Best karate move for Grapplers
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- Best karate move for Grapplers
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“A little bit of karate background”: has a karate black belt. Shintaro is a humble guy
Black belt is the beginning, but yeah, black belts are experienced
@@itsspoodini i thought it was white?
@@tadart2046 whilst that is also true, black is given when you have learned everything. You may not have perfected it yet.
@@itsspoodini thanks
@@tadart2046 Look at it more like you graduated from Highscool and the black belt ranks are University
I would say the Karate front leg check/sweep is great for grapplers. I noticed Shintaro used it quite a bit during the sparring to cause just a bit of long distance kuzushi and then close the distance.
Also, in Karate competitions that allow takedowns I've seen a few people get decent with the ai-yotsu lead leg side kick followed by jab -> cross -> Osoto and they never saw it coming.
Are you planning on doing "best throws for karateka"? I would love to see that
You can use karate kicks like Ryan Hall to force scrambles into grappling for mma. Ryan Hall trained with Wonderboy for this and Ben Askren’s son as a grappler went to him bc of that
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Me (sitting on couch for the last year): Oh.... :(
Keep these collabs coming! They are great.
Katate in Okinawa, has grappling similar to Judo as Karate came from not just Chinese martial arts but also Okinawan Wrestling and Ju-Jitsu.
Of course, Japan screwed that up.
But now-a-days styles like Ashihara and Enshin Karate helped bring Judo and Kyokushin Karate together.
Lazy front leg side kick in between legs to a inside leg trip
Karate and throws all go well together. When you kick, you set the lead leg, bear down, and initiate the takedown you close the gap. Morote Gari, te guruma, and hand-assisted ouchi gari all work in real self defense situations.
Shintaro teaches self defense as a scholastic subject for kids.
the one I am working on is the clean transition from striking to grappling I have obtain Brown belts in both Karate and Judo and an now working on how to meld the two to make both better.
There are a lot of MMA gyms, maybe you could try one of those
You did a video a few months ago on the Kani Basami. Seems like a side kick or a low heel kick could be used as a set for this very easily.
Great video .thank u .
Sensei Seth just left him hanging there 😂😂 8:50
Never let a Judo guy grab your hand. :D
I didn’t even see it!! Oh nooooo
@@SenseiSeth 😂😂😂 it happens
I would say a thigh-to-knee strike is the best grappling strike. Typically the way you set it up is:
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STEP 1) Angle in at 45 degrees (or closer) with a single lunging step, dragging your back foot. Typically you will lunge to the outside of the target's lead leg, but you can angle in either way. Your lunge should leave you closer to the target than you were -- this is not just circling around the target. You should be in punching range, but at your target's shoulder so that they cannot strike at you without pivoting to face you.
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STEP 2) As you finishing lunging, shift your weight onto your rear leg and then pivot 90 degrees to face the target. You should be in an opposite stance now. If you were in orthodox stance, you are now in southpaw -- and vice versa. After the pivot, what was your rear leg is now your lead leg. Your weight is on that lead leg, with your rear leg ready to deliver the strike.
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STEP 3) Whether or not you have the strike depends on what the target does. You are ready to step in and grapple from here, but there is a strike using the lowest portion of your thigh that might be available. You hook your thigh into the target's lead leg, striking the side of the knee. This breaks the target's stance and forces them to turn sideways (or even away from you) to protect the knee joint. Your upper shin is now resting against the back of the target's calf, right at their knee. Drop your weight forward onto your lead knee, and you either can ride the target all the way to the ground (where their knee takes all of the impact for you) or just break their stance without falling before delivering a standing technique (be it a strike or a grapple).
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The reason I like this move is because the target's defense against such an attack is to BACK AWAY. (Almost all trained fighters circle/angle out in response to someone angling in; being flanked close range at your shoulder is a bad position to get caught in.) When you are in a self defense situation, making the attacker feel like they should get away from you is a psychological win. Even if you don't land anything, you might be able to just back out of the confrontation after getting the attacker to panic this way. But if you are against someone with serious malicious intent, they won't back away and you can end the fight immediately from the position that arises after you land the knee strike.
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There is also a similar thigh strike to the interior of the target's knee, but it's not useful for closing distance except as reply to a kick. Typically the response to you coming in as the target resets their balance is to plant both feet and throw a hard punch at your face. You slip the punch and attack the base by striking at the lead knee. From here you are in grappling position against someone whose stance is buckling. Just striking here with so much mass (not force) will buckle the knee and sit the target down. Nobody can stand up while 200 lbs of opponent is hurling all of that weight violently through the side of their knee. You can be ready with any number of ground techniques from this position, or just stand up vs the prone opponent and escape an unwanted fight.
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I would remind anyone that attacks targeting the knee joint can cripple, so reserve them for self defense.
Shintaro, I think the closing distance kick you mean is called the “pisau” in BJJ. It’s what you saw Royce do in his UFCs. Check out the first technique in this video: ruclips.net/video/M5eSEBTejVA/видео.html
It's spell : pisão. Means stomp. I'am Brazilian.
I think the best should be advancing jabs to close distance and get into the clinch.
Make video bout, Best way to get up during street fight
I think it's the overhand right. If it has to be a kick, then a low leg kick. I felt your video was what is the best karate move for a grappler to know, not what is the best to use against a grappler. Then it's a shovel hook or knee.
I'm no expert but....when I was a youngster....I've had few bullies in childhood....who were karate fighters....but I was into judo....
I wasn't too skilled.....but I was always massive for my age....not fat, just bigger...than other kids....
But I always managed to threw few of them to the ground, not to mention wrist power...practice wrists....that is my advice.
If u managed to grab his "back collar"....you can threw him around like a rag doll.
Are those Bas Rutten palm and forearm strikes Karate ? Cause you could come in swinging like Fedor , grab an upper-body clinch and shit whip them to the ground, . looping punches become collar ties, underhooks etc when they overshoot, palms probably are better and less likely to break
That Michelle waterson aslo does that slide also
Best move for anyone is the Joestar secret technique!
Where’s the Sensei Seth highlighted comment?
I recommend using a long guard to control space and keeping the body upright while doing this. The nice thing about this is it keeps you safe while you enter into range. I have a whole cut kick for BJJ video where I break down this same concept. It's part of my Taekwondo for BJJ playlist, designed to teach using striking entries for BJJ, Judo, or wrestling. Depending on where the foot lands determines follow up, so if it goes inside I'll hit harai goshi or uchi mata, and if it goes outside I do a low single or a deashi barai, and in some lucky cases, take the back and valley drop.
ruclips.net/video/79qP2EzAM9o/видео.html
I like that overhook series too. The nice thing about it is the standing submissions available. I like to threaten a variation of a straight arm lock where I push the head back so they can't strike me and I can attack with knees and elbows. Then I can also do a sumi gaeshi, snap down to guillotine, or hit a low single on the opposite side.
ruclips.net/video/tsf1O2ifeYs/видео.html
#ShintaroHigashi what do you think is better wrestling or judo. for takedowns Answer please , would really appreciate it
Haito
Does karate not have a jab?
He's convinced he could kick Shintaro at will, but I'm not quite buying it. I think the Gracie Challenge matches proved for all time how difficult it is for a striker to land a meaningful punch or kick before he gets grabbed by the grappler. As Stephen Kesting said: it's like a game of rock, paper, scissors: the grappler beats the striker. The only time the striker beats the grappler is when he is also a grappler.
His side kick was awful. He doesn’t move like a green belt, let alone black. Bring in a Kyokushinka for real karate.
La la la la la..
Ban for talking and video has 25 seconds.
No disrespect, but should we really listen to karate self defense? How to incorporate a kick in grappling, yes...especially with distance management imo.
There are SO many techniques in karate. Some of it is certainly applicable...just like virtually any martial art.