I was once given an aikido wrist lock..I immediately went to my knees in shock! Thank God it was only a demonstration..otherwise I would have lost my arm and wrist..!
well i am 15 years old and i ve been training for 9 years in karate taekwondo kung fu sambo and many other martial arts.my friend is a 2 dan aikido master.he told me to do anything i can to beat him.20 minutes and he kept throwing me like i was a 3 y.o child!and i am 15!he teached basic aikido.for me is the best martial art.
Akido works perfectly on defensive (maybe lethal if the defender wants to), but the offensive side is not so focused. So it'd be better to accompany Akido with something more aggressive, Karate or MMA or even boxing would help you.
But if you're just a peace-lover, like me, Akido is your best friend.
... I realised Aikido only works because the attackers obviously don't know how to punch, why's he punching the groin? :S I'd rather just kick it... :S
@vxa1314 After watching the video, I see what you mean. The attack, munetsuki, is a straight punch to the chest or abdomen. The strike, when done correctly can severely damage internal organs. In this case, the punch was exaggerated for demonstration purposes.
@BotMig ...Dude. Im a brown belt after 5 years of training. This is a great video. Just that hes doing a prolonged easier to do version for people to view. The faster way is to blend, trap the hand, use his momentum to pull him around and face you. Use your second hand to twist his wrist down and slam him on the floor, continuing swiftly so you can make use of that window of opportunity to lock him, and proceed with more painful locks. What my sensei called, the baby lock.
i just started 2 month ago with aikido. How long do you need to practice until you are "moderate skilled" ? Imho aikido is very difficult to learn, compared to other martial arts.
@motley0crue12 Just thought you ought to know, even though you're not taking aikido anyway. The only reason they punched to the stomach is because in a demonstration, you don't want to risk being hit in the face. Trust me, it works at head level as well. Obviously it involves a bit better reflexes, but it's essentially the same. I've practiced many aikdio moves where I had to defend against a head-level punch. the best is when you just throw them down in a twisting motion. Simple and effective!!
Vorrei informare tutti, che il Maestro in questione, nel video, sicuramente ha molta esperienza in arti marziali, ma pochissima di AIKIDO. Quello che fa vedere è pieno di errori, oltre al fatto che mi chiedo a che cosa serve far vedere queste cose, nessuno imparerebbe qualcosa. L' AIKIDO, quando lo metti in pratica, hai gia' perso, quello che avviene dopo è solo, capacita', destrezza e molta molta fortuna. Meglio una persona viva, che un' eroe morto!
Vorrei informare tutti, che il Maestro in questione, nel video, sicuramente ha molta esperienza in arti marziali, ma pochissima di AIKIDO. Quello che fa vedere è pieno di errori, oltre al fatto che mio chiedo a che cosa serve far vedere queste cose, nessuno imparerebbe qualcosa. L' AIKIDO, quando lo metti in pratica, hai gia' perso, quello che avviene dopo è solo, capacita', destrezza e molta molta fortuna. Meglio una persona viva, che un' eroe morto!
@motley0crue12 some aikido styles work remember you can strike as well your working to form on the mats. on the street form goes but then you have to ask your self is it worth it when your being sued because you snapped some punk's arm because there waving a knife for you wallet ??
@1089nat well if he was carrying a knife, and i snapped his arm.. he would be going to prison. im not starting this anyway, im doing Pentjak Silat now instead.
it's possible, with hard training, to do this move when the opponent punches really fast, not in a luck way, but like you know the perfect moment when he punches and when you should grab his arm?
there's a certain move for every attack i think... in kicks,punch or jab.. but the thing is, let us respect each style. Because we practice our art or style NOT to compete but to promote discipline in ourselves, so I think RESPECT is the keyword here.. no comparing.
there's a certain move for every attack i think... in kicks,punch or jab.. but the thing is, let us respect each style. Because we practice our art or style NOT to compete but to promote discipline in ourselves, so I think RESPECT is the keyword here.. no comparing..
If the person attacking was Karateka doing lunge punch or a brawler doing a similar motion, this could work. If it were a boxer however, this would never happen. Boxers never step into punches unless they're going for a knockout, and they would only do such a wild attack when it's assured they'd hit ie their opponent is already stunned. Doing so otherwise exposes the boxer, leaving them prone to counter attack and breaking all the principals of boxing.
@namayake plus it doesnt seem realistic to do this to a boxer cuz they tend to have a faster hand .. like they snap there hand back faster probly alot hard to catch.
@namayake yes, its true but boxing has limiitations in its range and motions as well as visibility and just generally anything outside of the arm striking range. This technique will work only when an attacker COMMITS to an attack. Which would be a haymaker or a long straight (stepped in), but the principle to learn is the universal motion of a straight committed attack. Could be a knife, stick, punch, etc. Through time, you learn to read the person and not think so much about "is it a jab?" etc.
@namayake I think theres a certain moce for a certain attack.. in a boxer? i think this is not applicable. but, theres a certain technique for that punches I think.. but anyways, let's not compare.. thing is, we practice our own style, NOT to compete with other styles but to use it when needed, so let us respect each other guys.
@cmMoon The problem here is that you think that we have to catch the punch, but no, that comes extra, the guy could even punch and take back his hand close to his body, but there is no way his entire body gets away from the person he's trying to punch. The point here is that we don't go and catch a hand, we go and apply the technique to the attacker's entire body, and also, we use the energy of both the attack and our own body: Not arm strength, no biceps; the whole body.
@Icekler i understand what yours saying about the leverage and using the person's momentum against them since I train in bjj but whats demonstrated in this video is him catching the punch which really isn't real likely to be done
@wildbill6976 yea but wat im sayin is that if u know how to really punch u shouldnt be off balance and sure as hell not be close enough to catch an elbow
What I loved about Ikkyo was that whenever I was the attacker, I had double-jointed elbows and they would just bother my training partner since we implemented the pin with Ikkyo.
Okay ncie vid, rly but all the time Uke is boxin down o.o? Why its not real... normally Uke try to punch in toris face ... or some pressure point but i cant see a point in the air :P
learning to control your emotions in a fight with the effects of adrenalin/dealing with the fear of a physical fight (i.e the 'fight or flight' situation imposed by the sympathetic nervous system) etc. IMHO as i have said before, the best policy is to avoid fights at all costs, but if you have to fight, then train in a realistic as possible way with resistance. If you have no other option but to fight, then fight to win. Remember that they are the attackers & you are responding in self defense.
In the final analysis, a martial art should try to address all possible contingencies. For example, grappling, offensive stand-up fighting, defensive stand-up, weapon defenses from baseball bats, knives, chains, swords, firearms, machete's, hammers, metal bars,etc, multiple unarmed and armed assailants too. The training system should incorporate other variables into the mix too. The terrain on which you are fighting on, fighting whilst maybe physically impaired, fighting tactics/logistics,
Sometimes it is necessary to have those offensive strikes in your repertoire. I'm
not advocating violence here, but in a serious self defense situation against hardened criminals,etc, if for whatever reason your aikido techniques don't work, then it's good to have alternative strategies in that situation. Also, if an aikidoka has never been hit hard before in training, then how does he/she know how they are going to react under that type of duress, if it happens to them in a real life fight.
Having trained in other martial arts besides aikido, i find that when i am fighting an aggressive MMA type fighter then usually i would employ techniques from more aggressive styles like aikijujutsu, jujitsu, wing chun, bjj, Muay Thai, western boxing, etc. For instance, if i'm taken to the ground, then aikido has no ne waza (apart from koseikan aikido). As a defensive art, although there is atemi in aikido, it is not of the same calibre as other more offensive systems, which is to be expected.
does one know how effective it will be against a skilled fighter, who isn't an average brawler. It is an unlikely hypothetical scenario which most probably very few of us will ever encounter, but i have always believed that aikido is primarily a budo art & therefore should be rigorously tested to see its' efficacy in different combat scenarios.
I think that although the techniques of unarmed combat in aikido are from kenjutsu/katana/spear arts, etc, they are still viable, in the modern world. They have definitely worked when i have had to use them. Another criticism levelled at aikido is unrealistic weak attacks from uke on tori. I wouldn't necessarily concur with that thinking, but i do think there should be more sparring between aikidoka's & boxers, karateka's, kung fu practitioners, bjj, etc. Unless the art is truly tested, then how
systems too. IMHO no martial art system has all the answers. A combination of martial arts in conjunction with more modern tactical training/special forces combatives is the key to a more comprehensive fighting system. A mixture of the classical arts in combination with more realistic training methodologies. Sometimes studying a traditional art's techniques which were specifically designed for certain weapons, such as the katana, etc of the samurai, maybe obsolete in a modern world.
Above all, i think that aikido, more than any other art i have studied is the most subtle. The use of the hips, nuance of tai sabaki, blending with the attacker, etc to produce a kuzushi effect is a really admirable quality that aikido possesses. It is an elegant system of self defense. I'm not sure how effective it would be against a hardened professional MMA fighter like Bas Rutten, etc, but that is why it is very important to cross train in other striking, grappling & primarily weapon based
Aikido is an art which is accused of too much co-operation between uke & nage/tori, without the resistance or 'alive' training methods of MMA's. In my experience, this maybe the case at a lower level, but resistance or reversals of tori's techniques are taught at a more advanced stage in an aikidoka's training. If given space to be mobile, techniques like the abbreviated form of iriminage will generally work against the average brawler that you are likely to meet in a real life confrontation.
others, depending on the situation, but i have always believed the tenets of a martial way of life are more than just fighting. Discipline, respect, perseverance, diligence, industriousness, tolerance, kindness of spirit, etc are the things that true budo tries to engender in it's students. It is not just about fighting. Speak to anyone who has been involved in real fighting/ war situations & life or death fighting is not a pleasant thing to do. There is no glamour in fighting, so concentrate
just going to get you seriously injured, regardless of the prowess of bjj in a 1-on-1 fight. Use one's mind to avoid conflict. Anticipate & be very aware of your environment. That way you may be able to avoid confrontations before the need to resolve them with physical force arises. Fighting is a last resort & it amazes me how certain martial artists threaten other practitioners of different arts about the validity of their art. Yes, maybe some styles might be perceived as more effective than
The filipino martal arts like kali/arnis or the Bruneian systems of silat are also formidable fighting arts, but i think that they are almost too aggressive in their response to an attacker, especially considering that legal concerns have to be addressed. Life is not like the movies and sometimes certain martial arts responses are too aggressive / possibly lethal in countering assaults. Yes it is important to be safe, but you don't want to be prosecuted for 'gbh', 'abh' or manslaughter either!
unarmed/weapon combat too. Some of the nicest people in the martial arts i have met are aikidoka's & i think it is a more discerning defensive system for people who want to give a measured response to an attacker, rather than all out explosive violence from arts like muay thai, karate, wing chun, goshinkwai yawara, etc. In terms of the law, then aikido's restraining techniques definitely would be construed as 'reasonable force' in countering an attacker, in a self defense situation.
comments, because i really respect the art of aikido. The ability to take a punch, kick, etc if things haven't gone to plan are important & there isn't any of that kind of 'reality' training, if you are hit, which are present in systems like 'krav maga' or 'goshinkwai yawara', etc. The ability to take a shot or two & still fight on whilst possibly being concussed,etc, or being able to control your adrenalin in a fight situation are important & training should try to simulate that aspect of
aikido in a multiple opponent or armed assailant confrontation. The ability to be mobile, hence evading an attack & using principles such as 'kuzushi' are IMO very effective at dealing with those types of assaults. The drawbacks to aikido are obvious. There is no 'ne waza' (apart from Koseikan) and therefore the aikidoka is very vulnerable to a skilled grappler. Also in my experience i do find that most aikidoka are not the most physically conditioned of fighters. Please don't misunderstand my
MMA is not a 'new' concept. Martial artists have been cross training, long before Bruce Lee formed Jeet kune do. Having studied goju ryu karate, wing chun kung fu, bjj, budo taijutsu, western boxing, fudoshin aikido, muay boran/muay thai & am currently learning daito ryu aikijujutsu, i ferv ently believe that aikido is a great form of self defense, especially in the higher dan grades. BJJ is great in a one on one unarmed situation against any other single art, but is much less effective than
As any aikidoka knows, there are many styles of aikido which branched out from the original daito ryu aikijujutsu/aikikai routes of aikido. Koseikan & Yoshinkan are regarded as harder syles, whereas iwama ryu, aikikai, ki aikido,etc are progressively, so called 'softer' styles. Mōchizuki Minoru, the founder of 'Koseikan' was an expert in many forms of martial art i.e. judo, karate, iado, jiu jitsu, etc but his style is considered as a form of aikido. For detractors of aikido, contemplate that.
I'm looking into many martial arts and it seems to me like Aikido is one of the main ones when it comes to arm and wrist manipulations and I'm pretty interested in it.
To me, for everyone arguing, Aikido seems pretty good if your skilled at it. However, it seems to have a long practice-to-efficency time. A student would have to take at least 6-8 months of training in order to use it effectively in a fight whereas a more aggressive MA, like BJJ would only take a person about half that.
that may be true (Gullick), and of course it all depends upon the individual and his/her dedication, acumen, instructors, etc.. aikido may take me years to learn for combat value, but its principles help me avoid combat at the verbal level every day. but go with whichever one feels the best for you. all of the arts are great.
i doing aikido my self...and karate, so i can tell u this works against a bad fighter, for example in a bar fight, but grapping thin punching hand of skilled fighter is nearly impossible...however there are lots of other things u can do to him *gg*
My cousin has trained aikido. He told me to punch him, so i did, i waited <a little, trying to surprise him, and before i could react he had slammed me to the floor and held me in a grip where he coul snap my wrist right off. Aikido does work!
@Ffojt sure kiddo, problems, aikido requires you to reach out first which you are describing before you even moved, second aikido deals with only 1 attack at a time, if you throw a balanced punch you wont be thrown off center if you miss, thus when he grabs your arm and turns he is presenting his ear, punching just ahead of the ear will knock him out if you've any experience as a fighter, you could also fall backward and pull him on top of you, wrestling would then defeat him, eg do mma
@azreal289 I disagree... Aikido is all about using the attackers energy.. We're not talking "the force", we are talking about the energy an object uses to move. When you do this you get extreme speed and the person would have NO change to react, no matter how quick he was. This is extreme basics in the vid, but no, you wont have any time to attack when being thrown, slammed, locked or whatever the erson does..
@Ffojt Yeras ago I taught my 9 year old cousin a move in about 5 minutes that would be useful for a girl growing up - where a guy might grab her arm to control her...my uncle/auntie said its useless - shes too small to defend against someone your size. I told her not to think and just react next time...she threw me back so hard that if the couch wasn't there my head would have gone through the window...they didn't say much negative after that...lol
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wow ikyyo is fucking tards, look as the master did the first move to "trap the hand or wahtever" and move inside, the apprentice would immediately use the other hand and throw a punch right to the side of the head, isnt tht stupid? , guys look more closely, pause at the part where the master traps the hand, did u see the "open" path to the master's head? BAM. there it goes ur head has been KO
trust me I'm a karateka and if you would know anything about real fighting, not stupid street fighting, you'd know that if someone know's how to set that ikyyo on you, you'r fucked. There's no time for your fantasies of punching his head and knock him out. I also thought that and told my master. As a result of that my arm was broken. Not by purpose for sure ;-p. all that yust because I tryd to hit him jo-dan. Is is effective.
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THIS would NEVER work with a punch, ONLY if someone grabs for a gun from your side holster. So even though aikido cant work in fist fights there is a place for it in law enforcement, IF aikido is modified with common sense.
no, but in a street fight no one follow rules, they can punch whatever they want, and you need to be ready for anything, not just for what you learned
However - It only works for the strong-hearted, and for people with fast reflexes/movements. You need to move in fast, otherwise your opponent has time to attack once more, or tense their arm so that it gets harder to proceed through that arm lock.
This is a portion of an extremely basic Aikido kata, part of a set excellent video clips by Sensei Mastison. The most basic control Ikkyo is shown in response to a variety of static attacks. These static attacks are conceptual abstractions as is true of all Aikido kata. This clip is not intended as any sort of self-defense demonstration.
What you see here is part of the one of the steps that the "dancer" (Aikidoist) must learn. It is not the dance ... there is no music.
i agree not very likely.. thankfully ikkyo can be modified for different attacks, this expert village demonstrations are pretty poor but i guess there is not much on youtube for aikido beside this.
@bushwhacker2k If your still in high/mid school people are that dumb lol in my 8th grade class only about 6 other kids out of 113 knew better including me.
I remember taking this lesson when I used to train this martial art... It always felt good when you did this to a person, it makes you feel safe hahaha
the instructor left himself open many many times for the other hand to smack him in the ribs!
you go tenkan to the punch, use your forearm against the shoulder/armpit area so he can't turn round and punch you, then you take the wrist into ikkyo!
i'm only 2nd kyu and i could have demonstrated this better!
I think it's because he's explaining at the same time, so he's multitasking, and it isn't the focus of this video. I don't suppose he'll be letting himself open like that in a real fight when he's concentrating :)
The point of the step by step instruction is to show what he is doing once you practice this technic you will see that everything all rolls into one single motion
Aikido is too awkward to watch or even talk about... I feel bad for poor women who walk out of Aikido class with great confidence and belief in their ability to defend themselves when needed, well news for you, Aikido is not the answer. It might be good excercise, but it is not applicable in any sort of real life situation.
Wrong. My Uncle was a bouncer for 30 years and had learnt Akido & Boxing for 15 Years from a Master (his Uncle). It has proved Effective in almost every situation even when he is outnumbered.
actually if youve ever taken an aikido class youd know that its not only one of the hardest martial arts to learn but probably the most effective. also ever since my first class i realised a professional mma fighter cant land a hit on an aikido black belt
If you claim it is the "most effective", then you must have proof; post it. If you think a gaykido clown can take out an mma figher, post the proof. If you cannot back up any of what you say, you're just another deluded, fucktarded gaykido cultist without a clue.
Lol, touchy aren't we! you need to relax man, I just said every style has it's strengths and weaknesses. UFC guys are indeed tough, but not the most dangerous people on the planet. UFC is a great tool for conditioning and learning the basics. There is a whole world of techniques unavailable to MMA guys. Eye gouging, groin strikes, etc. I just think the more you know the better you are, so criticizing one style is pretty pointless. Youtube SIlat Suffian Bela Diri
you sir, are forgetting a small point in this video.
It's for BEGINNERS. So he's showing it slowly.
In reality, Ikkyo and all other techniques are done in less than a second, not to mention that UFC fighters are fighting unbalancedly, so if you attack carefully you can make them fall quite easily.
you guys are ridiculous. every style has strengths and weaknesses. To be a good fighter, it is important to at least be familiar with several styles. UFC guys are not the toughest guys, just the best fighters. You want tough, go find some special forces guy holed up in Afghanistan that doesn't train to fight, but to kill, there is a big difference.
The special forces guy would kill an UFC fighter assuming both had weapons, unarmed, regardless of environment the UFC fighter would win, close combat taught in the military is often meant to be employed in disarming or neutralising an opponent, surely the special forces guy will have an advantage over the average male but that advantage is not vast.
i have to disagree the special forces guy would take him out either way. ufc fights are use to reffs and rules the special forces are trained to kill. no rules just survival.
These techniques are outdated...This would never work against a trained boxer or kickboxer. The reality is you wouldn't have the reaction time necessary to sidestep and grap that body punch. If i throw a body punch with power, there's now way you'll grap my wrist. FACT !!
thats true liquid636, in a real fight it goes intense and goes over to wrestling, u get tired already within 20 seconds, thats true. but this teqhnicues still count something in the learning of balance and movements, u can maybe perform one tecnique like a self-instinct, if u get used to this.
I've done ikkyo in a fight. It's best suited to countering a hook. As for a body punch i prefer blending to a throw or sweep. You like striking appearently and so do I but I belive I could easily wrist lock you in a fight.
okay, just to solve the problems here... Break down a punch, any good fighter is going to pull the punch back twice as fast as they threw it, turning the hips for the follow-up punch from the free hand... As you trap the first punch and they pull back, you're pushing back with his wrist, so he can't turn his hips to use his other hand, make sense? Nobody can punch through their own torso, it's just not worth it.
Even if the attacker doesn't step, and depending on how far the person was away from you to start the attack, they may or may not, the technique will still work. In a real situation, what you see in the video will take place in a time span of maybe 2 seconds and an attacker will likely not have time to react before he goes face first into the pavement.
erm i dont think so while you were trappin the hand you would probably feel his other fist in your head!. if the attacker had any arm strength this would not work FACT!
Like I said, the whole thing would happen within a second or 2. The attacker would be on the ground before he could react with his other hand. But if you don't think it will work, look up the Sensei demostrating the moves, go to his dojo (its in Phoenix) and try to punch him. I have a feeling you'll end up face down on the floor with your limbs bent up like pretzels.
if i could i would but living in england its a bit far for me to travel. try watch some ufc or wec events thats how to learn proper martial arts and defence having trained for 4yrs i like to think i know wat im talkin about u neva just throw one punch at a time you through punches in bunches havin the dude in his pj's knocked out or needin alittle dental work
No, UFC will teach you how to fight, not teach martial arts. Thats why its called the Ultimate FIGHTING Championship. But I'm sure after 4 years you know everything there is to know about anything martial arts...
I have watched UFC, looks like a couple of guys with limited skills fooling around in a contest one step above WWE wrestling. I'd like to see a truly skilled martial artist (Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Hirokazu Kanazawa) go against someone like Anderson Silva. Lee would tear Silva apart
dont u every say UFC and martial arts in the same sentence again. Thats ludacris. I see places that teach "MMA" on the side of the road. thats real martial arts im sure. *rolls eyes*
Actually Mark you mostly only throw one punch at a time. How dumb are you? Every combanation is one punch at a time in a sequence. Now if you are prone to using the doulbe fist punch alot I'm wrong.
I was once given an aikido wrist lock..I immediately went to my knees in shock! Thank God it was only a demonstration..otherwise I would have lost my arm and wrist..!
homevideowatcher78 1 month ago
well i am 15 years old and i ve been training for 9 years in karate taekwondo kung fu sambo and many other martial arts.my friend is a 2 dan aikido master.he told me to do anything i can to beat him.20 minutes and he kept throwing me like i was a 3 y.o child!and i am 15!he teached basic aikido.for me is the best martial art.
ILiasMani 4 months ago
Yes, it's the real deal... I've been a cop for 17 years, taught Aikido for 14. There's no BS involved. It's all business.
IronHorse210 4 months ago
Akido works perfectly on defensive (maybe lethal if the defender wants to), but the offensive side is not so focused. So it'd be better to accompany Akido with something more aggressive, Karate or MMA or even boxing would help you.
But if you're just a peace-lover, like me, Akido is your best friend.
keiteenguyen 4 months ago
Technically this is Nikyo... the difference being in the hand grip and pin.
StormbringerStudios 5 months ago
Too many mistakes in this technique. This wouldnt work in real combat whatsoever.
Kenshincz 5 months ago
... I realised Aikido only works because the attackers obviously don't know how to punch, why's he punching the groin? :S I'd rather just kick it... :S
vxa1314 6 months ago
@vxa1314 After watching the video, I see what you mean. The attack, munetsuki, is a straight punch to the chest or abdomen. The strike, when done correctly can severely damage internal organs. In this case, the punch was exaggerated for demonstration purposes.
StormbringerStudios 5 months ago
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BotMig 7 months ago
@BotMig ...Dude. Im a brown belt after 5 years of training. This is a great video. Just that hes doing a prolonged easier to do version for people to view. The faster way is to blend, trap the hand, use his momentum to pull him around and face you. Use your second hand to twist his wrist down and slam him on the floor, continuing swiftly so you can make use of that window of opportunity to lock him, and proceed with more painful locks. What my sensei called, the baby lock.
genocidal123 7 months ago 2
i just started 2 month ago with aikido. How long do you need to practice until you are "moderate skilled" ? Imho aikido is very difficult to learn, compared to other martial arts.
HgMichA 8 months ago
@HgMichA I have practised for 5 years and still have the same feeling like yours. That is a long journey.
Aria132 7 months ago
@motley0crue12 Just thought you ought to know, even though you're not taking aikido anyway. The only reason they punched to the stomach is because in a demonstration, you don't want to risk being hit in the face. Trust me, it works at head level as well. Obviously it involves a bit better reflexes, but it's essentially the same. I've practiced many aikdio moves where I had to defend against a head-level punch. the best is when you just throw them down in a twisting motion. Simple and effective!!
MetalicAtheist 8 months ago
i love these movies lesson.
the advice of the Sensei are very accuracy and helpful for me.
thanks a lot! 練習頑張りましょう!ありがとうございます!
sakura0jp0aikidodesu 9 months ago
Vorrei informare tutti, che il Maestro in questione, nel video, sicuramente ha molta esperienza in arti marziali, ma pochissima di AIKIDO. Quello che fa vedere è pieno di errori, oltre al fatto che mi chiedo a che cosa serve far vedere queste cose, nessuno imparerebbe qualcosa. L' AIKIDO, quando lo metti in pratica, hai gia' perso, quello che avviene dopo è solo, capacita', destrezza e molta molta fortuna. Meglio una persona viva, che un' eroe morto!
katana126 9 months ago
Vorrei informare tutti, che il Maestro in questione, nel video, sicuramente ha molta esperienza in arti marziali, ma pochissima di AIKIDO. Quello che fa vedere è pieno di errori, oltre al fatto che mio chiedo a che cosa serve far vedere queste cose, nessuno imparerebbe qualcosa. L' AIKIDO, quando lo metti in pratica, hai gia' perso, quello che avviene dopo è solo, capacita', destrezza e molta molta fortuna. Meglio una persona viva, che un' eroe morto!
katana126 9 months ago
Comment removed
1089nat 10 months ago
@motley0crue12 some aikido styles work remember you can strike as well your working to form on the mats. on the street form goes but then you have to ask your self is it worth it when your being sued because you snapped some punk's arm because there waving a knife for you wallet ??
1089nat 10 months ago
@1089nat well if he was carrying a knife, and i snapped his arm.. he would be going to prison. im not starting this anyway, im doing Pentjak Silat now instead.
motley0crue12 10 months ago
@motley0crue12 ok
1089nat 10 months ago
it's possible, with hard training, to do this move when the opponent punches really fast, not in a luck way, but like you know the perfect moment when he punches and when you should grab his arm?
seusgordo 1 year ago
there's a certain move for every attack i think... in kicks,punch or jab.. but the thing is, let us respect each style. Because we practice our art or style NOT to compete but to promote discipline in ourselves, so I think RESPECT is the keyword here.. no comparing.
Daredamunuga 1 year ago
there's a certain move for every attack i think... in kicks,punch or jab.. but the thing is, let us respect each style. Because we practice our art or style NOT to compete but to promote discipline in ourselves, so I think RESPECT is the keyword here.. no comparing..
Daredamunuga 1 year ago
Sweet, now I know how to counter nutshots
Squirreldeath 1 year ago
If the person attacking was Karateka doing lunge punch or a brawler doing a similar motion, this could work. If it were a boxer however, this would never happen. Boxers never step into punches unless they're going for a knockout, and they would only do such a wild attack when it's assured they'd hit ie their opponent is already stunned. Doing so otherwise exposes the boxer, leaving them prone to counter attack and breaking all the principals of boxing.
namayake 1 year ago
@namayake plus it doesnt seem realistic to do this to a boxer cuz they tend to have a faster hand .. like they snap there hand back faster probly alot hard to catch.
tharguyoverthere16 1 year ago
@namayake yes, its true but boxing has limiitations in its range and motions as well as visibility and just generally anything outside of the arm striking range. This technique will work only when an attacker COMMITS to an attack. Which would be a haymaker or a long straight (stepped in), but the principle to learn is the universal motion of a straight committed attack. Could be a knife, stick, punch, etc. Through time, you learn to read the person and not think so much about "is it a jab?" etc.
PancakePlease 1 year ago
@namayake I think theres a certain moce for a certain attack.. in a boxer? i think this is not applicable. but, theres a certain technique for that punches I think.. but anyways, let's not compare.. thing is, we practice our own style, NOT to compete with other styles but to use it when needed, so let us respect each other guys.
Daredamunuga 1 year ago
"strike to the abdomen right here...boom"
lolol
Zowez 1 year ago
KEEP YOUR BODY CENTER!
supah1337B 1 year ago
When I hear "trap the hand" my eyes glaze over
Derukugi2 1 year ago
شكراً معلم
shsh97com 1 year ago
@cmMoon The problem here is that you think that we have to catch the punch, but no, that comes extra, the guy could even punch and take back his hand close to his body, but there is no way his entire body gets away from the person he's trying to punch. The point here is that we don't go and catch a hand, we go and apply the technique to the attacker's entire body, and also, we use the energy of both the attack and our own body: Not arm strength, no biceps; the whole body.
Icekler 1 year ago
@Icekler i understand what yours saying about the leverage and using the person's momentum against them since I train in bjj but whats demonstrated in this video is him catching the punch which really isn't real likely to be done
cmMoon 1 year ago
@cmMoon Yeah, I agree, this is not a good aikido video. I've seen better.
Icekler 1 year ago
@cmMoon even if you miss the punch, you're in a perfect position for a elbow shot at his head while he's still traveling forward and off balance.
wildbill6976 1 year ago
@wildbill6976 yea but wat im sayin is that if u know how to really punch u shouldnt be off balance and sure as hell not be close enough to catch an elbow
cmMoon 1 year ago
i <3 aikikai :P
CrazeKillen 1 year ago
there is a big problem with this .. and it starts very early on, try guessing what is the problem with this video..
that is why you wot be able to do it in real life. there are actually MANY problems with this
this is for fun. if i was to correct all moves shown on youtube i would waste my life
TheRogueMonk 1 year ago
im still waiting for this crap to hit mma... nothing yet HAHAHA
useless in real life applications
jeepdude770 1 year ago
Watching these videos are making me miss Aikido.
What I loved about Ikkyo was that whenever I was the attacker, I had double-jointed elbows and they would just bother my training partner since we implemented the pin with Ikkyo.
Saihei 1 year ago
aikido is really effective..
i was able to wrist lock a bully who tried tried to choke me to death in school.
anirudhkrishnamani 1 year ago
@martialway100 d fak dude
pelemashinica 1 year ago
Okay ncie vid, rly but all the time Uke is boxin down o.o? Why its not real... normally Uke try to punch in toris face ... or some pressure point but i cant see a point in the air :P
Metaller15 1 year ago
you can use that for a thrusting knife attack
kwekhc007 1 year ago
@kwekhc007 you right if it was a knife it would work.. that is why this guy automaticly thinks it works with a punch.
TheRogueMonk 1 year ago
learning to control your emotions in a fight with the effects of adrenalin/dealing with the fear of a physical fight (i.e the 'fight or flight' situation imposed by the sympathetic nervous system) etc. IMHO as i have said before, the best policy is to avoid fights at all costs, but if you have to fight, then train in a realistic as possible way with resistance. If you have no other option but to fight, then fight to win. Remember that they are the attackers & you are responding in self defense.
martialway100 1 year ago
In the final analysis, a martial art should try to address all possible contingencies. For example, grappling, offensive stand-up fighting, defensive stand-up, weapon defenses from baseball bats, knives, chains, swords, firearms, machete's, hammers, metal bars,etc, multiple unarmed and armed assailants too. The training system should incorporate other variables into the mix too. The terrain on which you are fighting on, fighting whilst maybe physically impaired, fighting tactics/logistics,
martialway100 1 year ago
Sometimes it is necessary to have those offensive strikes in your repertoire. I'm
not advocating violence here, but in a serious self defense situation against hardened criminals,etc, if for whatever reason your aikido techniques don't work, then it's good to have alternative strategies in that situation. Also, if an aikidoka has never been hit hard before in training, then how does he/she know how they are going to react under that type of duress, if it happens to them in a real life fight.
martialway100 1 year ago
Having trained in other martial arts besides aikido, i find that when i am fighting an aggressive MMA type fighter then usually i would employ techniques from more aggressive styles like aikijujutsu, jujitsu, wing chun, bjj, Muay Thai, western boxing, etc. For instance, if i'm taken to the ground, then aikido has no ne waza (apart from koseikan aikido). As a defensive art, although there is atemi in aikido, it is not of the same calibre as other more offensive systems, which is to be expected.
martialway100 1 year ago
does one know how effective it will be against a skilled fighter, who isn't an average brawler. It is an unlikely hypothetical scenario which most probably very few of us will ever encounter, but i have always believed that aikido is primarily a budo art & therefore should be rigorously tested to see its' efficacy in different combat scenarios.
martialway100 1 year ago
I think that although the techniques of unarmed combat in aikido are from kenjutsu/katana/spear arts, etc, they are still viable, in the modern world. They have definitely worked when i have had to use them. Another criticism levelled at aikido is unrealistic weak attacks from uke on tori. I wouldn't necessarily concur with that thinking, but i do think there should be more sparring between aikidoka's & boxers, karateka's, kung fu practitioners, bjj, etc. Unless the art is truly tested, then how
martialway100 1 year ago
systems too. IMHO no martial art system has all the answers. A combination of martial arts in conjunction with more modern tactical training/special forces combatives is the key to a more comprehensive fighting system. A mixture of the classical arts in combination with more realistic training methodologies. Sometimes studying a traditional art's techniques which were specifically designed for certain weapons, such as the katana, etc of the samurai, maybe obsolete in a modern world.
martialway100 1 year ago
Above all, i think that aikido, more than any other art i have studied is the most subtle. The use of the hips, nuance of tai sabaki, blending with the attacker, etc to produce a kuzushi effect is a really admirable quality that aikido possesses. It is an elegant system of self defense. I'm not sure how effective it would be against a hardened professional MMA fighter like Bas Rutten, etc, but that is why it is very important to cross train in other striking, grappling & primarily weapon based
martialway100 1 year ago
Aikido is an art which is accused of too much co-operation between uke & nage/tori, without the resistance or 'alive' training methods of MMA's. In my experience, this maybe the case at a lower level, but resistance or reversals of tori's techniques are taught at a more advanced stage in an aikidoka's training. If given space to be mobile, techniques like the abbreviated form of iriminage will generally work against the average brawler that you are likely to meet in a real life confrontation.
martialway100 1 year ago
IMHO on more constructive things in life.
martialway100 1 year ago
others, depending on the situation, but i have always believed the tenets of a martial way of life are more than just fighting. Discipline, respect, perseverance, diligence, industriousness, tolerance, kindness of spirit, etc are the things that true budo tries to engender in it's students. It is not just about fighting. Speak to anyone who has been involved in real fighting/ war situations & life or death fighting is not a pleasant thing to do. There is no glamour in fighting, so concentrate
martialway100 1 year ago 2
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martialway100 1 year ago
just going to get you seriously injured, regardless of the prowess of bjj in a 1-on-1 fight. Use one's mind to avoid conflict. Anticipate & be very aware of your environment. That way you may be able to avoid confrontations before the need to resolve them with physical force arises. Fighting is a last resort & it amazes me how certain martial artists threaten other practitioners of different arts about the validity of their art. Yes, maybe some styles might be perceived as more effective than
martialway100 1 year ago
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martialway100 1 year ago
The filipino martal arts like kali/arnis or the Bruneian systems of silat are also formidable fighting arts, but i think that they are almost too aggressive in their response to an attacker, especially considering that legal concerns have to be addressed. Life is not like the movies and sometimes certain martial arts responses are too aggressive / possibly lethal in countering assaults. Yes it is important to be safe, but you don't want to be prosecuted for 'gbh', 'abh' or manslaughter either!
martialway100 1 year ago
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martialway100 1 year ago
unarmed/weapon combat too. Some of the nicest people in the martial arts i have met are aikidoka's & i think it is a more discerning defensive system for people who want to give a measured response to an attacker, rather than all out explosive violence from arts like muay thai, karate, wing chun, goshinkwai yawara, etc. In terms of the law, then aikido's restraining techniques definitely would be construed as 'reasonable force' in countering an attacker, in a self defense situation.
martialway100 1 year ago
comments, because i really respect the art of aikido. The ability to take a punch, kick, etc if things haven't gone to plan are important & there isn't any of that kind of 'reality' training, if you are hit, which are present in systems like 'krav maga' or 'goshinkwai yawara', etc. The ability to take a shot or two & still fight on whilst possibly being concussed,etc, or being able to control your adrenalin in a fight situation are important & training should try to simulate that aspect of
martialway100 1 year ago
aikido in a multiple opponent or armed assailant confrontation. The ability to be mobile, hence evading an attack & using principles such as 'kuzushi' are IMO very effective at dealing with those types of assaults. The drawbacks to aikido are obvious. There is no 'ne waza' (apart from Koseikan) and therefore the aikidoka is very vulnerable to a skilled grappler. Also in my experience i do find that most aikidoka are not the most physically conditioned of fighters. Please don't misunderstand my
martialway100 1 year ago
MMA is not a 'new' concept. Martial artists have been cross training, long before Bruce Lee formed Jeet kune do. Having studied goju ryu karate, wing chun kung fu, bjj, budo taijutsu, western boxing, fudoshin aikido, muay boran/muay thai & am currently learning daito ryu aikijujutsu, i ferv ently believe that aikido is a great form of self defense, especially in the higher dan grades. BJJ is great in a one on one unarmed situation against any other single art, but is much less effective than
martialway100 1 year ago
As any aikidoka knows, there are many styles of aikido which branched out from the original daito ryu aikijujutsu/aikikai routes of aikido. Koseikan & Yoshinkan are regarded as harder syles, whereas iwama ryu, aikikai, ki aikido,etc are progressively, so called 'softer' styles. Mōchizuki Minoru, the founder of 'Koseikan' was an expert in many forms of martial art i.e. judo, karate, iado, jiu jitsu, etc but his style is considered as a form of aikido. For detractors of aikido, contemplate that.
martialway100 1 year ago
Ya, I bite the opponents ankles so none of these counters are usable.
20alphabet 2 years ago
i just started aikido and im learnin my basic grabs blocks and locks
ive read tht critics find the attacker to be a bit sloppy in training as it would not happen in reality
but the basic attack what an untrained attacker would use is a punch...wich aikido counters fairly well
also ppl always say no1 ever grabs ur wrists in a fight
well ppl dont notice it..half the time of a fight a n untrained attacker will try to grab ur arms to "disarm" you
:P
InkGraff 2 years ago
It is interesting how easily one can provoke the attacker to grab you.
Anyways, the basic idea of Aikido is to learn the kata... simply to forget it later on.
You become one with the Ai-Ki-Do and use it without thinking.
Aikido is nothing for anyone who wants to learn how to defend himself fast. It is not self-defense. It is a martial ART.
Actual combat is an aspect that you get to above 3.dan.
FinalKenny2 2 years ago
thanks for share this techniques.
the camera should take the pics on various angle.
cassavaeater 2 years ago
I'm looking into many martial arts and it seems to me like Aikido is one of the main ones when it comes to arm and wrist manipulations and I'm pretty interested in it.
To me, for everyone arguing, Aikido seems pretty good if your skilled at it. However, it seems to have a long practice-to-efficency time. A student would have to take at least 6-8 months of training in order to use it effectively in a fight whereas a more aggressive MA, like BJJ would only take a person about half that.
Gullick 2 years ago
that may be true (Gullick), and of course it all depends upon the individual and his/her dedication, acumen, instructors, etc.. aikido may take me years to learn for combat value, but its principles help me avoid combat at the verbal level every day. but go with whichever one feels the best for you. all of the arts are great.
sonsofdon 2 years ago
i doing aikido my self...and karate, so i can tell u this works against a bad fighter, for example in a bar fight, but grapping thin punching hand of skilled fighter is nearly impossible...however there are lots of other things u can do to him *gg*
Cyb3rus 2 years ago
My cousin has trained aikido. He told me to punch him, so i did, i waited <a little, trying to surprise him, and before i could react he had slammed me to the floor and held me in a grip where he coul snap my wrist right off. Aikido does work!
Ffojt 2 years ago 52
try to fight an aikidoka from this starting point:
you shook hands, and you are still holding eachothers hand.
whatever you do, you're fucked.
and i did judo for 15 years.
even that has no use xD
wubs23 2 years ago
@Ffojt sure kiddo, problems, aikido requires you to reach out first which you are describing before you even moved, second aikido deals with only 1 attack at a time, if you throw a balanced punch you wont be thrown off center if you miss, thus when he grabs your arm and turns he is presenting his ear, punching just ahead of the ear will knock him out if you've any experience as a fighter, you could also fall backward and pull him on top of you, wrestling would then defeat him, eg do mma
azreal289 1 year ago
@azreal289 I disagree... Aikido is all about using the attackers energy.. We're not talking "the force", we are talking about the energy an object uses to move. When you do this you get extreme speed and the person would have NO change to react, no matter how quick he was. This is extreme basics in the vid, but no, you wont have any time to attack when being thrown, slammed, locked or whatever the erson does..
Ffojt 1 year ago
@Ffojt what if u kicked him instead and said u punched him with ur foot lol
juanaguitar 1 year ago
@Ffojt Yeras ago I taught my 9 year old cousin a move in about 5 minutes that would be useful for a girl growing up - where a guy might grab her arm to control her...my uncle/auntie said its useless - shes too small to defend against someone your size. I told her not to think and just react next time...she threw me back so hard that if the couch wasn't there my head would have gone through the window...they didn't say much negative after that...lol
salsalover69laters 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@Ffojt no you are probably just a pussy
kolonelalcazar 4 months ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
wow ikyyo is fucking tards, look as the master did the first move to "trap the hand or wahtever" and move inside, the apprentice would immediately use the other hand and throw a punch right to the side of the head, isnt tht stupid? , guys look more closely, pause at the part where the master traps the hand, did u see the "open" path to the master's head? BAM. there it goes ur head has been KO
lordlutari 2 years ago
how much do u know about martial arts? once he has his hand the guy cant pick his nose without the master's permission
Ap0colyps6 2 years ago 3
You know what happened to the last guy who complained about such things while training?
Let's just say that his wrist was held with two fingers and screamed like someone was ripping off his legs.
FinalKenny2 2 years ago
ahahahaha
good 1
xD
InkGraff 2 years ago
Your wrist would be broken before you cocked your fist back. I trained in a bit of this for corrections training and you really are immobalized.
clancy6969 2 years ago
he is just underrestimating aikido
berser50 2 years ago 3
@ lordlutari
trust me I'm a karateka and if you would know anything about real fighting, not stupid street fighting, you'd know that if someone know's how to set that ikyyo on you, you'r fucked. There's no time for your fantasies of punching his head and knock him out. I also thought that and told my master. As a result of that my arm was broken. Not by purpose for sure ;-p. all that yust because I tryd to hit him jo-dan. Is is effective.
sry for my english
Misantropie 2 years ago 4
you would be supprised ive used ikkyo on numerous occasions in a ''fist fight''
jeffnicholas16 2 years ago 3
This comment has received too many negative votes show
THIS would NEVER work with a punch, ONLY if someone grabs for a gun from your side holster. So even though aikido cant work in fist fights there is a place for it in law enforcement, IF aikido is modified with common sense.
IMnotSAS 2 years ago
oh yes master. thank you for spreading your wisdom
nikomof 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
look at these fat overweight out of shape Americans, they sure know their moves but can't dance or they'll sweat to hard & become breathless,,lol
CreativeCritisizm 2 years ago
instead just the punch there can be knife as well
J4nek 2 years ago
the result will be the same
fidodidogr 2 years ago 2
no, but in a street fight no one follow rules, they can punch whatever they want, and you need to be ready for anything, not just for what you learned
ichiberto 2 years ago 4
no one would punch in this way
Pycckuu1989 2 years ago
Nice vid :]
However - It only works for the strong-hearted, and for people with fast reflexes/movements. You need to move in fast, otherwise your opponent has time to attack once more, or tense their arm so that it gets harder to proceed through that arm lock.
Nirophyte 2 years ago
erm isnt this why we train, your talking like u can watch this and go out and do it for real. fool
ukmale164 2 years ago 2
OH, THERE IS NOTHING I LIKE MORE THAN A TENSE WRIST...all the more easier to SNAP!!!
opticannon 2 years ago
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Sabomnim888 2 years ago
Give Hapkido it's due. Ushiba pulled from a few different arts.
Sabomnim888 2 years ago
This is a portion of an extremely basic Aikido kata, part of a set excellent video clips by Sensei Mastison. The most basic control Ikkyo is shown in response to a variety of static attacks. These static attacks are conceptual abstractions as is true of all Aikido kata. This clip is not intended as any sort of self-defense demonstration.
What you see here is part of the one of the steps that the "dancer" (Aikidoist) must learn. It is not the dance ... there is no music.
dc9912dc 2 years ago 2
This comment has received too many negative votes show
It only works for demonstration!...Bullshit! Try a Armlock or something against a good Puncher....that doesn't work!
He hits you five times before you make any move.
ManuReko 2 years ago
fast technique
giovannyec 2 years ago
I was a little weirded out by that too, I can't imagine anyone launching a downward punch to the abs to attack someone.
bushwhacker2k 2 years ago
i agree not very likely.. thankfully ikkyo can be modified for different attacks, this expert village demonstrations are pretty poor but i guess there is not much on youtube for aikido beside this.
daniel89cs 2 years ago
@bushwhacker2k If your still in high/mid school people are that dumb lol in my 8th grade class only about 6 other kids out of 113 knew better including me.
iScareMidgets 1 year ago
i guess its just a ''just in case'' technique
SanctusDiavolos47 2 years ago
I remember taking this lesson when I used to train this martial art... It always felt good when you did this to a person, it makes you feel safe hahaha
Screamorulz9 2 years ago
Boom! lol the emotion ;)
s3hammer 2 years ago
the only annoying thing on this vid that you dont show the steps on the feet but the rest is perfect thanks alot :D
Po1soNiNg 2 years ago 2
I agree, footwork is disregarded too much from my experience, even though it is totally vital to executing techniques correctly.
bushwhacker2k 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
exp village sucks so bad
mnmn59 2 years ago
I get attacked like that almost every day and always use the technique I learned from this video. It has never failed me yet. Thanks Expertvillage!!!
audiobuttmaster 2 years ago
hahaahaha...people must hate you a lot to get attacked like that everyday.. ^__^
69elchupacabra69 2 years ago
Someone tries to punch you in the stomach everyday? DANG! Where do you live!?!?!
bushwhacker2k 2 years ago
it all depends on how quick you do these technics
lightner4455 2 years ago
they have to become your reflex !
pkPUX 2 years ago 2
thats like the most dumb answer ive ever read.
sadomeso 2 years ago
expert my arse!
the instructor left himself open many many times for the other hand to smack him in the ribs!
you go tenkan to the punch, use your forearm against the shoulder/armpit area so he can't turn round and punch you, then you take the wrist into ikkyo!
i'm only 2nd kyu and i could have demonstrated this better!
youngaikidoka 2 years ago
I think it's because he's explaining at the same time, so he's multitasking, and it isn't the focus of this video. I don't suppose he'll be letting himself open like that in a real fight when he's concentrating :)
metzalx 2 years ago
Mekkora szarság ez!
Johnnynho27 2 years ago
Maybe I'm missing something here but he is stepping to the inside which sets him up for a pretty deadly kidney shot from the left hand.
kdocki 2 years ago 2
The point of the step by step instruction is to show what he is doing once you practice this technic you will see that everything all rolls into one single motion
SECMusic 2 years ago
if you react really quick you are safe from left hand :D
pkPUX 2 years ago
WHY IS DANIEL TRYING TO PUNCH YOUR WAIST? shouldnt he punch a little higher???
DIYMAN 2 years ago
He explains the Technique at the start. A straight Punch to the Abdomen.
PlayItRough09 2 years ago
THIS LOOKS VERY HARD TO MASTER
ROYALPRIMUS 2 years ago
this surely takes time to master..and it is proved to be effective in CQ situations..i learned a few and has served me well
MrOmaaL 2 years ago
Aikido is too awkward to watch or even talk about... I feel bad for poor women who walk out of Aikido class with great confidence and belief in their ability to defend themselves when needed, well news for you, Aikido is not the answer. It might be good excercise, but it is not applicable in any sort of real life situation.
Daski69 2 years ago
Wrong. My Uncle was a bouncer for 30 years and had learnt Akido & Boxing for 15 Years from a Master (his Uncle). It has proved Effective in almost every situation even when he is outnumbered.
PlayItRough09 2 years ago
actually if youve ever taken an aikido class youd know that its not only one of the hardest martial arts to learn but probably the most effective. also ever since my first class i realised a professional mma fighter cant land a hit on an aikido black belt
Shink5 2 years ago
If you claim it is the "most effective", then you must have proof; post it. If you think a gaykido clown can take out an mma figher, post the proof. If you cannot back up any of what you say, you're just another deluded, fucktarded gaykido cultist without a clue.
Blndrfist 2 years ago
gaykido?
atleast i dont watch shirtless men hugging on the ground
Shink5 2 years ago 4
Lol, touchy aren't we! you need to relax man, I just said every style has it's strengths and weaknesses. UFC guys are indeed tough, but not the most dangerous people on the planet. UFC is a great tool for conditioning and learning the basics. There is a whole world of techniques unavailable to MMA guys. Eye gouging, groin strikes, etc. I just think the more you know the better you are, so criticizing one style is pretty pointless. Youtube SIlat Suffian Bela Diri
efreling 2 years ago
you sir, are forgetting a small point in this video.
It's for BEGINNERS. So he's showing it slowly.
In reality, Ikkyo and all other techniques are done in less than a second, not to mention that UFC fighters are fighting unbalancedly, so if you attack carefully you can make them fall quite easily.
sims2ustasi 2 years ago
you guys are ridiculous. every style has strengths and weaknesses. To be a good fighter, it is important to at least be familiar with several styles. UFC guys are not the toughest guys, just the best fighters. You want tough, go find some special forces guy holed up in Afghanistan that doesn't train to fight, but to kill, there is a big difference.
efreling 2 years ago
The special forces guy would kill an UFC fighter assuming both had weapons, unarmed, regardless of environment the UFC fighter would win, close combat taught in the military is often meant to be employed in disarming or neutralising an opponent, surely the special forces guy will have an advantage over the average male but that advantage is not vast.
Daski69 2 years ago
i have to disagree the special forces guy would take him out either way. ufc fights are use to reffs and rules the special forces are trained to kill. no rules just survival.
mannnymanny 2 years ago
actually if you count The Green Hornet, Bruce Lee did perform martial arts on a regular basis starring in a syndicated tv show.
mwwdlsc 2 years ago
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thegraphicdesigner45 2 years ago
look at lyoto machida he murdered evans he is karate through and through
tfoticus 2 years ago
sure did make alot of movies tho didnt he?
djmland 2 years ago
Only like seven. :)
But Bruce Lee did actually have real skill do to all of his training in multiple diciplines.
daichikyo 2 years ago
i tottally agree with u dude
YuGiOhGXJadenYuki 2 years ago
These techniques are outdated...This would never work against a trained boxer or kickboxer. The reality is you wouldn't have the reaction time necessary to sidestep and grap that body punch. If i throw a body punch with power, there's now way you'll grap my wrist. FACT !!
liquid636 2 years ago
pritty much agreed... but practice makes a man perfect !
sshhaammiiiiiiiiii 2 years ago
thats true liquid636, in a real fight it goes intense and goes over to wrestling, u get tired already within 20 seconds, thats true. but this teqhnicues still count something in the learning of balance and movements, u can maybe perform one tecnique like a self-instinct, if u get used to this.
Sovietsky89 2 years ago
If you can train yourself to punch that fast, than surely you can train yourself to block that fast too.
OathOfCalm 2 years ago
I've done ikkyo in a fight. It's best suited to countering a hook. As for a body punch i prefer blending to a throw or sweep. You like striking appearently and so do I but I belive I could easily wrist lock you in a fight.
kingconanmanka 2 years ago
BAD SENSEI !!!!!
i dont' look this aikido ....
mikyfireblack 2 years ago
okay, just to solve the problems here... Break down a punch, any good fighter is going to pull the punch back twice as fast as they threw it, turning the hips for the follow-up punch from the free hand... As you trap the first punch and they pull back, you're pushing back with his wrist, so he can't turn his hips to use his other hand, make sense? Nobody can punch through their own torso, it's just not worth it.
steveecker 2 years ago
what aload of crap trapping the hand my arse the other guy has 2 and how many times do u step into a punch????
mark197907 2 years ago
Even if the attacker doesn't step, and depending on how far the person was away from you to start the attack, they may or may not, the technique will still work. In a real situation, what you see in the video will take place in a time span of maybe 2 seconds and an attacker will likely not have time to react before he goes face first into the pavement.
jkmoore1120 2 years ago
erm i dont think so while you were trappin the hand you would probably feel his other fist in your head!. if the attacker had any arm strength this would not work FACT!
mark197907 2 years ago
Like I said, the whole thing would happen within a second or 2. The attacker would be on the ground before he could react with his other hand. But if you don't think it will work, look up the Sensei demostrating the moves, go to his dojo (its in Phoenix) and try to punch him. I have a feeling you'll end up face down on the floor with your limbs bent up like pretzels.
jkmoore1120 2 years ago 2
if i could i would but living in england its a bit far for me to travel. try watch some ufc or wec events thats how to learn proper martial arts and defence having trained for 4yrs i like to think i know wat im talkin about u neva just throw one punch at a time you through punches in bunches havin the dude in his pj's knocked out or needin alittle dental work
mark197907 2 years ago
No, UFC will teach you how to fight, not teach martial arts. Thats why its called the Ultimate FIGHTING Championship. But I'm sure after 4 years you know everything there is to know about anything martial arts...
I have watched UFC, looks like a couple of guys with limited skills fooling around in a contest one step above WWE wrestling. I'd like to see a truly skilled martial artist (Bruce Lee, Chuck Norris, Hirokazu Kanazawa) go against someone like Anderson Silva. Lee would tear Silva apart
jkmoore1120 2 years ago 2
dont u every say UFC and martial arts in the same sentence again. Thats ludacris. I see places that teach "MMA" on the side of the road. thats real martial arts im sure. *rolls eyes*
LoganHankins 2 years ago
Actually Mark you mostly only throw one punch at a time. How dumb are you? Every combanation is one punch at a time in a sequence. Now if you are prone to using the doulbe fist punch alot I'm wrong.
kingconanmanka 2 years ago
Do it this way and uke's other hand will gyakutsuki you...
flintstonecom 2 years ago
see cesar febles and forget this guy
NCHCanarias 2 years ago
question: doesn't the way that you've got his hand for this technique suggest Nikkyo rather than Ikkyo? or does that not matter?
Gattawon 2 years ago
Yup it is nikkyo. It's the same where I train, ikkyo is seldom practiced, even when explicitly doing ikkyo.
ketsan 2 years ago
golf is much2 better =)
ngeks 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Oh yeah and as for the "I ment to thumb down your comment"...
OH NO! PLEASE DONT THUMB DOWN MY COMMENT!? Nobody cares about that. lol.
evilmickey 2 years ago
LOL
I have no hard feelings, bro.
Have a good one.
abkmf 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
TAKE THAT!!!1!
i thumb downed both of you
i bet your dead on the inside now
JaCkMiChEaLs0n 2 years ago
Who the hacks going to throw a straight punch to the abdomen!?
I'd much rather just give em a left hook. Much more relyable and likley to work...
Sorry for my spelling...
evilmickey 2 years ago