Added: 4 years ago
From: ShorinjikempoTV
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  • Wow, the power and technique!

  • @markell89 MMA is mixed martial arts. An MMA school has teachers who teach various martial arts eg I go to a school where they teach kempo and eskrima therefore this school is an MMA school. The MMA you refer to consists of a grappling art( ju jitsu, BJJ, sambo and Olympic wrestling ) and a striking art ( Tae Kwon Do, Muay Thai, competition karate and boxing ) which of course is used for competition.

  • Not Randori:(

    

  • 先生、、、上段蹴ってるΣ('Д`/)/

  • My SK dojo where I trained for 10 yrs had open sparring. No pratective gears and open weight, and ground OK. The only rule is not to severely injure opponent though that happened too (dislocated joints, swallen balls, unconciouns etc). Still we were all friends and respected eachother at the end. Forms and basics come first of course, but if you lack experiences to apply in real fight, you will timid in real fight. NO fight is the same.

  • everyone is missing the point of this video. the master's massively masculine mustache

    :P JK, its a good video

  • You fight like you train. If you train in a vaccume just rehearsing with willing partners, you can convince yourself that your techniques are deadly, but you'll never make them work. Sparring will give you that confidence. But 90% of traditional martial artists just don't get it and will continue living a lie.

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  • I think you're right in the sparring part. You can't really learn to fight without sparring. I think you're wrong in the 90% of traditional martial artists part. Evidently you've seen the worst of the traditional, but definitely not enough to talk about that percentage.

    Lots of masters from nowadays had to survive a period of constant challenges back when they started teaching. Also, not a few have had their own successful tournament runs.

  • @MAfanatic Well, I hate to break THIS news to you, but, Okinawa is the birth place of karate, it was used effectively for centuries without free sparring. How do you think that possible?

  • I TOTALLY agree

  • Comment removed

  • It actually develops more skill than sparring, which often has restrictions. They both develop timing, control, blocking, and get to utlize many techniques that cannot be used in typical sparring sessions, which reduce otherwise great syllabi of techniques in many styles to simple punching and kicking.

  • And most importantly...

    Sparring only teaches you NOT TO DEFEND YOURSELF.

    In sparring, the fight is treated as a sport. You hit, you bounce back. You throw punches, he throws punches...

    In reality, you want to make the fight as brief as possible.

    And if you see the opportunity mid-fight, you should flee.

    I disagree with you. Techniques are not developped during sparring.

    If you have shit technique before sparring, you will have shit technique during sparring.

    Or worse, you will "tweak" it.

  • Sparring is what you make of it like all your experiences. Light sparring is mostly for exercise. Kickboxers know that. You have to go hard to be effective and it's up to the fighters how hard they wanna spar. What you said about sparring is wrong. If something doesn't work against an active opponent than it doesn't matter what speed you practice it.

  • Everything "works" if you understand what you are doing.

    It is futile to try to perfect technique during the heat of the moment, because your chances of deviating from the fundamental principles and using muscle or speed go up. Which works just fine as long as you fight physically inferior opponents (which is why so many bad martial artists over emphasize conditioning, after it is the main source of results for them).

    Sparring is useful for developing a principle that requiers feedback.

  • Actually, the heat of the moment is a great time to get things right. A better time is before the fight but a it's poor to think "it's the heat of the moment so I may as well not try to do it right". And sparring does not give you poor technique. That doesn't make sense at all.

  • I hate to break the news to you, but this type of training wont make the fight as brief as possible.

    Techniques are not taught during sparring, but they are developed and perfected during sparring. Too many martial artists train in a vaccume thinking they're way too deadly to spar. Most MA masters have never been in a real altercation. It is much harder to put down an adrenalin pumped opponent than most so called masters think.

  • Yeah the wingchun stance is soooo practical and it has some great locks and throws too-a complete system

  • Wing Chun is great in a small space where movement is limited. Wing Chun is excellent at teaching you power generation and structure for nose to nose fighting. But that's it.

    In an open space, it is almost helpless. Against an intelligent fighter.

    Does it make WC or Kempo better? No. They are both great arts, but they serve different purposes.

    A Wing Chun guy will beat the Kempo guy inside a toilet for example.

    But the Kempo guy will win on the dance floor.

    Open up your mind!!

  • perfect tecnique

  • He jus shows the techniques, no randori

  • hahahahah i love the last one

  • Nice moustache

  • Nice

  • change the tital, this is not randori!

  • LOOK AT THAT MOUSTACHE!! LMAO

  • Aosaka sensei is a great master

  • it isn't randori, it's a selection of techniques

  • You're right. Its a demonstration of techniques and not randori neither embu. I've trained in the dojo in Hombu where this was filmed :)

  • nice but doesnt really look like randori though

  • ¿¿Como va a tener Aosaka la edad que tiene?? Es increible...

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