I'm so glad that you added the correction of "farther" rather than "further". Many people see the two words as interchangeable, but they're not. Thank you. Oh, yeah, the kicking tips were great, too. ;)
I did taekwondo as a child. I absolutely loved my dojang and achieved black belt. Unfortunately, I had to quit, haven't done it in years but, would love to return. Your videos are making it all come back to me. Thank you so much!
I just watched your Side Kick video and this one back to back and couldn't help but notice the similarities between the chamber position for the two kicks, o.k. for the side kick the knee is pulled up a bit closer to the chest but the positions of the supporting foot and leg, hips upper body etc. are pretty much the same. There is another Tae Kwon Do instructor on youtube named Carl Van Roon who talks about the "universal chamber" for the kicks, maybe he is on to something... Or he has just given a name to something that Tae Kwon Do people have been doing all along. Beautiful Side Kick by the way, right down to the heel being higher than the toes at the point of impact; a text book example!
Omg I love that version. Bren Foster did it like that on Sports Science where they compared Kicks from 4 Martial Arts. Capoiera, Karate, Muay Thai and Taekwondo.
Completely off topic (My apologies I don't know how to reach for direct questions) I am curious why different schools have different Belt Colours. In my first school I have gone white, orange green. In my current school they go White, White Yellow*only for kids, Yellow, yellow green, green, green blue, blue, blue red, red, red black, 1st Dan black. ... Actually I Think I found it... WT (World Taekwondo) and ITF (International Taekwondo Federation) have different belt colour standards. Posting anyways as I find it interesting :P
Yeah, everyone does their own thing with the colors. The gup and dan ranks are the same, that’s what you will want to look at when determining rank from one school to another.
In the update of kukkiwon in the 2022 manual for the basics and then the wt for poomsae competitions, now the knee does pass a little from the center, precisely to give it effectiveness, since the martial arts forms aim to teach how to perform the basic techniques to then perform them against targets or real people. Pd: Good video, I love your channel
@@tkdguide More than a change, it was a clarification, since in Kukkiwon, both in the 2005 manual and in the new 2022 one, it is like this, and the WT made the clarification that the kick must be passing the head and that the way it is aligned with the body was a modification by the same athletes to make it look "prettier." Pd: If I could send photos here I would send you the ones of the dollyeo chagi of both manuals.
Instep in the meatier part near the ankle is a great place to hit with a roundhouse in and out of the sport side. Especially the higher you are kicking it is less and less practical (or even possible) to hit with the shin. If you are stuffing your opponent that much your better off either using a hand technique or a front/side kick to give you a bit more separation. If you are going for body kicks yea shin is probably better for maximum damage though ball of the foot can do some good targeted damage too if thats what you are going for. It really depends on your intended application sport v self defense.
sir tommorow i got my anterior ankle hurt please tell me exactly which part i have to hit with i am so messed up i cant lay a nice kick so out of frustation i just kicked randomly on pad with different part od my foot without proper stance like flying from beginning and got my anterior ankle hurt . . please suggest me something .
You seem like a capable athlete but you lack martial arts experience, due to age considerations. By "chambering" before kicking you lose the most important power-generating component which is THE HIP TWIST. Moreover, apart from contacting with the shin (Thai boxing), and most commonly with the instep, you can contact with the ball of foot for greater penetration and damage to the target. This requires a slight variation to the standard performance of the roundhouse, but this is for the more experienced practitioner.
Run a little, then tie a resistance band to a door handle or something else and do kicks with it attached to your feet towards the inside to warm up. Then do several splits for longer: like 20, 30 seconds. Do splits after training too, I know coaches don't allow it, but you do them outside while still warm.
Bruv must've had one too many Muay Thai keyboard fanboys
😂
I'm a karate guy (1 year and 3 months of training) and this video is pure gold! Thanks!
Thanks for the kind words!
I'm so glad that you added the correction of "farther" rather than "further". Many people see the two words as interchangeable, but they're not. Thank you. Oh, yeah, the kicking tips were great, too. ;)
I don't even practise TKD, but I really like your breakdown! Very understandable and easy to copy thank you! :)
You're so funny and entertaining, hehe!! But yeah, i appreciate your lessons more importantly.
I did taekwondo as a child. I absolutely loved my dojang and achieved black belt. Unfortunately, I had to quit, haven't done it in years but, would love to return. Your videos are making it all come back to me. Thank you so much!
I love the roundhouse kick one of my favorite kicks
I just watched your Side Kick video and this one back to back and couldn't help but notice the similarities between the chamber position for the two kicks, o.k. for the side kick the knee is pulled up a bit closer to the chest but the positions of the supporting foot and leg, hips upper body etc. are pretty much the same. There is another Tae Kwon Do instructor on youtube named Carl Van Roon who talks about the "universal chamber" for the kicks, maybe he is on to something... Or he has just given a name to something that Tae Kwon Do people have been doing all along.
Beautiful Side Kick by the way, right down to the heel being higher than the toes at the point of impact; a text book example!
Roundhouse kicks are not only dependable but they give u a badass feeling
You give my Daniel San vibes lol I love it
He reminds me of a mix of Johnny and Daniel. Lol
The passion of Johnny and the poise of Daniel San
A spinning hook kick would be appreciated )
you are making my kicks better thanks ❤
"Did I blow your mind, you one-dimensional idiot?" 😂
Not too shabby… for an accountant 😅… that drives a Camry… reliably scoring points.
😂
Hello Taekwondo sir
It's my favourite kick. But un luckely my kick is not so good.
Keep at it!
How does this guy only have 20k subs.
3:04 Oowee, careful. You might trigger the Muay Thai Keyboard Warriors.
Nu uitați un lucru important: în cazul unei lupte reale, non-sportive, adversarul poate lovi sub centură și în piciorul de sprijin.
I like to do it from a stance with both knees slightly bent and add a small jump with the kick 😈
Omg I love that version. Bren Foster did it like that on Sports Science where they compared Kicks from 4 Martial Arts.
Capoiera, Karate, Muay Thai and Taekwondo.
""It's a sport...Shut UP!" LOL
Street fight got shoes as well
3:42 poor guy has some kickboxing haters
Completely off topic (My apologies I don't know how to reach for direct questions)
I am curious why different schools have different Belt Colours.
In my first school I have gone white, orange green.
In my current school they go White, White Yellow*only for kids, Yellow, yellow green, green, green blue, blue, blue red, red, red black, 1st Dan black.
... Actually I Think I found it... WT (World Taekwondo) and ITF (International Taekwondo Federation) have different belt colour standards.
Posting anyways as I find it interesting :P
Yeah, everyone does their own thing with the colors. The gup and dan ranks are the same, that’s what you will want to look at when determining rank from one school to another.
@@tkdguide Thank you! ... Also, you are awesome!
In the update of kukkiwon in the 2022 manual for the basics and then the wt for poomsae competitions, now the knee does pass a little from the center, precisely to give it effectiveness, since the martial arts forms aim to teach how to perform the basic techniques to then perform them against targets or real people.
Pd: Good video, I love your channel
@@gabrielorellana6544 interesting, thanks for sharing!
@@tkdguide More than a change, it was a clarification, since in Kukkiwon, both in the 2005 manual and in the new 2022 one, it is like this, and the WT made the clarification that the kick must be passing the head and that the way it is aligned with the body was a modification by the same athletes to make it look "prettier." Pd: If I could send photos here I would send you the ones of the dollyeo chagi of both manuals.
I love this guy! You're hilarious!
Effortfull martial art erfolgsstarkender kampfsport
If you're a real strict Japanese karate person, it's with the ball of the foot. Same as the front kick.
ruclips.net/video/jmZgJXwHNQY/видео.htmlsi=-oobZLGyyOgWZY_N
Awesome video man! Thank you 👍👍
I love the roundhouse kick
Yes, it’s a very useful technique.
@@tkdguide can u show me how to trip someone
@@barbmccabe maybe at some point I can cover that. Thanks for the suggestion!
this dude so darn funny man
😅 your funny. Your techniques are similar to the ones I do in shotokan.
Yes, very similar styles. Shotokan is the original Taekwondo.
I feel pain whenever i do this, any advice?
You will need to ask a medical professional, the human body is very complicated.
Instep in the meatier part near the ankle is a great place to hit with a roundhouse in and out of the sport side. Especially the higher you are kicking it is less and less practical (or even possible) to hit with the shin. If you are stuffing your opponent that much your better off either using a hand technique or a front/side kick to give you a bit more separation. If you are going for body kicks yea shin is probably better for maximum damage though ball of the foot can do some good targeted damage too if thats what you are going for. It really depends on your intended application sport v self defense.
4:20 LOL
sir tommorow i got my anterior ankle hurt please tell me exactly which part i have to hit with i am so messed up i cant lay a nice kick so out of frustation i just kicked randomly on pad with different part od my foot without proper stance like flying from beginning and got my anterior ankle hurt . . please suggest me something .
Great video, love the channel! Thank you for it. (jacket though...not so good. Proper Dobok would be better)
"Learn to think in more than one frickin' dimension!!"
Bold of you to believe that I can think at all 🤸🤸🤸
I really Like your Videos. Good stuff. Thank you :)
Thanks much sir, very interesting, make up more like this ...
Sahasrara (for Crown ceakra) Mantra - "Vum".
Very very nice 🙂
Thanks!
Thank You Daniel Son🥋😇
You gotta be the best teacher ever
WOW that's great
Lol lol love it
Thank you
YOU ARE NO LONGER GRASSHOPPER, YOU DRAGON NOW
NICE KICK THANKS
Nice👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
WELL...
3:45 Nice catch! 😄
Great presentation!! 🤜🫷
I try. Far from perfect 😂
Yes
🥋🙇♂️💪
Damn when it autoplayed the video from a distance made it look like it was not a maniquine and the dudes head was kicked off.
😂
You seem like a capable athlete but you lack martial arts experience, due to age considerations. By "chambering" before kicking you lose the most important power-generating component which is THE HIP TWIST. Moreover, apart from contacting with the shin (Thai boxing), and most commonly with the instep, you can contact with the ball of foot for greater penetration and damage to the target. This requires a slight variation to the standard performance of the roundhouse, but this is for the more experienced practitioner.
I can't split 😢
Run a little, then tie a resistance band to a door handle or something else and do kicks with it attached to your feet towards the inside to warm up. Then do several splits for longer: like 20, 30 seconds. Do splits after training too, I know coaches don't allow it, but you do them outside while still warm.
@@zacmich6472
Ok ..👀 I'll try it..btw thank's...
@@zacmich6472 you must split legs before trying to do this kick?
@@RuinedViper1235no
Wouldn't kicking with your top foot risk breaking your toes
@@ladyinred9656 hitting with any part of your body risks breaking said part.
@@tkdguide yeah but the risk is less when you use the bottom of the foot 🙄
@@ladyinred9656 yes
@@tkdguide do you do handstand press at all
Holy non sequitur, Batman!