Added: 4 years ago
From: karate35
Views: 38,078
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  • Looks pretty much like shotokan, were are the goju ryu like katas?

  • このモデルは黒田さん?

  • THIS IS KYOKUSHIN KARATE.. THE MOST THECNICAL EM STRONG KARATE OF THE WORLD! OSU!!!

  • Thanks for posting. Dont know where my gradings would be without your videos.

  • i was just watching this so i know it for my grading 2night

    OSU!

  • damn, my room is too small for me to try this!

  • O.o I got dizzy just watching him do this. I see myself having a bit of a hard time getting these down.

    OSU!

  • che schifo... fatti malissimo.. le anche immobili ed il kime è andato a farsi fottere...

  • Spinning can also over exaggerate movement; giving you the ability to develop control. Some top sensei suggest spinning backwards is done on the heel whereas spinning forwards is done on the ball of the foot.

    So by 180 degree + turning you can become very aware of where your weight is in your foot - therefore you can adjust and bring that into your normal movement.

    There's an association of Shotokan which have developed Kata to help with this. Try looking for Junro Yondon.

    Good training.

  • OSÚ!!!

  • Thanks for the response. I find it interesting. I have done TKD since '78. To keep forms training fresh, i practice at different speeds, tempos, learn them backwards, perform the mirror image add moves and so on. It's interesting to see someone else be creative with there own traditional forms as well.

  • Well, classical chung-hon-TKD has a reason why its forms starts with chon-ji hyong instead of one of its pinan-kata-derived hyongs: its unqiue enbusen (stepping diagram) provides lots of turns for learning footwork, agility and weight distribution.

  • There's a great lateral dysbalance in all beginner's hyongs, tho: with few exceptions, right turns are 180° & left turns are 90° and 270°, training the feet quite differently. I suspect the diagrams were made simpler (or rather: stricter) than the Karate ones due to Gen. Choi's philosophy on teaching and the influence of confucianism and calligraphy, and there may be deep inner meanings to the ways and directions of turning... but it's not a good way to train your body symmetrically.

  • What is the significance of adding the spinning footwork to the tradition pinan katas? Is it simply to add complexity and variation?

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