Nice applications. Locks are always a technique to be applied after a blow or if an opportunity appears serendipitously, rather than something to be looked for as a first response, but these are fun to practise and play with. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for sharing your insights on joint locking in Karate 🙏 I liked the categories and I found it refreshing to see finger locks and knee locks too! Pretty darn good stuff! 💯 Gyaku Tsuki (reverse thrust) is a common way how people get stabbed by a knife. It's also a very powerful blow - the "heavy artillery of martial arts" (Bruce Lee). It's not wrong to use it for analysis/bunkai. I don't think that any particular style is superior to another. It's like favoring blue over red for some reason. It's a matter of taste. This video (& description) is a nice contribution and elucidating even for the advanced practitioner. Great work!👍 押忍🙇
Second lock looks a little impractical especially haveing your back to your attacker while he politely keeps his hand on his hip Would not happen in a million years You should display bunkai from a realistic attack not a reverse punch which nobody is going to attack you with Your setting up your students to failure if you work your bunkai from unrealistic attack scenarios Check out Patrick McCarthy , ian Abernethy , john burke Koryu uchinadi its real karate what karate is supposed to look like ... thankyou 👍
I don't think that the opponent comes to the idea to do any harmful things with his left hand ("politely" kept on his hip) while his right arm/ellbow is locked over my shoulder (or even broken) and he is only standing on his tiptoes. He rather will be preoccupied with his pain and his instable stance. But thank you for the hint, where I can find out, what real karate is.
I am a huge fan of Ian Abernethy and that is exactly what that technique is. You can either break the elbow joint rendering that arm useless, or you can throw your opponent - or you can do both. Don't get caught up in how the technique is demonstrated in a training video. With any technique in a form you need to assume you have already been engaging with an attacker and at some point find an opening where you can apply the given technique
Nice applications. Locks are always a technique to be applied after a blow or if an opportunity appears serendipitously, rather than something to be looked for as a first response, but these are fun to practise and play with. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for sharing your insights on joint locking in Karate 🙏 I liked the categories and I found it refreshing to see finger locks and knee locks too!
Pretty darn good stuff! 💯
Gyaku Tsuki (reverse thrust) is a common way how people get stabbed by a knife. It's also a very powerful blow - the "heavy artillery of martial arts" (Bruce Lee). It's not wrong to use it for analysis/bunkai.
I don't think that any particular style is superior to another.
It's like favoring blue over red for some reason. It's a matter of taste.
This video (& description) is a nice contribution and elucidating even for the advanced practitioner.
Great work!👍
押忍🙇
Oss! 🥋
Second lock looks a little impractical especially haveing your back to your attacker while he politely keeps his hand on his hip
Would not happen in a million years
You should display bunkai from a realistic attack not a reverse punch which nobody is going to attack you with
Your setting up your students to failure if you work your bunkai from unrealistic attack scenarios
Check out Patrick McCarthy , ian Abernethy , john burke
Koryu uchinadi its real karate what karate is supposed to look like ... thankyou 👍
I don't think that the opponent comes to the idea to do any harmful things with his left hand ("politely" kept on his hip) while his right arm/ellbow is locked over my shoulder (or even broken) and he is only standing on his tiptoes. He rather will be preoccupied with his pain and his instable stance. But thank you for the hint, where I can find out, what real karate is.
I am a huge fan of Ian Abernethy and that is exactly what that technique is. You can either break the elbow joint rendering that arm useless, or you can throw your opponent - or you can do both. Don't get caught up in how the technique is demonstrated in a training video. With any technique in a form you need to assume you have already been engaging with an attacker and at some point find an opening where you can apply the given technique
Doesn't work that way oldman👎👎