@lilwarrior89 -Yes, that sword used is heavy. It is called Sun-Moon sword which is durable, sterdy and the blade is very sharp and flexible near the tip of the sword for added showmanship blade's noise.
Occasionally, incidents happen where spectators get cut because they stand a little bit too close.
So any spectator watching fast broadsword performance must stay clear, giving the performer enough space for their floor routines to avoid accident.
@khmerkic cool i have broadsword it ernt easy i thought it was easy to use at first wen i see the wushu or shaolin but wen the first time i used it it was heavy so its not easy to do that and u need alot cencontration u got good son man and it was worth it i wsh i was this good theirs some moves that i never seen 3.2 u said u he started at 14 now hes 20, so he learnd 6 yrs all this? wow
@lilwarrior89 - up to that time, in 2007, he had learned for 9 years in wushu and taiji.
With Brendon, you see moves you have not seen before, because the truth is that wushu must evolve like computers.
Some backward-minded people think that wushu has to remain old-style like in the 1960s. In fact, real wushu in China today has evolved so much that competitors overthere include so many new moves that some people have never seen before. This change is good, for the sake of wushu.
@lilwarrior89 - One best way to find out is to stay in china and train/compete in China; then one will see all the new changes and new moves they have never seen before.
Therefore, in a way, wushu is like a free-style acrobatic kungfu, and also is like American XMA ( extreme martial arts ) or free-style acrobatic martial arts.
you must be so proud to have son like this i wish i went to china atleast train shaolin its better when your young maybe when am older i try to go their anyway thnks for your help
Thank you for your comment. Actually the one Brendon used at that time is very heavy compared to the present-day competition broadswords used by wushu martial athletes in competition in China.
My friend, it is a butter-fly twist; sometimes they can make it into a cork screw flip too. It is a very high level skill that a great athlete can perfect. Brendon is one of those. He went to China spending some years learning additional martial arts there, and the culture and the language, etc. But that's not all, he's a martial athlete who is quite well-rounded in so many martial arts disciplines and styles including Karate, TaeKwonDo, Judo, wrestling, Sanda/sanchou, kumdo/kendo, hapkido, etc
nice
aminjani 2 years ago
wow that is amazin how long he learned tht, this is top wushu form and the sword is heavy? wow and he makin it look so easy thats just amazin
lilwarrior89 2 years ago
@lilwarrior89 -Yes, that sword used is heavy. It is called Sun-Moon sword which is durable, sterdy and the blade is very sharp and flexible near the tip of the sword for added showmanship blade's noise.
Occasionally, incidents happen where spectators get cut because they stand a little bit too close.
So any spectator watching fast broadsword performance must stay clear, giving the performer enough space for their floor routines to avoid accident.
khmerkic 2 years ago
@khmerkic cool i have broadsword it ernt easy i thought it was easy to use at first wen i see the wushu or shaolin but wen the first time i used it it was heavy so its not easy to do that and u need alot cencontration u got good son man and it was worth it i wsh i was this good theirs some moves that i never seen 3.2 u said u he started at 14 now hes 20, so he learnd 6 yrs all this? wow
lilwarrior89 2 years ago
@lilwarrior89 - up to that time, in 2007, he had learned for 9 years in wushu and taiji.
With Brendon, you see moves you have not seen before, because the truth is that wushu must evolve like computers.
Some backward-minded people think that wushu has to remain old-style like in the 1960s. In fact, real wushu in China today has evolved so much that competitors overthere include so many new moves that some people have never seen before. This change is good, for the sake of wushu.
khmerkic 2 years ago
@lilwarrior89 - One best way to find out is to stay in china and train/compete in China; then one will see all the new changes and new moves they have never seen before.
Therefore, in a way, wushu is like a free-style acrobatic kungfu, and also is like American XMA ( extreme martial arts ) or free-style acrobatic martial arts.
khmerkic 2 years ago
you must be so proud to have son like this i wish i went to china atleast train shaolin its better when your young maybe when am older i try to go their anyway thnks for your help
lilwarrior89 2 years ago
Maybe you can go at the time you can make it.
khmerkic 2 years ago
wow that was great the blade was nearly invisible he was so fast
albus138 2 years ago
Extraordinary! Wow!
stretchsportguy 2 years ago
He is really good! Thanks for sharing :) - mbf
musicboxforever 2 years ago
Yes my friend George, I have just read it and replied. Thanks again.
khmerkic 2 years ago
Thank you for your comment. Actually the one Brendon used at that time is very heavy compared to the present-day competition broadswords used by wushu martial athletes in competition in China.
khmerkic 2 years ago
that was great man , brill job , loved the flip just close that the edge xD great skill xD
parkourjack1 2 years ago
My friend, it is a butter-fly twist; sometimes they can make it into a cork screw flip too. It is a very high level skill that a great athlete can perfect. Brendon is one of those. He went to China spending some years learning additional martial arts there, and the culture and the language, etc. But that's not all, he's a martial athlete who is quite well-rounded in so many martial arts disciplines and styles including Karate, TaeKwonDo, Judo, wrestling, Sanda/sanchou, kumdo/kendo, hapkido, etc
khmerkic 2 years ago
thankyou for the info
parkourjack1 2 years ago
omg wow, blast from the past! *sighs* i miss watching him perform so much! i miss you guys more! *hugs to all of you!
ktchupgrlky 2 years ago