Maybe it's just my school, but I learned Ipponme and Nihonme a little differently, such as, in Ipponme, there is a parry in between the wakikamai and the kasa cuts. In Nihonme, your left leg follows the first cut, so, instead of having a suhe that is stationary, it advances. There is also a parry in between the suhe and kasa cuts. I have nothing against it if this is how it is taught in your dojo, but with the way that I have learned, it seems more fluid.
i think it done per your instructor, we do it differently as well, but helps in practise at home when instructor is not here, i only see small differences
am I the only one who imagines blood getting on the camera when they do jiburi?
KoriKitti 1 year ago
Very very poor tehnique, everything is very poor :(
neuromachina 1 year ago
Maybe it's just my school, but I learned Ipponme and Nihonme a little differently, such as, in Ipponme, there is a parry in between the wakikamai and the kasa cuts. In Nihonme, your left leg follows the first cut, so, instead of having a suhe that is stationary, it advances. There is also a parry in between the suhe and kasa cuts. I have nothing against it if this is how it is taught in your dojo, but with the way that I have learned, it seems more fluid.
CannonX17 1 year ago
Great!
vitalislaci 1 year ago
@vitalislaci
i think it done per your instructor, we do it differently as well, but helps in practise at home when instructor is not here, i only see small differences
p shaw
driverman51 7 months ago