Added: 4 years ago
From: mccarthysensei
Views: 45,078
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  • I wonder if this drill is performed in any other fighting arts?

  • @mccarthysensei Offhand, the closest I can think of is Wing Chun's Chi Sao drills

  • The first drill looked quite a bit like Wing Chun

  • I like it alot. Not only are the qualified people in the video showing amazing sensitivity and precession, but they are also showing the Trapping Range of Karate.

    Thank you.

  • So very cool!

  • The first drill reminds me a lot of wing chun's pak sao drill - interesting! I'll need to train once with Sensei Ludovic in Belgium Sensei Patrick!

  • Woah! Karate's Trapping is amazing!

  • Dear Sebas1277,

    We do not yet have official representation anywhere in South America, yet.

  • Does his school have some representative in Argentina or Latin America?

    Greetings from Argentina!

  • Tim san,

    Nice of you to drop by -much appreciated. Trust all is well in the big city and give my best to the mutant when next you see him.

  • Pat you have done a wonderful job with the drills and system overall. Very impressive my best to the kids and Mikey H sends his regards :)

  • Folks just to set the record straight if you look at the orgination of Combat jujusu you will see all of these formats of drill types taught for hand deflection, for toughening, for speed for many purposes, far before most of the ars you have named even existed in their recognized forms. But unfortunately the word jujutsu has come synonymous with grappling. Only those who truly understand JJ know the real facts sad but true.

  • Do these drills have changes applied in them?

    Ways of swtching from one side to the other?

    Ways of changing from one drill to he next?

    If not, then by speed repetitions they are teaching students to fall into traps and the much of the applications and positives of Wing Chun drilling has been missed in this version.

    Well done for seeing outside the Karate square though, Keep at it.

  • The answer to all three of your questions is yes. Some of the drills are Okinawan, some are Filipino, others are Southern Chinese. Wing Chun is southern chinese, and therefore there is alot of crossover.

  • Evil I must say this and i am not a student under Hanshi McCarthy but i do respect him never the less how can u compare your orange to his apple and then compliment him for being a good grape! U sir seemed to be so mystified by your opinion of WC that u seem to compare everything to it. instead forget your narrow opinion for a second and appreciate the beauty of the apple and realize there are many apples that doesnt make them grapes. look close youll see Hanshi Mccarthy is eating only apples.

  • I certainly hope they credit Wing Chun for stealing their Pak Sao and Elbow Drills. They are not prevalent in other SE Asian styles, just Win Chun. Only in recent years has this type of drill shown up in other styles, particularly Karate. I was wondering though. (see next post)

  • Also, I don't know about that. Usage of kakie drills, similar to those in Wing Chun, have been around for a while, just not as organized as this. The Okinawans give credit to the Chinese. The strongest influence is Southern Chinese. Seeing as though Yong Chun (Wing Chun) is a southern white crane system, then they (the Okinawans) do give credit. McCarthy Sensei has studied and is ranked in Okinawan Karate.

  • Actually I find that question refreshingly misinformed. In actuallity in Kempo which was introduced into jujutsu in 1500s which pre dates wing chun by 300 years at minimum used these type of drills constantly for training. Ive been doing Combat ujutsu for 39 yrs and am also a Wing Chun Inst and i can say for certain these drills were taught to me strictly from a jujutsu master who was 100% Japanese and would never look at a chinese system. I believe you may be a bit uninformed my friend

  • Nice drilling. I'm wondering why it's called "Koryu Uchinadi Tegumi" though. This isn't either "Koryu," Okinawan, or "Tegumi"

    Do you practice transitions and learn to weave with these drills?

  • I have seen some variation of these Same Drills from my Ryu Te Instructor . Excellent demonstration ... since these same Southern Chinese drills were probably known by the Te practitioners in Okinawa a Long time ago.

  • It's Gojo-Ryu-Karate

  • looks like wing chung

  • Nice :)

  • These are a compilation of hand drills common to SE Asian fighting arts and Southern-based quanfa that we've adopted into our interpretation of karate about twenty years ago.

  • What style of Karate is this? It is so cool

  • Real karate? what the hell, thats a rare thing to see. If your his students, bring people to class. MccarthySensei, you have my deepest respect and grattitude for mastering true martial arts and keeping these treasures alive for the next generation.

  • if only we could all do them at this speed and correctly too.

  • What would "correctly" look like to you?

  • 1. The correct movements learned from muscle memory.

    2. The intent of violent force without hurting your partner.

    3. Seeing that the partners performing understand the following of the tegumi: a. Practical applications and uses b. Mechanics of the movements (how it works) c. The human anatomy and physiology of the techniques (why they work on the human body)

  • very nice and interesting! looks similar to the tapi-tapi drills in Filipino Martial Arts. thanks for sharing the video.

  • alcune sequenze mi sembrano interressanti,altre troppo veloci da capire...:-)nel complesso bel video!!

  • Thankyou mio amico. Purtroppo, la fotocamera lo rende più veloce di guardare in realtà. Visita il nostro sito web, anche.

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