I used to think Hapkido was awesome but after watching tons of RUclips videos on it I just think Hapkido is 10,000 different ways to punish a guy for grabbing your wrist.
This is sadly the case in A LOT of what you will see of Hapkido. Unfortunately, there is no consistent representation of it, and many practioners made Hapkido a demonstration art comprised of static wrist grabs. Check out this video - here is an example of how common joint locks evolve into applications: ruclips.net/video/EdL_LZfJYzs/видео.html
hello i am a second degree black blet with the World Hapkido Association, you have not seen all that hapkido has offered, we use cane techniques, short stick, long stick, stone throwing uniform grabs strangle holds release, ground techniques, more than one assailant wrist grabs are our foundation yes not exclusive check out this movie Billy Jack or Con Air at the beginning with Nicolas Cage- that is all Hapkido Billy Jacks instructor was Bong so Han hope this is helpful have a good hapkido day and off course cane techniques knife defense techniques
@@newtoncoffin2254 Is there a defense against jujitsu and/or amateur wrestler takedowns? If one were to end up in a match against either, I don’t imagine the Hapkido fighter wants to engage in a grappling match.
I am very interested in learning Hapkido because of the control and joint lock aspects. I've worked in law enforcement and tactical security. I've also studied and gotten rank in three martial arts and dabbled with about a half dozen others. What I learned over the years in situations where I actually had to go hands on with suspects to gain control is you don't do any striking or kicking at all. The goal is to gain control and compliance, not to inflict damage intentionally. Further, strikes of any variety are very bad optics on cameras and make it very easy to get use of force complaints. I've come to the conclusion that the only martial arts that are really worthwhile for LE/Security types is grappling and joint manipulation arts. Jiu-jitsu (one of the arts I have rank in) is a fantastic art for self defense, particularly against a larger attacker. Many of the principles for joint locks are great. But what I've found is the majority of Jiu-jitsu isn't practical for most hand to hand confrontations. I've used virtually none of it in any of the actual times I've made contact with suspects. Something like Hapkido might be more applicable. I'd like to give it a try and find out.
@mattr.1887 yes, I have. I am just about to earn my green belt in Combat Hapkido. Like any martial art, some aspects seem more realistic than others. Some of the joint locks are little odd, though I'm told that Combat Hapkido was required to keep certain "traditional" aspects to be recognized as its own style in Korea. The instructors are great, and have helped tailor some of the lesson plans to be more applicable to what I do. They often show follow ups to keep control and place a potential suspect in position for handcuffing as well. So far I've greatly enjoyed it and I would recommend it.
Thats a shame, law enforcement is looked down upon these day's, taking orders from the communist power freaks... And these day's, they put..YES SIR, NO NOTHING'S ABOUT THE LAW.. DID'ENT USED TO BE THAT WAY.. HONOR THE OATH.. ALL DAY EVERYDAY.. 😮 S&W PUT IT BEST.. 😊❤
I like this. He's one of the few people actually breaking his partner's grip before doing the technique against the wrist grab. Watch this, then go watch your average kuksool video of the same techniques. The guys in this video who are using their techniques with resistance are way better. It is one thing to mimic a technique and another thing altogether to actually understand and perform it against someone grabbing REALLY hard.
if the other guy doesnt flip he will suffer either a broken wrist, broken elbow or a dislocated shoulder. The flips are compliant for our safety, in reality performing a joint lock would be met with resistance and resulting in injury. The flips are not to make the move look cooler, even if they do. these moves can be performed without the opponent grabbing you by the wrist. They are started with a wrist grab for good practice, given that it is a self defense martial art, not an attack.
I earned a black belt in hook chu gwan hapkido in South Korea in 1998. This demo seems very similar to drills that I remember doing, albeit more simply.
I did not think it was possible for a Person with an average Joe Physique to flip another Person with about the same weight into the Air and onto the Ground. Martial Arts are incredible.
As an Aïkido practitioner, I think it seems to be a very interesting martial art, perhaps I will try it in the future (too bad, the only place in my town that offers Hapkido lessons offers a single one the Friday), thanks for this video (and don't listen to the haters who have probably never even tried Hapkido in their entire life). I have a question, Tanbô except, are there weapons in Hapkido (like the Jo/Bokken/Tantô in Aïkido or the Kobudo in Aïkibudo) ?
Thanks. There are weapons training in hapkido, but unfortunately it isn't consistent among all styles/practitioners. Traditional Hapkido weapons in our system are - sword, short stick, long staff, cane, and rope techniques. Some are taught as extensions of self defense applications while others function more as motor skill building or holistic purposes. Hapki!
I started my own journey in Aikido, went through the Army and did their combative course (basically bjj and kickboxing), when I got out I went to Hapkido to see what it was about. It helped a significant amount in combining everything I learned into one. It connected the dots so too speak. With Aikido it was very good information but not practical, bjj and kickboxing were the exact opposite but if you don’t have strength and speed over the opponent its a lot harder, but with Hapkido, it gave a base for me to form a more stable fighting style. I learned kicks, strikes, and some (actually very little) wrist grapples. My school focused on learning how the body moves and the mechanics of it all. Very useful for a combative
imo- this is the most effective self defense method around- I was brown belt and my sensei said i was doing 5th dan kicks- this is easy to remember the basic blocks and cross blocks into locks and get a person onto the gorund for the next level hurt lock they will never forget.. THIS form made steven seagal chit his pants once being knocked out by the 9th master of this- look it up
Is a former student of Hapkido (purple belt), I enjoyed the discipline. Using in a street fight is an entirely different conversation. The techniques are extremely painful and truly joint destroying. So I ask myself,, would I teach my daughter? Yes, but the primary art would be jiu-jitsu hands down. Not everything is about fighting the arts are about discipline.
@@namyar4254 No, literal aikido guy, you only think that because your martial art is also bullshido. It's extremely easy to apply most martial art's techniques either in the street, or in a professional fight. It's extremely easy to land a teep to the body, or a lead jab, shit it can even be easy to secure a double leg. From there BJJ is also extremely easy to apply to a real life situation... find me literally one example of a wrist lock working against a resisting opponent.
Nah. Hapkido is great. Especially used in conjunction with grappling. For me, it feels like standing BJJ. Most times, I have an arm bar locked in before I even hit the mat.
I see some really ignorant and stupid comments saying this would not work if the guy held on tight. It’s the guy holding on tight that makes it work. It’s when he holds it loosely and moves with you that you get in trouble. It’s the same way with every grappling system in the world from college wrestling to hapkido to judo. When you grab a grappler with all your strength, you’re helping him. For example, if you grab the wrist very tightly, it’s really easy for him to break your posture because you’re rigid. And the partner is flipping because he’s moving with the technique to keep his wrist from being broken.
I guess if you hit the final move in some of these with enough force, you could hurt the person if they don't do one of the uke style flips. But getting into the dangerous part of the teqnique requires the oponant to do nothing to fight back...
the opponent is defending himself by break falling or you may cal it submitting, in many cases a person untrained such as yourself would be very badly injured by fighting back as you call it. I is very humerus to read comments from those who have no understanding and experience.
When it comes to these techniques, they are obviously artificial in the fact that your opponent is not doing anything. But in real life, you would do these techniques with enough speed and power so they would not be able to do anything.
Yeah the grabs are not 'end state' techniques, they aren't dominant positions and no one would leave their arm so far from their body. The moment the other person began to respond to such a weak attack you'd likely just let go and pull your arm back. It requires a presumption that you will attempt to hang on to this weak grip during the the entirety of the response. The proof is you literally never see these techniques in real world scenarios. No one attacks like this and no one would wait for a response to develop.
I was walking a drunk female friend home one weekend (my buddies GF). I was jumped four separate times. Three of my attackers literally grabbed my wrist. Was it smart? No. Does it happen? Yes.
This is a great art to practice and like all martial arts only about 10% of the techniques are reliable in a real fight. And since 99% of all serious martial artists will never need to use their training on the street any technique that is fun to practice is legit. These guys know their demonstrations aren’t representative of an attack on the street. Hapkido is also known for powerful kicks, punches, knees, elbows, chokes, etc., etc., etc. plus they incorporate weapons. The most practical defense tool they are known for is cane selfdefense.
Sure and the cane might work of your 25;and completely healthy. I never understood the cane thinking of you need it your obviously having na hard time walking let alone fighting with it
I do not believe I am the only person to think of this but after all of the training with a "cane" wouldn't the real world application of that training be to have the ability to be able to grab an item similar to that of a cane that may be available within the surrounding area and use it effectively. Another example being, training with a bo staff vs being able to effectively use a broom or similar item if It's nearby
That's not too far from the truth. Aikido and Hapkido both come from the same parent art; Aiki Jujutsu. The founder of Aikido had a very pacifist mindset and so the techniques became softer. The founder of hapkido returned to Korea and blended it with the Korean systems.
The one thing I never liked about hapkido was we never went live. How do you know any of it will work in a real life situation? This is why no mma fighter practices hapkido today and no one who has ever practiced hapkido has ever won a mma title it’s because if someone know martial arts they’ll know how to defend against just about all of the things they do in hapkido. Hapkido is great for using against someone who doesn’t know anything. Facts is facts! 🤷🏾
i's so weird that aikido tries to do the same techniques without effort , flowing wih the opponents energy but in hapkido you just force the techniques trough. Weird that so few injuries happen in hapkido also. It looks and feels so violent. I do them both so I have a bit view into both sides.
There's flow in hapkido. If you're forcing anything, it's bad form. We have a skinny guy in our class. 90 pounds. He tosses guys around by taking a step or simply turning in place. I'd call it fake if I were not one of the tossed... Hapkido uses three main concepts. Circular motion. The Water principle or The River principle and The Unity of Opposites.
I think it's very kind of these attackers to hand their intended victim their wrist, and then stand there obediently doing nothing and offering no resistance whatsoever. Because that's totally going to happen in real life, right? I mean.....right?
You only need to learn 2 or 3 maneuvers and you can dance in these situations. If you can drop someone on concrete quickly you just won. Also most things people want are HANDED over.
if the other guy doesnt flip he will suffer either a broken wrist, broken elbow or a dislocated shoulder. The flips are compliant for our safety, in reality performing a joint lock would be met with resistance and resulting in injury. The flips are not to make the move look cooler, even if they do. these moves can be performed without the opponent grabbing you by the wrist. They are started with a wrist grab for good practice, given that it is a self defense martial art, not an attack.
@@ryanrelater It's kind of cute that you believe that. Can you show an example of these techniques working against active resistance, where the subject in question does not obediently grab their partner's wrist and then cooperate fully with the technique?
@@seraphinaaizen6278 No, I can't. But I've seen a dudes arm being dislocated because he put up resistance. There are no hapkido videos of people putting up resistance against the techniques because it would be silly because it ends in injury. If you want proof try empirical proof. Go to your local hapkido gym and put up all the resistance you like and come back to me. Or just continue believing that joint manipulation isn't a dangerous technique. Its all good with me
@@ryanrelater My position isn't that joint manipulation isn't dangerous. My position that that joint manipulation doesn't work the way it does in this video. This a cooperative dance routine, in the same vein as aikido demonstrations.
Ha! You're late to the party. Read previous comments and reply :) This type of comment has been dragged out long enough. But thanks for participating. LOL!
Looks cool but very staged. - you dont really extend a punch or a kick and wait for your opponent to get nice, good grab on it . But I guess thats why its a "demo"
The original filipino master of hapkido is dano inosanto. What you see in korea isnt the authentic hapkido. And its not even called hapkido. Dano inosanto just invented the name and the technique. It drastically became a craze in the 70s for martial artist to learn hapkido (he even was sent to korea to teach the south korean soldiers the art). So basically its a filipino art. And the old master from the 1900s that koreans claim to be the "founder" of the art, was just būllshïttïng Again Brother Dano Inosanto developed the art to teach the koreans🤦🏼♂️
Bjj relies on being fair if a bjj guy is attacking my friend on the ground I'm just going to bash his head with a rock. Keep it standing mix ground fighting with striking
You're missing, basically, everything shown in the video. If you were paying attention, you'd see that after the wrist grab the person who was grabbed traps the attackers own hand and then does something. But, do go on.
En un combate real de nada te sirve estás figuras, la mayor parte de un combate cuerpo a cuerpo será definido en el piso , este arte e irreal en un combate real...
I get it's a demo but practicing for real world should be practiced as real world in my opinion. When I studied many people didn't provide resistance such as what I'm seeing here. Just letting the person perform the moves. I mean no racism but the white guy seems to be just going through the movements. Holding black belt is an achievement to be proud of. But I see no ferocity. But clearly theirs still some skill there. Just saying I believe he and in bettering himself his peers can be better than they already are. But still nice demo. No disrespect intended as I know hapkido is a lifetime of work. Not a 6 year black belt program by any means.
@nihat Savmaz Keep in mind there are millions of hapkido practioners world wide and the love for this art will not stop because of your silly RUclips comments. Many practioners celebrate Hapkido, and continue to train, because of what martial arts has added to their lifes; not for some grand delusion of acquiring unbeatable fighting abilities. But... if you are absolutley curious to see the hyper effective practical stuff we are happy to send you clips of our higher level, no-touch, Jedi-Hapki skills video. You will be in awe!!!
if the other guy doesnt flip he will suffer either a broken wrist, broken elbow or a dislocated shoulder. The flips are compliant for our safety, in reality performing a joint lock would be met with resistance and resulting in injury. The flips are not to make the move look cooler, even if they do.
...Hapkido is to be used in conjunction with Taekwondo. The best schools have a Taekwondo skill set for children and then moving into the Hapkido skill set for adolescents and adults wanting to learn full on self defense.
You're so right! The athelets in this demo must be oblivious to that reality. Afterall, MMA and street fights are the only sensible reasons for practicing technique or for any martial art to have any relevance. Why else would they waste time dedicating themselves to polishing such a useless art form?
In my opinion if someone grabs your wrist they are gonna grab it tight and once it’s tight none of this will work so you better do this when your opponent reaches for your wrist
That makes absolutely no sense. You’re putting your entire body weight against someone’s wrist. How the Hell is someone’s wrist going to resist someone’s entire body weight?
you know if it was a girl doing these there would be a hundred people coming out of the woodwork to call it "fake" and "boring" and "bad" and saying the other guy was throwing himself.
I earned a black belt in hook chu gwan hapkido in South Korea in 1998. This demo seems very similar to drills that I remember doing, albeit more simply.
Even with your black belt you would get smoked in a fight with someone that has 6 months of Gracie jiujitsu training. Not trying to be rude, it’s just a fact
I used to think Hapkido was awesome but after watching tons of RUclips videos on it I just think Hapkido is 10,000 different ways to punish a guy for grabbing your wrist.
This is sadly the case in A LOT of what you will see of Hapkido. Unfortunately, there is no consistent representation of it, and many practioners made Hapkido a demonstration art comprised of static wrist grabs. Check out this video - here is an example of how common joint locks evolve into applications: ruclips.net/video/EdL_LZfJYzs/видео.html
hello i am a second degree black blet with the World Hapkido Association, you have not seen all that hapkido has offered, we use cane techniques, short stick, long stick, stone throwing uniform grabs strangle holds release, ground techniques, more than one assailant wrist grabs are our foundation yes not exclusive check out this movie Billy Jack or Con Air at the beginning with Nicolas Cage- that is all Hapkido Billy Jacks instructor was Bong so Han hope this is helpful have a good hapkido day and off course cane techniques knife defense techniques
@@newtoncoffin2254 Is there a defense against jujitsu and/or amateur wrestler takedowns?
If one were to end up in a match against either, I don’t imagine the Hapkido fighter wants to engage in a grappling match.
If you want to learn wrist locks, do Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, do not do Hapkido as it is all untested.
@@StuUngar Hapkido guys do not even test their own techniques, no one is allowed to challenge a technique, it is all fake compliance.
I am very interested in learning Hapkido because of the control and joint lock aspects. I've worked in law enforcement and tactical security. I've also studied and gotten rank in three martial arts and dabbled with about a half dozen others.
What I learned over the years in situations where I actually had to go hands on with suspects to gain control is you don't do any striking or kicking at all. The goal is to gain control and compliance, not to inflict damage intentionally. Further, strikes of any variety are very bad optics on cameras and make it very easy to get use of force complaints. I've come to the conclusion that the only martial arts that are really worthwhile for LE/Security types is grappling and joint manipulation arts.
Jiu-jitsu (one of the arts I have rank in) is a fantastic art for self defense, particularly against a larger attacker. Many of the principles for joint locks are great. But what I've found is the majority of Jiu-jitsu isn't practical for most hand to hand confrontations. I've used virtually none of it in any of the actual times I've made contact with suspects. Something like Hapkido might be more applicable. I'd like to give it a try and find out.
It's been 9 months. Have you had a chance to try Hapkido?
@mattr.1887 yes, I have. I am just about to earn my green belt in Combat Hapkido. Like any martial art, some aspects seem more realistic than others. Some of the joint locks are little odd, though I'm told that Combat Hapkido was required to keep certain "traditional" aspects to be recognized as its own style in Korea.
The instructors are great, and have helped tailor some of the lesson plans to be more applicable to what I do. They often show follow ups to keep control and place a potential suspect in position for handcuffing as well.
So far I've greatly enjoyed it and I would recommend it.
Agreed at the watching this video is definitely grateful. Law enforcement and security. I'm definitely interested now
it really is the perfect self defense system nonlethal there is
Thats a shame, law enforcement is looked down upon these day's, taking orders from the communist power freaks...
And these day's, they put..YES SIR, NO NOTHING'S ABOUT THE LAW..
DID'ENT USED TO BE THAT WAY..
HONOR THE OATH.. ALL DAY EVERYDAY.. 😮
S&W PUT IT BEST.. 😊❤
I like this. He's one of the few people actually breaking his partner's grip before doing the technique against the wrist grab. Watch this, then go watch your average kuksool video of the same techniques. The guys in this video who are using their techniques with resistance are way better. It is one thing to mimic a technique and another thing altogether to actually understand and perform it against someone grabbing REALLY hard.
As a 2nd degree in taekwondo and 3rd in hapkido
It’s always been my passion!
Really nice technique, good break falls. Hopefully I get to train at this hapkido school one day.
Hello there :)
if the other guy doesnt flip he will suffer either a broken wrist, broken elbow or a dislocated shoulder. The flips are compliant for our safety, in reality performing a joint lock would be met with resistance and resulting in injury. The flips are not to make the move look cooler, even if they do.
these moves can be performed without the opponent grabbing you by the wrist. They are started with a wrist grab for good practice, given that it is a self defense martial art, not an attack.
I earned a black belt in hook chu gwan hapkido in South Korea in 1998. This demo seems very similar to drills that I remember doing, albeit more simply.
Awesome demo - Thank you for sharing!
You're welcome, sir.
It's was a exhibition demo during the clubs 50th anniversary celebration. Glad you enjoyed it.
Great. Thanks. Need more videos about the Traditional Hapkido
😍😍😍 they both did a really good job and were respectful of each other.
Note to self: Never grab anyone by the wrist.
Simply superb, Mind-blowing
Really good technique if your attacker offers you a handshake before he mugs you
😂😂
If the attacker does not "offer" you anything he is not an attacker...
🤣🤣🤣
I did not think it was possible for a Person with an average Joe Physique to flip another Person with about the same weight into the Air and onto the Ground.
Martial Arts are incredible.
The person receiving the technique has tu flip or jump in order to minimise injuries on his joints.
As an Aïkido practitioner, I think it seems to be a very interesting martial art, perhaps I will try it in the future (too bad, the only place in my town that offers Hapkido lessons offers a single one the Friday), thanks for this video (and don't listen to the haters who have probably never even tried Hapkido in their entire life).
I have a question, Tanbô except, are there weapons in Hapkido (like the Jo/Bokken/Tantô in Aïkido or the Kobudo in Aïkibudo) ?
Thanks. There are weapons training in hapkido, but unfortunately it isn't consistent among all styles/practitioners.
Traditional Hapkido weapons in our system are - sword, short stick, long staff, cane, and rope techniques. Some are taught as extensions of self defense applications while others function more as motor skill building or holistic purposes. Hapki!
@@EvokeMartialArts Thank for you answer!
I started my own journey in Aikido, went through the Army and did their combative course (basically bjj and kickboxing), when I got out I went to Hapkido to see what it was about. It helped a significant amount in combining everything I learned into one. It connected the dots so too speak. With Aikido it was very good information but not practical, bjj and kickboxing were the exact opposite but if you don’t have strength and speed over the opponent its a lot harder, but with Hapkido, it gave a base for me to form a more stable fighting style. I learned kicks, strikes, and some (actually very little) wrist grapples. My school focused on learning how the body moves and the mechanics of it all. Very useful for a combative
In a street fight.
Hold up please grab my wrist.
Now we can begin 🤣
Muito bom, saudações do Brasil 🇧🇷.
is this master lee in darien ct?
That guys joints will never be the same again
Need more...
Good demo-sharp techniques 👍🏻
Wait you think your opponents gonna let you do that?
imo- this is the most effective self defense method around- I was brown belt and my sensei said i was doing 5th dan kicks- this is easy to remember the basic blocks and cross blocks into locks and get a person onto the gorund for the next level hurt lock they will never forget.. THIS form made steven seagal chit his pants once being knocked out by the 9th master of this- look it up
I did lots of stuff like this when I was younger the kote gaeshi stuff works well in certain situations in bjj
Is a former student of Hapkido (purple belt), I enjoyed the discipline. Using in a street fight is an entirely different conversation. The techniques are extremely painful and truly joint destroying. So I ask myself,, would I teach my daughter? Yes, but the primary art would be jiu-jitsu hands down. Not everything is about fighting the arts are about discipline.
BRAVO ..... 🙂
So some of us are here because of Kim Sunoo??? 😭🤚
Yes 😭
Yass😭
Obviously ✋😭
Huh whyyy i love Sunoo but please explain 😭
@@enloisa8784can you explain why?😭
what is the point of training your all life at techniques almost impossible to apply in the street
It can be applied for every martial art, you know...
hollywood is about the only place i can see this working
@@namyar4254 no sir!
@@namyar4254 No, literal aikido guy, you only think that because your martial art is also bullshido. It's extremely easy to apply most martial art's techniques either in the street, or in a professional fight. It's extremely easy to land a teep to the body, or a lead jab, shit it can even be easy to secure a double leg. From there BJJ is also extremely easy to apply to a real life situation... find me literally one example of a wrist lock working against a resisting opponent.
Great skills hapkido grab techniques so easy
Hapkido is the same as bullshido?
Nah. Hapkido is great. Especially used in conjunction with grappling.
For me, it feels like standing BJJ.
Most times, I have an arm bar locked in before I even hit the mat.
Hapkido, BJJ, JJ, Aikido, Judo, etc. derive from Aikijiutsu.
A lot of techniques in such martial arts seem similar to many I've seen in Shaolin Quan.
I see some really ignorant and stupid comments saying this would not work if the guy held on tight.
It’s the guy holding on tight that makes it work. It’s when he holds it loosely and moves with you that you get in trouble.
It’s the same way with every grappling system in the world from college wrestling to hapkido to judo.
When you grab a grappler with all your strength, you’re helping him.
For example, if you grab the wrist very tightly, it’s really easy for him to break your posture because you’re rigid.
And the partner is flipping because he’s moving with the technique to keep his wrist from being broken.
I guess if you hit the final move in some of these with enough force, you could hurt the person if they don't do one of the uke style flips. But getting into the dangerous part of the teqnique requires the oponant to do nothing to fight back...
We welcome you to our ruclips.net/user/thapkido page.
the opponent is defending himself by break falling or you may cal it submitting, in many cases a person untrained such as yourself would be very badly injured by fighting back as you call it. I is very humerus to read comments from those who have no understanding and experience.
When it comes to these techniques, they are obviously artificial in the fact that your opponent is not doing anything. But in real life, you would do these techniques with enough speed and power so they would not be able to do anything.
Yeah the grabs are not 'end state' techniques, they aren't dominant positions and no one would leave their arm so far from their body. The moment the other person began to respond to such a weak attack you'd likely just let go and pull your arm back. It requires a presumption that you will attempt to hang on to this weak grip during the the entirety of the response. The proof is you literally never see these techniques in real world scenarios. No one attacks like this and no one would wait for a response to develop.
Exactly
Unfortunately that's the truth about Hapkido
Good video Respect But who grabs someone by the wrist in reality?
I was walking a drunk female friend home one weekend (my buddies GF). I was jumped four separate times. Three of my attackers literally grabbed my wrist. Was it smart? No. Does it happen? Yes.
Why is he cranking every sub?
Isn't Hapkido kinda like Judo
This is a great art to practice and like all martial arts only about 10% of the techniques are reliable in a real fight. And since 99% of all serious martial artists will never need to use their training on the street any technique that is fun to practice is legit. These guys know their demonstrations aren’t representative of an attack on the street. Hapkido is also known for powerful kicks, punches, knees, elbows, chokes, etc., etc., etc. plus they incorporate weapons. The most practical defense tool they are known for is cane selfdefense.
Everybody is a martial arts expert on the internet.
I would say boxing, wrestling and Muay Thai have more than 10% reliability in a real fight.
Sure and the cane might work of your 25;and completely healthy.
I never understood the cane thinking of you need it your obviously having na hard time walking let alone fighting with it
@@truebluesumo mybe 12% at most reliability
I do not believe I am the only person to think of this but after all of the training with a "cane" wouldn't the real world application of that training be to have the ability to be able to grab an item similar to that of a cane that may be available within the surrounding area and use it effectively.
Another example being, training with a bo staff vs being able to effectively use a broom or similar item if It's nearby
Très belle vidéo
Now let's see you do that to an adversary full speed with bad intentions.
Enjoyed the movie
So this is what sunoo does......
Yup😳
Used a simple Technique on a bully in High school. Never laid a hand on me again. That was 45 years ago
ハプキドーは合気道に似ている武道という認識なんだけど、細い技術の部分でどう違うのか興味はあるな。
Bare in mind I’m a shotokan/kenpo guy, but this looks sort of like aikido blended with taekwondo.
you're totally right
That's not too far from the truth. Aikido and Hapkido both come from the same parent art; Aiki Jujutsu. The founder of Aikido had a very pacifist mindset and so the techniques became softer. The founder of hapkido returned to Korea and blended it with the Korean systems.
Looks like the one to learn for defence!!
Great video !
I didnt know tobey maguire was a hapkido master .
I got to visit this school on a trip to Korea and he was the one that actually taught me (since he spoke English), really nice guy
Lol
The one thing I never liked about hapkido was we never went live. How do you know any of it will work in a real life situation? This is why no mma fighter practices hapkido today and no one who has ever practiced hapkido has ever won a mma title it’s because if someone know martial arts they’ll know how to defend against just about all of the things they do in hapkido. Hapkido is great for using against someone who doesn’t know anything. Facts is facts! 🤷🏾
Hapkido is very effective on the street when they hit the concrete there done
We welcome you to our ruclips.net/user/thapkido page.
i's so weird that aikido tries to do the same techniques without effort , flowing wih the opponents energy but in hapkido you just force the techniques trough. Weird that so few injuries happen in hapkido also. It looks and feels so violent. I do them both so I have a bit view into both sides.
There's flow in hapkido. If you're forcing anything, it's bad form.
We have a skinny guy in our class. 90 pounds. He tosses guys around by taking a step or simply turning in place.
I'd call it fake if I were not one of the tossed...
Hapkido uses three main concepts. Circular motion. The Water principle or The River principle and The Unity of Opposites.
1:28 Shiho Nage Ura !
Yup
I think it's very kind of these attackers to hand their intended victim their wrist, and then stand there obediently doing nothing and offering no resistance whatsoever.
Because that's totally going to happen in real life, right?
I mean.....right?
You only need to learn 2 or 3 maneuvers and you can dance in these situations. If you can drop someone on concrete quickly you just won. Also most things people want are HANDED over.
if the other guy doesnt flip he will suffer either a broken wrist, broken elbow or a dislocated shoulder. The flips are compliant for our safety, in reality performing a joint lock would be met with resistance and resulting in injury. The flips are not to make the move look cooler, even if they do.
these moves can be performed without the opponent grabbing you by the wrist. They are started with a wrist grab for good practice, given that it is a self defense martial art, not an attack.
@@ryanrelater It's kind of cute that you believe that.
Can you show an example of these techniques working against active resistance, where the subject in question does not obediently grab their partner's wrist and then cooperate fully with the technique?
@@seraphinaaizen6278 No, I can't. But I've seen a dudes arm being dislocated because he put up resistance. There are no hapkido videos of people putting up resistance against the techniques because it would be silly because it ends in injury.
If you want proof try empirical proof. Go to your local hapkido gym and put up all the resistance you like and come back to me. Or just continue believing that joint manipulation isn't a dangerous technique. Its all good with me
@@ryanrelater My position isn't that joint manipulation isn't dangerous. My position that that joint manipulation doesn't work the way it does in this video. This a cooperative dance routine, in the same vein as aikido demonstrations.
It looks like Fez and Foreman✌😃
Lol. So true
" Just grab my wrist or lapel, ok?"...
"OK"
"Don't actually PUNCH me though, cuz...I don't know anything to stop that!"
"OK"...
😊
Ha! You're late to the party. Read previous comments and reply :) This type of comment has been dragged out long enough. But thanks for participating. LOL!
Respect Respect
I ❤ Hapkido
Uke does a great job.
Ok cool but in what situation will a mugger give me his hand like nothing
well done
grab attack??? again???
Powerful demon of Hapkido
Look like John Wick defence move
I hate how people talk shit on "traditional" martial arts they actually work well if you have half a brain...
my shoulders hurt just watching this
SCORPION MORTAL KOMBAT STYLES Hapkido Judo Jujitsu Karate wrestling weapons best mma combo
It seems similar to chin na.
❤
Wow
In summary, don't grab his wrists.
Gotcha!
Looks cool but very staged. - you dont really extend a punch or a kick and wait for your opponent to get nice, good grab on it . But I guess thats why its a "demo"
The initiation is totally whack, anyone got a suggestion video on the practicality of hapkido?
In the street it's not about technics. You need balls. But technics helps you.
The original filipino master of hapkido is dano inosanto. What you see in korea isnt the authentic hapkido. And its not even called hapkido. Dano inosanto just invented the name and the technique. It drastically became a craze in the 70s for martial artist to learn hapkido (he even was sent to korea to teach the south korean soldiers the art). So basically its a filipino art. And the old master from the 1900s that koreans claim to be the "founder" of the art, was just būllshïttïng Again Brother Dano Inosanto developed the art to teach the koreans🤦🏼♂️
👏👏👏👏👏💯💣 bien
He must be a pain to train with. Seems like he has no control. Very agressive in his moves.
(1st. Person)
Bjj is what really works In the streets
Bjj relies on being fair if a bjj guy is attacking my friend on the ground I'm just going to bash his head with a rock. Keep it standing mix ground fighting with striking
As long as you only have 1 attacker to worry about, and he's unarmed...
@@bendowell5184 hell no Gracie used bjj on multiple people
Grab my wrist, please!? keep holding on while I do this….
You're missing, basically, everything shown in the video. If you were paying attention, you'd see that after the wrist grab the person who was grabbed traps the attackers own hand and then does something.
But, do go on.
So... PARK JIMIN Can freaking do this? OMG!
Steven Seagals bullshido art
You're thinking Akido not Hapkido.
Long live Billy Jack!!!
Scorpion stlyle fight Get over wear!
En un combate real de nada te sirve estás figuras, la mayor parte de un combate cuerpo a cuerpo será definido en el piso , este arte e irreal en un combate real...
Wrong. I grapple. BJJ. This martial art actually helps the transition to the ground go easier.
I get it's a demo but practicing for real world should be practiced as real world in my opinion. When I studied many people didn't provide resistance such as what I'm seeing here. Just letting the person perform the moves. I mean no racism but the white guy seems to be just going through the movements. Holding black belt is an achievement to be proud of. But I see no ferocity. But clearly theirs still some skill there. Just saying I believe he and in bettering himself his peers can be better than they already are. But still nice demo. No disrespect intended as I know hapkido is a lifetime of work. Not a 6 year black belt program by any means.
You first line got it right.
It. is. a. demo. :)
New style of bullshido.
@nihat Savmaz Keep in mind there are millions of hapkido practioners world wide and the love for this art will not stop because of your silly RUclips comments.
Many practioners celebrate Hapkido, and continue to train, because of what martial arts has added to their lifes; not for some grand delusion of acquiring unbeatable fighting abilities.
But... if you are absolutley curious to see the hyper effective practical stuff we are happy to send you clips of our higher level, no-touch, Jedi-Hapki skills video. You will be in awe!!!
T.H.A Martial Arts & Kickboxing - Toronto Hapkido Academy wow you just copy paste 😂
Your art is TRAAAASH
@@EvokeMartialArts "no touch jedi-hapki" smells like teen bullshit
@@liampope3326 I think it was a joke.
@@namyar4254 just like the whole martial art
The flips seem unrealistic. If the other guys doesn't flip he ain't gonna have the strength to flip a human Like that. Maybe a small dog
if the other guy doesnt flip he will suffer either a broken wrist, broken elbow or a dislocated shoulder. The flips are compliant for our safety, in reality performing a joint lock would be met with resistance and resulting in injury. The flips are not to make the move look cooler, even if they do.
Hapkido a tornado of different martial arts….ugly and spinning en when it stops everything falls down.
poor dude
Aikido with better uniforms
bjj is better
To me hapkido is better than TAE kwon do
...Hapkido is to be used in conjunction with Taekwondo. The best schools have a Taekwondo skill set for children and then moving into the Hapkido skill set for adolescents and adults wanting to learn full on self defense.
This fancy work is utterly useless in real life fights and MMA.
You're so right! The athelets in this demo must be oblivious to that reality. Afterall, MMA and street fights are the only sensible reasons for practicing technique or for any martial art to have any relevance. Why else would they waste time dedicating themselves to polishing such a useless art form?
In my opinion if someone grabs your wrist they are gonna grab it tight and once it’s tight none of this will work so you better do this when your opponent reaches for your wrist
That makes absolutely no sense. You’re putting your entire body weight against someone’s wrist.
How the Hell is someone’s wrist going to resist someone’s entire body weight?
smells.... bullshido....
Real art false training
you know if it was a girl doing these there would be a hundred people coming out of the woodwork to call it "fake" and "boring" and "bad" and saying the other guy was throwing himself.
how is this comment relevant to the post?
women ☕
Fake
I earned a black belt in hook chu gwan hapkido in South Korea in 1998. This demo seems very similar to drills that I remember doing, albeit more simply.
Even with your black belt you would get smoked in a fight with someone that has 6 months of Gracie jiujitsu training. Not trying to be rude, it’s just a fact
respect- did you ever meet grandmaster Young Seol Ryoo
@@monkadelic13 Yep. Great guy