад

    hubud-lubud/chi sao

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  3 года назад +1

      Similar movements exist among a variety of martial arts. There are only so many ways to move. :)

  • @sakarate2447
    @sakarate2447 7 лет назад

    So are these drills effective at a range to make contact? Or are they just timing and muscle memory drills?

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  7 лет назад +2

      Thank you for the question. The back and forth drill is absolutely for timing and muscle memory. It's a way to get a high number of repetitions in, while limiting the variables and allowing you to focus your attention on specific aspects of technique. Of course, you do also need to break it apart and work these as entries in more realistic combative and/or self-defense contexts. They can be effective at all ranges, allow you to negotiate the initial attack, and establish contact with the opponent vital for limiting their continued attack as well as for your own follow up. You would of course not attempt to go back and forth exchanging strikes like this in any realistic scenario. This is a "go no sen" level entry practice to counter their first strike and move in.

    • @ponnarajashekhar760
      @ponnarajashekhar760 6 лет назад

      This is very effective at close distance but practice is required and a cool head too like legend Jet lee.

  • @bebodhi
    @bebodhi 5 лет назад

    Ques. - have you had any real fighting / combat experience (not point fighting)? Where did your drills come from, They look like filipino - tai chi - wing chun sensitivity drills, and do you have vd links showing the practice from the old times. Your Ideas showing the angles are good but for a real fight I would offer a different idea based on real fighting / combat experience. pretty good over all, good effort to talk about real self defense.Peace

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  5 лет назад +1

      Hi Fred. Thanks for watching. These are introductory level drills meant to teach fundamental skills, and as such don't resemble "real" fighting in that you would of course never stand toe to toe and exchange punches back and forth in this manner. Build the skills first, then put them into practice. The style that I do is called Koryu Uchinadi, but checking and trapping drills are common to all fighting arts, in some form or another. There are only so many ways you can intercept punches. Cheers.

  • @PaulGappyNorris
    @PaulGappyNorris 6 лет назад +1

    All very interesting exercises, however, EVERYTHING you are practicing is out of range. This is a fun drill (s) to do but has no use if constantly practised at an unrealistic distance.

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  6 лет назад +8

      We're close enough most of the time to make contact if we extended and followed though, but I take your point. It's probably a good thing we can't learn everything there is to know about martial arts from one simplified exercise, or we'd never be able to make a life-long pursuit of it. ;)
      I wouldn't say it has no use. It helps to teach flow, control, timing, reaction, movement, etc. If it becomes completely "realistic" you can't flow back and forth in this way. You'd never stand there and exchange right hands! It's an easy way to get in many reps. Of course at a simple level one seen here, we take it out of any combative context just for skill building.
      I'm sure you have also practiced solo, and I'm sure you still find value in that? That's the ultimate distancing problem, isn't it? Your opponent doesn't even have to be in the room! :)
      There's always more, my friend.

  • @music-wd2yq
    @music-wd2yq 4 года назад

    i wonder if this works when he actually tried to hit you

    • @monsterprone353
      @monsterprone353  4 года назад +3

      This is a training exercise intended to develop coordination, timing, distancing, rhythm, redirection, etc. The back and forth nature of it is not intended to resemble an actual altercation. One would not simply stand there, parry, and continue to exchange punches in this way. Cheers.