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From: tkdtoad
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  • that sweet at 1.37 is sick

  • @Straaawberrycake sweep*

  • lame. GJJ will own this

  • Weak Fat shit stuff, move in man , you are wearing pads, weak stuff , waste of time .

  • @brodealers wtf u talking bout? its safety? ya it may look like pussy shit but this shit is fucking hard to do

  • @VelocityThugs .. For me this is pussy as shit and weak stuff, all this means is just showing off for public to see , but only ppl like yourself might think this is real mean stuff

  • @brodealers My self being a mixed martial artist saying that this is usefull , dont disrespect martial arts, its all about the way the fighter trains, all martial arts are equal dont go calling this pssy shit cuz at the end of the day your gonna get your ass kicked messing with these guys.

  • @brodealers That's why they call them DEMONSTRATIONS

  • @brodealers

    This is a tournaments, it's so you can test your skills effectively and safely against another with out any real damage. It may be "weak" stuff, but remember.... people have died doing tournaments. A mean enough flying side kick to the chest has been proven deadly.

  • @brodealers lol it was a championship, not a real 'im going to kill you' fight, ofc they're wearing protection. It's a competition. You don't see fencers sparring in normal clothes, they wear padding because they aren't trying to kill each other.

  • Thank god for the mute button.

  • gay song...........  cool video

  • oh and coolest flips ever

  • coolest flips ever

    i want to study some form of kung fu, martial arts, ect

    orginally i wanted to study mantis

    well the closest mantis school was 5 hours away so forget that

    now hapkido looks promising as well as silat but i haven't done much research on where they are taught in regards to where i live

    although there are multiple martial arts school in my town their all taekwondo and karate

    i want to be unique in my fighting style

  • @Kalkas53 ya thats a bummer you have to leave enar a studio if you want to dedicate time to it

  • @Kalkas53 Start with taekwondo or karate. The American schools teach them generally similarly with exceptions. Take a striking art first, and learn the most you can with as much of an open mind in that art.(you may find them verry advanced as I found Taekwondo advanced with my ninjutsu background.) Then move to a more grounded art. Thats my advice. Besides it may be easier to learn with a more broadened background. Good luck to you.

  • I practice hapkido is very good, I recommend to everyone.

  • gayest song

  • Hapkido is a mix of jiu jitsu,taekwando, and aikido. Trust me, i'm an second degree black belt hapkidoka.

  • some of that was taekwondoe

  • @ForS4kenSnip3r yea the creator of hapkido also incorporated a lot of taekwondo kicks into his style. Hapkido, like aikido are decedents of daito-ryu aiki-jiujitsu, and a korean master of that style went back to korea, met some other martial artists, and realized that it'd be good to mix the styles together to get a better balance, so he added in Taekwondo and Judo techniques.

  • Funny!!

  • para mi el HAP KI DO es el mejor arte marcial, el mas completo de todos!

  • Bon Jovi? I probably would have chosen a different track for this video, but it is still pretty cool what people are capable of.

  • this is fuckin pretty

  • Do a barrel roll!

  • knowleage→knowledge

    excuse me XD

  • REAL LIFE TEKKEN!

  • seems like wushu

  • qual o nome da musica?

  • @earllpike its my life por bon jovi

  • funny

  • ... taught to the marine corps, CIA, and to soldiers in Vietnam, after Vietnam Grand master kim brought the art to california where he only allowed 4 schools to open. He was a true Master of the art he did it for over 60 years, unlike the tae kwon do people who practice it for a few years and call themselves masters. If you want true technique Kims Hapkido is the way to go.

  • In HAPKIDO we have a lot of throws, I spar with my friends that do MMA and every time we fight I throw them, Our throws originate from judo, we just use more circle motion, in HAPKIDO circle motion is key, everything you do is circle motion to continue the opponents energy moving, you just redirect it. If anyone is in California look up kims Hapkido thats where I train we have a few studios throughout california. Its a vary effective art that grand master kim ( person who brought it to the us)

  • @m16police kims hopkido i herd bout dat one i had a friend who use2 go there...wat city r u in??

  • @june14211 I train in the one in Fontana, you can google kims hapkido and youll see all of our studios that are in california

  • @m16police i live in fontana 2...its right there on foothill right?

  • looks like the key is in the footwork.

  • well...what is Hapkido, anyway? I've never heard it. Is this comedy or something?Historically, Korea has been a vassal state of China more than 1000 years. Why did Korea have original culture?

  • @nene3471 Hap Ki Do is one of many korean martial arts. Most people only know Tae Kwon Do but in fact there are others as well. Korea was a tributary state to China but not a part of China. In certain rare periods of times Korea rose as a dominant force in that part of Asia. Koreans have a strong sense of identity which allowed them to develop a unique culture.

  • @nene3471

    Hapkido is a copy of aikido of Japan.

  • @main0128

    Incorrect. Hapkido is not a copy of Aikido, Hapkido have the elements of Aikido true, but it focuses on offensive abilities more than aikidos defensive approach. You can call Hapkido the offensive version of aikido. Although, Hapkido is korean I believe.

  • @main0128 aikdo is selfdefense and hapkido is offence dont belive me i take both

  • @main0128 No! Aikido ia copy of Hapkido!

  • @main0128 lol that was the most idiot comment that i've ever saw!! if you dont know what you are saying please just dont =D

  • @main0128 Not really. Hap ki do = Ju jitsu , Taekwondo , Tai-chi and a little of aikido, so why te hell are u talking that is copy? You just don't know anything about martial arts. Have you seen any kicks and pounches in Aikido?

  • @main0128 its not just that but it is also another form of tae kwon do mixed with the elements of judo and aikido

  • @rocker129678 All based on Aikijutsu(The proto type of Jujuttsu)

  • @main0128 they are both styles of karate

  • @main0128 not a copy a mix of taekwondo with aikido but honestly i think hapkido has almost nothing of aikido.dont worry i dont like hapkido that much ether...

  • @main0128

    It's not a copy, it takes aspects from Aikido and many other forms too!

  • @nene3471 Are you joking right? Hapkido is old, It was used by the hwarang, the young elite warriors in Korea... I guess Taekkyon is even older....

  • @nene3471 well, i'm sure that japs as ocupants of china would never understand..

  • What I'm getting from this style is that it's a mix or Tae- Kwon- Do and Judo. Am I correct?

  • i use to do taekwondo, and now i do kick boxing, but i'd like to learn hapkido.

  • If you like the kicks watch Teakwondo ^^

  • i lsten to this soong every day about 60 times :P

  • *ahem, replay.

  • Could've gone without the instant slo-mo replay on everything.

  • Could've gone without the instant slo-mo reply on everything.

  • @myNDNeyes Its about the art not the song

  • As a man with modest experience with martial arts, I think that all martial arts are great and wonderful. However, the secret lies within the fighter him/herself...so it is not only about the technique or the art wether it was Karate, Mauthat, Krav maga, Hapkido etc...actually, it is more about the way it is used by the fighter.

  • @nnissani u are totally right my brother knows tae kwon do and he kicks total ass i mean when we spar ( i don't know martial arts lol) i cant even lay a blow on him. when i hit him once he already hit me like 7 times plus he knew how to fight before he took the classes so he kind of mixes street fight with tae and that's bad ass and like u say its all about the fighter.

  • @nnissani Krav maga isn't a martial art its a fighting system 

  • @wingchun149 Yes, I totally agree with that. I apologize for including it with the others.

  • @nnissani Well spoken. Are you SURE you have modest experience. With an explanation such as this one, I think you're not telling all you know... or the warrior within you spoke for you.

  • @CyberDawg69 - Thank you for saying that Cyber, most appreciated. I am sure that you would agree with me when I say that martial arts are like a deep ocean. No matter how much someone knows about it, there is still more to know.

  • @nnissani Agreed.

    But, in this particular ocean, you may be crushed if you DO NOT dive deep enough!

  • I practice karate-do but I have great respect for Hapkido. It is great fun to compare and contrast the similarities and the differences in the joint lock techniques with those of modern Aikido. Both are amazing martial arts, but they appear to have a very different mindset. Plus, Hapkido has great striking and kicking techniques. Many Japanese stylists like me respect the Korean arts. Osu!

  • hapkido is really fun and cool better than karate.

  • @alphamonX it is but i think grappling and throws are better/more badass

  • the best thing about any martial art is the confidence and disipline it brings, i am a 34 year old mum, 2 years ago i was doing Hapkido, i gave up after i got my yellow tip, wish i hadnt but i had a stupid fear of falling, i just couldnt get it, loved my time at Chricton Cobbers here in Christchurch, NZ, it now has sadly been ruined in the earthquake...Alan was the best instructor ever.

  • 1:32 fully sick

  • Nice video! Can you tell me how the point sparring works? Do the take downs count for points or can you only punch and kick the head and chest for points?

  • is hapkido better than karate?

  • @snorrie60 every martial art is better than karate in my opinion. karate is a good base thought if you want to learn punches. combining punches with arts like aikido, BJJ, ninjutsu or hapkido is most effective. if you want to learn strikes quickly for self defense do muay thai. that is more tthan enough on the street or to beat a douchebag who bullies you up

  • @888peanut888 so hapkido is good to beat up bullyes in school or outside right?

  • If you liked this video, check out Martial Arts 411 Magazine. 

  • 日本からパクって、中国からパクって、さらにテコンドーもパクっ­てのんかよw朝鮮人はウンコだなw

  • i wish we can do this in the real tournament

    it would be so much funnier

  • damn this shit is crazy

    i feel like it would be fucking epic to just be like

    "yeah im a 10th dan black belt in hapkido, what the fuck you gonna do about it?"

  • @WoWPwnCraft

    Cant get 10th dan in a korean art while youre alive bro...

  • king of being cocky..fuck that!...it is not mma, ufc fighters..

  • el regueton podria considerarse un arte marcial?

  • I had to turn off the sound and listen to some SLAYER on Winamp instead, but otherwise, this is a five-star video. :)

  • Comment removed

  • these guys are great at falling down

  • xD

  • this looks like TKD with dives

  • Korean guy started Hapkido doesn't mean it is a traditional Korean martial art. Everybody knows Choi Yong Sool learned the techniques from Daitoryu Aikijutsu, which is a traditional Japanese martial art, then mixed it with Tekkyon.

  • if u have no way of learning a martial art heres 1 of the easiest arts . step 1 . kick em in the balls step 2 punch em in the face step 3 they fall to the floor and stomp on thier face

  • @ricky932093

    olha q cara mais tosco...

  • @ricky932093 so what do u do if they actually know what there doing and they catch ur foot on step 1

  • @ricky932093 This one kid tried spep one on me did not end up well. He was crawling for a week. The thing about tkd is you can't kick people in the leg to bad in real fight you can and kicking someone in the shit with a side kick or round house is a b****.

  • The strength of any art is within the practitioner. To say that Hapkido is better than MMA is pointless. What I will say is Hapkido prepares one to engage a larger group of people at a time instead of the classic ground and pound, tap out tactics employed by MMA. Hapkido is one of the martial arts instructed to US troops during the first Gulf War.

  • I didn't know that Bon Jovi was the official music of Hap Ki Do.

  • People kick... and they fall. People throw, and their opponent lands on top of them. In short, sloppy. Very sloppy.

    People flip their weapons around, with no technical application to it, and are more likely to hurt themselves than an opponent like that. (ie, in traditional use of nunchaku, you use one, and only whip it out in short bursts - you don't want it flailing around anymore than necessary, out of control. In short, flashy. Very flashy.

    Doesn't seem like a good way to train...

  • @mrtempertantrum I think it was meant to be flashy. Just to impress the crowd.

  • @chillychil1 Fair enough. But (and I say this as a traditional martial artist) this kind of none-sense is what has ruined most traditional styles. "Looking good" for laymen. Functional = boring. Flashy = hard to make work (at best) or self-defeating (at worst) but exciting.

  • @mrtempertantrum That might be true, but the Hapkido style I'm training (sin moo hapkido) feels traditional. Techniques are easy to execute, but also effective. I can almost guarantee that these guys train traditionally, this probably just to make the crowd interested and that people would like to try out this martial art.

  • King of fake

  • really the best martial art you could possibly learn would be traditional Muay Thai style striking (primarily knees and elbows from the clinch) modified with open palm striking (so you don't break your hand in the middle of a fight) and greco-roman/judo upper body style clinch takedowns. If you train grappling don't train much besides chokes/an emphasis on top control. Then just condition condition condition. Good conditioning is really the most effective form of self defense.

  • @iwhoart I agree- it's extremely effective. there are a couple of problems though, when used outside the ring: 1.) you destroy you joints and body in training, it's unsustainable, 2.) it's brute force, which isn't useful for smaller people, and 3.) it's not really a complete system - there's a lot of ways to deal with an opponent that, if you are smart about things, can be more devastating, or allow for more subtlety.

  • @mrtempertantrum

    what are you even talking about?

  • @iwhoart Not sure what you were responding to...

  • WTF "taekwondo" with takedowns. Looks interesting.

  • i'm joining taekwondo,but im also interested in hapkido..but there's no dojo for this martial arts here in my state...after seeing this video,hapkido is just the same as mma but with pads and cooler..respect for this art..

  • @segumalsebastian

    Taekwondo isn't that good in real life combat at all, from sources. My Master teaches Taekwondo and says it is helpless in defending yourself, same with his master and his master's master... and his master's master....

  • @JaredThinks that's correct...but tkd can at least helps you to defend a little bit...but with hapkido,u rules...

  • Hapkido VS MMA, does it really matter? Each to their own I say, but I do know that its pretty hard to stay aggressive and carry on fighting when you've had your wrist broken, which these Hapkido guys can do, and do it very quickly. MMA to me is more an offensive style, Hapkido is primarily self defensive.

  • why do you have so many replays it is very irritating

  • ok dat is zo why vind ik jou niet schizonoide ik kom te dicht by ik kyk myn label ,ik,ben,meer,dan,een,label,jy,­niet,dan,sorry,foute,diagnose,­jy,bent,wild,child,levenslusti­g,op,pc,als,ik,jou,ken,ik,weet­,het,niet,nu,kyk,je,mee,naar,m­yn,verplicht,kort,1arts,kan,je­,leven,tekenen,met,foute,diagn­ose,zyn,kluizenaars,zwervers,o­ok,,dit,onzin,je,kiest,wat,by,­je,past,dan,heeft,mn,zusje,dit­,ze,leeft,met,haar,vriend,ja,m­erendeels,samen,alone

  • ok dat is zo why vind ik jou niet schizonoide ik kom te dicht by ik kyk myn label ,ik,ben,meer,dan,een,label,jy,­niet,dan,sorry,foute,diagnose,­jy,bent,wild,child,levenslusti­g,op,pc,als,ik,jou,ken,ik,weet­,het,niet,nu,kyk,je,mee,naar,m­yn,verplicht,kort,

  • No man Of course it's a ref''d fight What I'm saying is when it comes down to it out side the ring hings are different. It's still a sport Yes? I mean does MMa teach you to fight with weapons? No. Listen I'm not knocking MMA all I'm saying is your example of two guys equal skill time etc. in a street fight advantage traditional martial arts.

  • You kids raving about MMA because you see it on UFC don't know what you're talking about. You just know it "looks awesome." Even with the gay cuddling and groping in between occasional jabs and awkwardly placed kicks.

  • @megatokiorio learn to respect all forms of fighting, UFC fighters are skilled and dedicated and respect many different martial arts. They use the same principles of discipline and dedication that many other martial arts use.

  • @megatokiorio Look, heres what ill say on that, if you trained a 2 guys with the same athletic ability for 2 years, one in hapkido, and one in MMA, the hapkido guy would get his ass kicked. This is only an allusion. You have to be a fucking retard to not realize their letting each other do the "techniqies" on them. At least in MMA training you ACTUALLY fight. I dont have a prolem with hapkido, i just have a problem when you guys comment on how tuff they are and crap. its a joke...

  • @ElfredBumm If two guys train for the same period of time in two different styles say for arguments sake They are Hapkido and MMa if they were to test their mettle in the ring (mma octagon) Advantage MMA. There are rules a ref and safety gear. I'm not saying that isn't an effective combat system. the question is who would win in a street fight. With no rules, no ref and all sort of variables thrown in like broken glass concrete floor eye gauges throat strikes small joint locks?

  • @YuriGee718 Funny how you say MMA is the dicipline with all the rules...Did you even watch this video? The ha[pkido gayboys are armoured to the teeth with a ref that stops the action after a "move". I im pretty these wangs would choke in a real fight too. Give it up man, MMA is the closest combat sport to fighting, Not this "ok you let me do this move" BS.

  • @ElfredBumm

    I'm a big fan of MMA (been watching it since about 2003; before it blew up) but even I have to acknowledge it's still not very realistic compared to a real fight. It gets the aggression factor of real fights a bit more but as far as the actual fights go you don't have 3 to 6 weeks to train and peak for a random encounter at a bar. Plus closed fist strikes to the face are the absolute worst thing to train for a real fight.

  • @iwhoart OK well your either missing my point or didnt read my comments to the other gentleman. Fact is, if your regularly training in MMA, that means your encompassing all aspects of fighting in your "training". (Striking, Grappling, clinch, ext.). Also in MMA, you actually spar. Which makes you more prepared for a fight should one come upon you. You would have ot be an idiot to think these guys in Hapkido arnt letting the techiniqes done ot them. Fact is they dont work... Good day sir.

  • @ElfredBumm

    naw i got your point and i read your comments. your point that training MMA makes you tougher is completely flawed because each person reacts to things differently. in MMA sparring you're still in a nice enclosed environment with rules and protective gear and the mind set is not to actually hurt your opponent. that's completely different from an actual fight. i've sparred and gotten in actual fights and i can pretty much tell you it made no difference.

  • @ElfredBumm

    in real fights people don't follow the technique standards you'd expect from somebody training in any sort of martial arts (including MMA). in sparring most people are trying to make certain techniques work that will ONLY work if your partner is using techniques that make sense and that you would know. i can practice checking leg kicks for hours in sparring based on what the correct movements that somebody who knew how the throw a kick would use. but if in a real fight my opponent

  • @ElfredBumm

    throws a leg kick with some kind of bizarre upper body movement and pivots his hips in an unconventional way that kick will probably land and i won't know to even check it. basically techniques are mostly pointless. this is where both MMA and TMA have a problem. this is also why conditioning is the most important factor. in a real fight it will really come down to who gets tired first. 

  • @iwhoart Really? I've sparred, and I've gotten in real fights. I'll agree - very different, because the intent and situation is completely different, as you say. However... with TMA (or good MMA) where people actually understand what they are doing, you WILL be much more likely to win. (nothing is ever guaranteed, obviously). REAL fights are over in less than 10 seconds. Fucking around might last longer. It just sounds like you don't know much about fighting, but are tough.

  • @mrtempertantrum

    i think you are laboring under the delusions of someone who has seen far too many action movies. there's no man on earth you can finish in 10s. unless you throw a strike and it just so happens to land perfectly and knock him out. even the weakest person can put up enough of a struggle that the fight will not end in 10s or even 30. this type of time frame is realistic only in the sense that most people will engage for an extremely brief period of time one will separate and with

  • @mrtempertantrum

    little to no damage dealt to either participant one will flea or give up in some sense. this actually is probably the way the vast majority of real fights go. 2 individuals engage, skirmish briefly, and are separated by a group surrounding them or one simply tries to get away or out of the fight somehow. in this case MA in general have no real purpose. you would do almost just as well if you knew nothing than if you were a master. i suppose in this struggle one might have the

  • @mrtempertantrum

    opportunity to secure top control in what will most likely be one person grabbing the other and trying to take them down. so in a sense i suppose you might be correct. however, the importance of techniques or MA is negated by the brevity of the action. now concerning a fight for your life against an opponent of approximate size and strength you will probably find that the fight might only last 30s because one, or both, participant goes for maximum effort and burns themselves

  • @mrtempertantrum

    out. in this case it will come down to who recovers more quickly from a maximum effort physical action. this is the very essence of conditioning. no matter how hard you train it is almost impossible to maintain a maximum effort physical action for longer than 20 to 30s. conditioning really is enhancing how much you recover between bouts of maximum effort. now i'm sure you'll say some nonsense about being clever enough to avoid this or something. you may very well be able to.

  • @iwhoart 1.) I don't strike to knock out, I strike to break things. Noses, jaws, ribs, throats, etc. Easy to do with good targeting practice. 2.) If the fight lasts that long, then why not just leave, or slowly back away into a safe place while maintaining your guard? 3.) You're talking about "real" fights with two non-Martial artists, no real fights with a martial artist. You're also talking about fights among buddies, who don't really intend to hurt each other. Noob.

  • @mrtempertantrum

    3) i'm not in the slightest. fights that i have witnessed between "skilled" MA and a normal person have gone just as i've described. 2) you could absolutely do so. in fact i believe that's actually what i said. 1) i simply don't believe that in the confusion of a real fight you will land any sort of blow like that. you might land some awkward strikes as you eventually clinch and go to the ground but i doubt you will seriously harm the other person.

  • @mrtempertantrum

    additionally people can fight through all sorts of trauma. i think you will find that a lot people, if there life is on the line, could fight through a broken jaw or ribs or nose quite easily. there's only 2 real ways to incapacitate an opponent: 1) knocking them unconscious or 2) securing a blood choke. then there's the problem of people utilizing narcotics and amphetamines which both block pain and one can stimulate endurance and aggression.

  • @iwhoart Considering fights dont tend to last longer then really 30 seconds..... i don't think conditioning will really matter as much as being the most important thing? Unless ur talking about ring "fighting" thats really more for sport.

  • I train Wing Chun kung fu and have trained Choy Lee Fut style as well. My tattoo guy was telling me about his time training hapkido. Looks pretty cool. I like the take downs. I don't know if I much agree with all the kicking, though, but that's just style bias. He said something about Bruce Lee having a hand in how Hapkido has developed on a style. Anybody have any say on that?

  • @WilliamMacBroadcast Hapkido is pretty versatile. It is very similar to MMA in the grappling aspect. And remember, you can always adjust a style to match your preferences.

  • @megatokiorio its not very similar to mma. in mma u use grappling techniques for offense. in hapkido all the grappling is used for defense. the only similarity between mma grappling and hapkido grappling is that the goal is to submit your opponent.

  • @Gangsta28RLZ Good for you that you've studied the differences. Not too many people out there know about this.

  • wich one was the king?

  • This is excellent material.

  • this is hollywood movie martial arts. i dont know much about hapkido and i dont think i want to.

  • Everyone who says this is gay would probably get skullfucked by each and every one of these guys.

  • @megatokiorio ya dude the people who do hapkido are so tuff when other people LET them do stuff to them

  • @69MetALDrUmmeR69 I think you should leave martial arts to those brave enough to master them. Just stick to your tekken and mortal kombat, lol

  • @megatokiorio how about MAN up and do something REAL, such as MMA

  • @69MetALDrUmmeR69 lol. you're too retarded to know what a real martial art is aren't you. MMA is a beginner style. it's the bare basics of a martial art. and it's only useful against people who don't know how to fight period.

  • @megatokiorio yea hence the word "art" as in ART FORM. i guarantee u if someone were to jump on of these guys they would choke majorly because theyve never actually done the techniques to someone who has been fighting back or resisting them. but you're too retarded to realize they WILLING letting them perform the techniques on them aren't you?

  • @69MetALDrUmmeR69 Mixed Martial Arts has ART in the fucking name. So try again, prettyboy.

  • Just because you call it an art doesn't make it an art. MMA is a sport. It's all about rules and competitions, and what "works" in competitions. It takes pieces from other styles, without taking the the foundational principles, training, and understanding that make those techniques work. It's so... crude. What's so bad about it is people see a technique succeed or fail once in a big competition, and take it as "proof." Psuedoscience at it's best...

  • @mrtempertantrum If it isn't an art then why is the word art in the name? Because they couldn't come up with a unique name?

  • @megatokiorio You can call something what ever you want. Brute force is brute force, bro. Brute force =/= art. It's cage fighting. Deal.

  • hapkido, plus some jovi...couldn't get any gayer!

  • Interesting. Like WTF, it doesn't allow punches in the face (which I think it's BAD). Unlike WTF, it allows takedowns.

  • @TakedaMitsurugi it does not allow punches because it's a competition to see who got the better kicks. If everything is included then it would be like mma instead. So in this video, they are actually competing in different category; weapons, kicks, jumps.

  • @psycho930 It doesn't make sense. If the goal is to see who got the better kicks, takedowns should not be allowed and then it would be WTF TKD.

    And punches in the face would NOT make it a MMA, because MMA has ground fighting.

  • lol foda

    

  • I don't think this is hapkido.

  • @Comocks It is. There are two main forms of Hapkido. One does competition sparring, one doesnt.

  • @Comocks this is hapkido because i do hapkido and i know the moves.

  • best fight i have seen so far

  • Hapkido - dva styly v jednom...

  • awesome vid...excellent martial arts

  • Uhm..this is Tae Kwon Do.

  • @hcdub i thought Tae Kwon Do too. Looks like Olympic Tae Kwon Do sparring with modified rules to include throws & sweeps. The switching of stance, hands (guard) down, back kick, round house, axe kick etc...doubt this is Hapkido

  • @realityIZanILLUSION hap ki do teaches all of those kicks, you do realise that right? Hap Ki Do is a blend ot TKD and aikijujutsu. It uses allot of high snapping kicks, just like TKD, and allot of modified throws from aikijujutsu hence why it looks like aikido sometimes. It has kicks like drop wheel, roundhouse, Out-to-in crescent kick, and so on. 90% of the kicks found in hap ki do, can be found in TKD. This is HKD, the two guys just probably found it easier to strike than to throw

  • @hcdub no man .... no take downs in tae kwon do sparring ...