Added: 6 years ago
From: stalvl
Views: 252,697
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (101)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Cool you rock keep it going.

  • The best KO In the world from john riviere

    1991

  • 0wn3d

  • I had my fifth lesson last thursday and i feel like i'm really getting better at it.

    I'm sure i've grown stronger ^_^

    But i've got some trouble with the Kata, Pinan sono ichi.

    I need a slowmotion video or instructions.

    Okay i haven't searched a lot on youtube or google.

    If someone can help me, pleaaaaseee help me ^_^

    Arigatou!

  • @Lisann3tjuh You're worried about your progress after 5 lessons?  Relax.

  • @devourerofbabies Lol, that comment was nine months ago. :|

  • @devourerofbabies I didn't look.  Hope you're doing well in your training.

  • Or is that jodan ushiro uramawashi geri? ... lol

    Osu Good kick!

  • I'm a yellow belt and I'm trying to do that kick-kyokushin karate

  • it looks like both of their legs clashed

  • ... If you look well, his block failed, anyways the kick was great!

  • @DjSapao not exactly, the guy who won had his guard right where the opponent's kick would come,but his kick connected faster therefore the other guy was thrown out, and the trajectory came off with him.

  • kaitouToshi,of course not!There is no age limit to learn karate,the most important thing in it,is your fighter spirit,you can be even the world champion,if you start to learn it,not only with your body,but atmost with your mind,there is eveything!the teqniques,is not everything!use your spirit to fight,and you´ll see that the 90 porcent depends of that,your fight should to come from inside of you,not just from the body,but from the MIND

  • This is just A Spinning kick, not exactly Kyokushin Kick, Just A Spinning kick.

  • do you think 21 years old is too late to learn karate?

  • TKD and Aikido? Hahaha. Nice trolling.

  • @devourerofbabies What do you think Hapkido is? TKD and Aikido fundamentals combined. Old school TKD though, not the crappy competition where they only teach you point scoring and not self defense.

  • @bi0nicEar TKD was founded in 1953. It's basically re-tooled shotokan with emphasis placed on kicking. It has never had proper competition and it wasn't founded in the ring or on any battlefield or anything like that.  The creation of TKD was a political move by the Koreans to re-assert their cultural identity after having been ravaged by the Japanese. There is no such thing as effective "old school" TKD. Aikido is impractical as well.

  • @devourerofbabies I see ignorance typing. The NAME "taekwondo" was accepted for practice in 1955 actually. But has been around much longer... the basis of subat and taekkyeon make up Taekwondo. and YES, what I meant by old school is from years ago. Your ignorance comes from not realizing TKD of the PRESENT is taught for olympic style competition and scoring points based moves. It no longer has any actual self-defense applications and is worthless.

  • @bi0nicEar Nonsense. Korean martial arts were in a state of atrophy before WWII. During the Japanese occupation what was left of Korean martial arts was heavily suppressed. What you're referring to is Taekyon, a so called "kicking game". It wasn't even a complete martial art. They incorporated what they could into TKD, but it wasn't much really. And you can shit all over olympic style for being points oriented all you want, but there wasn't meaningful competition before that anyway.

  • @devourerofbabies WOW, you have NO PLACE to cite any opinions, you can't even spell Taekkyeon correctly. And to refer to it as a kicking game? You're either pulling bullshit out of your ass or you're trying to google incorrect facts. FACT: there are 2 types of TKD martial arts styles. TRADITIONAL which is what oriented in the 50s, was established in the Korean Military. The SPORT which is the olympic style came later. Thus, there actually is "old school" TKD which is the traditional style.

  • @bi0nicEar Well I'm sorry, but I've read that in a couple different places. Perhaps I've been misinformed by a couple different sources. Perhaps you can point me to the real history?

  • @devourerofbabies Subak and Taekkyeon ARE martial arts styles, not kicking games. Korean Martial Arts were not in a state of atrophy before WW2, they were in a state of atrophy DURING, as the Japanese Oppression banned facets of Korean identity, which included the use of Taekkyeon and Subak. You should learn your history before you try to facts about something you clearly don't know anything about.

  • @devourerofbabies saying Aikido is impractical as well, comes from someone who has never studied it, or had the excellent pleasure of learning from a McDojo, and not a real school. You are the same as the people who said years ago that Shaolin Monks had no self defense.

  • @bi0nicEar I don't need to study aikido. If it were any good people would use it in MMA. It's simply unworkable. But you know what? My opinion doesn't count for anything. Please continue to enjoy your Hapkido training, just try not to let the fact that nobody who actually wants to win trains it bother you.

  • @devourerofbabies I love the fact how people say "if it's not in the MMA it's no good". When did UFC and bullshit become the be all end all argument of martial arts? HAHAHAHA. That's funny. Why don't I see any Shaolin Monks in UFC? Their style is ineffective? Or it's simply because they don't care for that kind of crap.

    Aikido not in MMA? Guess who Anderson Silva trains with? Steven Seagal. Guess what Seagal is trained in? Aikido. What did Silva use to beat Vitor Belfort? An Aikido front kick.

  • @bi0nicEar It would be in MMA it was effective. Those guys train 4-5 hours a day 5-6 days a week and all they care about is winning. Have you seen any early MMA? All kinds of martial arts have been represented, it has become a Muay Thai, wrestling, and BJJ competition for one reason: that's what works.

  • @devourerofbabies Yeah, please check your own comment and look at early MMA, do you know what they all said? BJJ would be ineffective, and here comes Gracie proving them all wrong. Just because someone hasn't actually stepped into the ring trained in Aikido, Wing Chun, JKD, or whatever the hell, doesn't mean it's ineffectual and a "dumb style".

    Silva's kick was an Aikido Heel kick, different martial arts have different front kicks.

  • @bi0nicEar You think none of these guys has ever done wing chun? Nobody has ever looked at it or tried to use it or studied it? The reason TKD has no representation in MMA is because nobody who knows it has ever stepped in? That's silly.

  • @bi0nicEar And spare me your bullshit about that front kick. That's Aikido? Front kicks? Guess who else has front kicks? Every other fucking martial art in existence. I don't care if Stephen Seagal taught it to him, you don't get to credit Aikido with one of the most common moves in all of martial arts. I'm pretty sure Anderson Silva knew how to throw a front kick before he met Seagal. It annoys me when people pick out one move from one fight and claim credit for a whole martial art.

  • @devourerofbabies Silva trains with Seagal, he obviously wouldn't be training with him if he didn't think the man had anything to offer, or maybe you and countless others didn't bother to think about that.

    FYI, I don't study Hapikdo and never have. But the fact you ASSUMED I study it (when I was only answering your comment about TKD + Aikido) shows me you base things heavily off assumption and not fact.

    Korean history, go to your library, get off Wikipedia & other false sites on the web.

  • @bi0nicEar Silva has trained with a lot of people. So what? Is Silva is an Aikido fighter now? Aikido has a front kick that's common to all martial arts so it's an effective art? I don't get that logic at all. You say they use the heel instead of the ball, wow, nobody has ever thought of that before. Although when Silva threw it he landed it with the ball. So I guess it's a modified Aikido kick that only LOOKS like every other front kick I've seen in my life. I see.

  • @bi0nicEar Here, this is Bas Rutten being very very polite.  watch?v=-k_uumIQ1uk

    Look, real fighting is extremely messy and chaotic and does not conform to your martial arts movie ideas of what a fight should look like. What tends to work is stuff born and bred in the ring like MT, BJJ etc, not fancy stuff like TKD and Aikido. I know you're a martial arts expert because you've taken a few Hapkido lessons, but if you really want to learn to fight your time is perhaps better spent elsewhere.

  • @devourerofbabies BTW, there's no Kyokushin in UFC (blah blah blah blah). I suppose it's as ineffective as Aikido right? Or Joe "I can't tell my elbow from my asshole" Rogan talking about Wing Chun as if he knows martial arts. He needs to go back to making people eat horse penis on Fear Factor. Hearing his retarded commentary during fights is often irritating.

  • @bi0nicEar That's not quite true, there's some Karate representation in MMA, Machida and GSP for example. I think Kyokushin has serious drawbacks though. It doesn't mean Kyokushin isn't any good at all, it's just that a guy who has trained only in Kyokushin is going to have a really hard time against a trained boxer or MT fighter, so not a lot of people bother with Kyokushin or other karate styles much. I would say that Kyokushin is much more effective than Aikido though.

  • @bi0nicEar You're right, I did assume that you did Hapkido, largely because you mentioned it and not a lot of people know much about it. To make a general statement about the way I think because I made one assumption is quite an assumption on your part, don't you think? And thank you again for admonishing me for not having the same understanding of Korean martial art history as you. I have already asked you for some good resources, but I'll ask again. Care to point me in the right direction?

  • @bi0nicEar You're right, I did assume that you did Hapkido, largely because you mentioned it and not a lot of people know much about it. To make a general statement about the way I think because I made one assumption is quite an assumption on your part, don't you think? And thank you again for admonishing me for not having the same understanding of Korean martial art history as you. I have already asked you for some good resources, but I'll ask again. Care to point me in the right direction?

  • @devourerofbabies You should respect all arts. Not just your favorite...

  • @ymk19 I respect chemistry more than alchemy.

  • @devourerofbabies Uh, ok? I don't know if that involves Martial Arts but, whatever...

  • @ymk19 What I mean to say is that it's a fact that some martial arts work and some don't. I think it's ridiculous to pretend that they're all just as good in the name of "respect". If you put years and years into TKD I respect you as an athlete and as a human being, but that doesn't change the fact that I think TKD is next to useless. Pretending otherwise is dishonest, and that would be even more disrespectful.

  • @devourerofbabies Every person's opinion to himself/herself...

  • @ymk19 I don't think it's really a matter of opinion, but whatever.

  • @devourerofbabies The way i see of things, is that there is NO best Martial Art, but best fighter, it's the way you,me and other fighters use it. So there is no bad Martial Art or neither best martial art.

  • @ymk19 I wouldn't say that there's a "best" MA either, but there are certainly some that aren't very good at all. Of course the fighter himself matters. Of course the best TKD guy in the world is going to beat the worst MT guy in the world. But there's a reason there's an almost total absence of TKD or Wing Chun or whatever else in high level combat sports. It's true every art has strengths and weaknesses, but some arts have very few strengths and many weaknesses.

  • @devourerofbabies True that... But it really depends on how the person who studies it.

  • @ymk19 Of course it does. But if you apply yourself to certain MA you're going to get a lot more effective than others.

  • @devourerofbabies Yes...

  • @devourerofbabies : you seem to be associating sport fighting with real fighting. Now, don't get me wrong. There are tough guys who are both sport and real fighters. I imagine that most of those MMA guys pack a punch on the street, too.

    There are also very good fighters who have never entered a ring or a cage before. I say this as someone who has practiced both Kyokushin AND Wing Chun, and sees that both are street effective.

  • No.

  • no juz go for it an give it ur all

  • @kaitouToshi NO WAY! Go for it! Don't even think about it!

  • there is no such thing as too late to learn a martial art

  • No way! I started when I was 34 and I have lost 20kgs. Now I'm the strongest I have ever been in my life!

  • @kaitouToshi no im 26 and i started it ;) and my colleague is 28

  • how can this be anything but 5 stars?!? its an incredible moment!

  • muay thai karate or wrestling you know what disciplines doesn't make men men made them so how can you say this is good stuff or the best ???? it depends on men not their disciplines it depends on skills i say jeet kune do is the best coz it not only uses kicks punch but also you can disarm people try to kick a man with knives in hand sounds undisciplined right? well martial art is for defending you or the ones you love not showing off beware warriors!!!

  • learn english.

  • learn who you are first dummer

  • so sick!!! fight with me??? just message to my account..

  • It's amazing!!!

    Osu!!

  • Ushiro Mawashi Geri. Osu.

  • @Izzy11215 Ushiro uramawashi geri..

  • @Izzy11215 Osu

  • fat one

  • whateva names u call it in Karate, it is also used in TKD. One of my fave counterattacking moves but timing is crucial cuz if u miss, it leaves u open to attack.

  • GO CANADA, JEAN RIVIERE 4TH PLACE

  • lol icepick2222, Do you know anything about kyokushin?. this is definitally not a roundhouse kick. and when explaining kyokushin techniques and terms say it in japanese. It's only polite and is how it should be said. It is tradition and we all kyokushin karatekas should always say them in japanese. Thankyou. I meant no offense btw. You can reply if you want.

  • No koolshen, Empanada666 is right. It is a Ushiro Geri. Look it up if you don't believe me. I practice kyokushin so I know the techniques. I'm not being rude or anything. I'm just saying I know what I'm talking about when i say Empanada666 is right when he said it's an Ushiro Geri

  • he kicks a mirror and breaks it, typical fat kid

  • Its a Ushiro Geri

  • No, it's a Ushiro-mikazuki-geri

  • no he kicks him in the fuckin head

  • lol, well said

    but its a spinning reverse hook kick

    its amazing how many different names the same thing goes by, depending on what style you do =]

  • diosss,que suerte uno je je

  • its a spining heel kick if u watch closely

  • It's a back spin kick, not a roundhouse.

  • tis a round house kick

  • this isnt a round house kick...

  • ice, a roundhouse is where you turn toward the opponent, cock your leg at about a 45 degree angle. after that, it varies slightly depending on style, but the basic jist is that you bring it from the cocked stage to the opponent by snapping it up and toward the opponent (usually still at a 45-ish degree angle, but a few MA's try to bring it more across). You never turn your back on the enemy in a roundhouse(except spin-back), you don't try to keep your leg straight, and your knee stays close.

  • I really need to know something is he from canada QC? Because I think I know him

  • lol nvm i dont know him

  • Jean Riviere is tha Bomb !

  • Reminds me when I questioned my instructor about the usefulness of one of the kicks we were learning (I was doing northern shaolin kung fu) he then asked me to try to punch him. I threw my punch, which he dodged and nearly kicked my face in. The kick was similiar to this one.

  • FUE EL MAS RAPIDO DEL OESTE.

  • Now THAT'S what Karate is all about.

    Sure, speed and power are important.

    But most of all, it's about timeing...

  • Er, "Karate." Yeah, I can spell....

  • I'd love to send this vid to every Katate detractor on the planet....shut 'em up for once.

  • Karate detractors will just say the opponent is not credible enough or that a wrestler/grappler would take them down and beat them up.

    I believe these kicks would work in the UFC easily and they would hurt people. The sad part is that the best Kyokushin Karate and TKD fighters don't believe in themselves and don't believe they can do well in the UFC or MMA. The burden of proof is on Kyokushin and TKD fighters to prove their art is effective in MMA. So far, they'd rather be fighting their own

  • that's exactly right gyro, I couldn't have put it better myself honestly

  • I can't speak for TKD, but Kyokushin and other karate fighters mostly just don't care for MMA. It's far too uncontrolled and undisciplined. It isn't hard to get two guys in a ring to beat the crap out of each other. What Kyokushin and other styles of karate practice is control and discipline. All techniques that score in competition are done with precision; not that MMA garbage where they just slug it out. The only burden of proof is in the street, where it matters.

  • As a fan of Shotokan karate, it's painful to see an ugly style like Muay Thai dominate the MMA scene. People now are starting to think that Muay Thai is the most effective striking art. This irritates me. I know for a fact that Shotokan is viable and that any JKA sensei can dominate UFC's Muay Thai guys. I'm sick of MMA just being Muay Thai. I wish there were some real Shotokan masters. Lyoto is a FAKE Shotokan practitioner. He's a phony for calling himself Karate when he uses Thai

  • Why is he a phony? He uses both, there's absolutely no problem with that.

  • You guys should check out Peter Graham's fights in K-1. He uses this kick all the time with excellent form, and he actually LANDS them. He KO'd Jan, Badr Hari and some others with this kick. I just wish more guys like Gary O'neil and Tsukamoto would train their ground game defense and then enter MMA.

  • kyokushin is controlled and precise?

    dont make me laugh, most of the time it looks nothing like this, 99% of the time it just looks like a body blow slug fest with a couple of low and high kicks thrown in. and grappling does requires ALLOT more precision and practice to master and pull off then any kind of simple kick strike or punch.

  • IMO you're half right. karate is definately more disciplined than MMA. but MMA does have it's share of sportsmanship and discipline too. don't forget that people in MMA usually have a lot of martial arts background like karate/MT/judo/bjj. for instance GSP is a kyokushin karateka.

  • huum try to go anywhere in the world ;-) do meet some thugs there and tell them you know kyokushin kai and ''guys be precise and disciplined ,if your men'' guess they would say oki !!! fools this world is of survival throw everything or just sit chuuut and watch !!! garbage its the traditional way of improving mens real inner strengh when meeting someone or anything that wants your life do tell them come disciplined yeah police will be here to protect you eternally brainwashed

  • damn ! x( nice :P

  • *cough* pwnt *cough*

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more