i'm not a kyokushin practitioner but i used to spar with a few kyokushin friends. i agree with some of the comments here. Do not underestimate Kyokushin fighters' ability to break your skulls just because their randori does not allow headshots. Many martial arts allow but they do it poorly. There is no best system overall but Kyokushin is one of the most solidly structured training method and sparring systems. Just my two cents
@boris999222666 in kyokushin you condition the body to be able to recieve beatings with punches and kicks. kicks to head must be controlled, and because of the nature of the hard hitting punching, and no gloves competition it is not allowed to punch face, they dont want the dude to die you see?! ;)
@twdk01 hello, i find the comments you made to be ridiculous all martial arts aid in the conditioning to strikes and how to avoid them! a kyokushin karate ka power depends on the student not the style, its the artist not the art! however back to my point the rules in this form of compition are rubbish as they aid in the promotion of bad habits ie not guarding your head. On the street you are a hell of alot more likely to get a fist in the face than a jumping spin kick lol
and many boxers break their hands in real fights because they have never hit a solid object without gloves. Every rule format has posatives and negatives. Do not make the mistake of thinking because the bareknuckle full contact tournaments do not allow head shots that Kyokushin does not have or train headshots. The technique permitted under these rules is only a part of the whole art. Are BJJ or submission tournaments rubbish because you can't hit anywhere let alone the head?
@DaBhaalspawn Yeah alot of dojos are like that but also alot aren't. if they are never training head shots than they are only training part of the art.
I only know of one Kyokushin master who realized the importance of head punches, and is still trying to reintroduce them to the art (Shihan Hiroshige, if you care).
Sadly, I don't think most of the other masters will listen to him, they care about tradition too much.
@boris999222666 Its not allowed because oyama killed a guy with a punch to the face.He was so devastated about it that he forbidd it in tournaments, simple :)
@XxSoulRazoRxX if that is true (pardon my ignorance) it just proves my point that a punch is a devastating attack and that at the core of every martial art you MUST learn to deal with it. TKD also suffers for this as it promotes a low gaurd with little regard for the fastest strike possible the punch.
@boris999222666 lol try getting punched in the face by Kyokushin Grandmaster Mas Oyama, then tell me should there be punches in Kyokushin Tournament. But you're lucky Mas Oyama's not around anymore. In any case, at least do a tiny bit of research before you comment negatively? Thanks ^^
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
Their punches don't look that strong, compared to other styles, this match at least doesnt look like a martial arts match at all. Kyokushin is a awesome art but these two don't look that good.
@mmatkdfit really? filho and feitosa don't look that good? filho has defeated 4 separate K1 champions (hoost, aerts, hug and bonjasky) and feitosa was runnerup in K1 final twice.
There's a reason: Feitosa respects Filho too much. He practically gave the match to Filho. I'm sure he didn't use 100% of his power against Shihan Filho.
I dont know what to say about this match, is a little too low energy, it looks more like a demostration match then a final, and what is with the 3 minute round 1 round match, in kyokushin the matches are on a 3:3:1, or 3:2:1 minutes basis per each round. I gues the rules are diffrent in brazil.
The low energy could be due to the fact that it's a final. It happens, that finals are less entertaining - particularly heavy weight matches - since the fighters have come a long way through a hard tournament. Tired, possibly with damages and so forth.
No. The reason is that they know each other very well. Filho knows Feitosa power, and Feitosa knows Filho very well...both trained together for several years...sparred several times (and probably KOed each other many times)...and Filho was his senpai, so there's a lot of respect here.
0:22 = almost like a mirror LOL
DralnuduLouvre 2 months ago
??????????????
KYUNGILNAM 4 months ago
i'm not a kyokushin practitioner but i used to spar with a few kyokushin friends. i agree with some of the comments here. Do not underestimate Kyokushin fighters' ability to break your skulls just because their randori does not allow headshots. Many martial arts allow but they do it poorly. There is no best system overall but Kyokushin is one of the most solidly structured training method and sparring systems. Just my two cents
Rizaldjohan 4 months ago
are hits to the head in kyokushin not allowed?
moredad 4 months ago
@moredad Are not allowed.
pastropmal 4 months ago
@pastropmal thank you
moredad 4 months ago
Este tipo de luta é muito mais bonita que MMA.
LJRRR 5 months ago 2
total rubbish rules no punchs to the face
boris999222666 9 months ago
@boris999222666 in kyokushin you condition the body to be able to recieve beatings with punches and kicks. kicks to head must be controlled, and because of the nature of the hard hitting punching, and no gloves competition it is not allowed to punch face, they dont want the dude to die you see?! ;)
twdk01 8 months ago
@twdk01 hello, i find the comments you made to be ridiculous all martial arts aid in the conditioning to strikes and how to avoid them! a kyokushin karate ka power depends on the student not the style, its the artist not the art! however back to my point the rules in this form of compition are rubbish as they aid in the promotion of bad habits ie not guarding your head. On the street you are a hell of alot more likely to get a fist in the face than a jumping spin kick lol
boris999222666 8 months ago
and many boxers break their hands in real fights because they have never hit a solid object without gloves. Every rule format has posatives and negatives. Do not make the mistake of thinking because the bareknuckle full contact tournaments do not allow head shots that Kyokushin does not have or train headshots. The technique permitted under these rules is only a part of the whole art. Are BJJ or submission tournaments rubbish because you can't hit anywhere let alone the head?
aldridge1 4 months ago 2
@aldridge1
I trained Kyokushin for a year. My Shihan was a 5th Dan, just so you know it wasn't a McDojo.
Outside the Kihon (punching/kicking the air for a few minutes), you don't do head shots. Ever.
That, and kicking the air (usually at fast speeds, therefore ruining technique and balance) got me to stop training it.
The barehanded kumite was good though.
I speak through my experience, but it wasn't really that great, and the Dojo was legit. My two cents
DaBhaalspawn 3 months ago
@DaBhaalspawn Yeah alot of dojos are like that but also alot aren't. if they are never training head shots than they are only training part of the art.
aldridge1 3 months ago
@aldridge1
I only know of one Kyokushin master who realized the importance of head punches, and is still trying to reintroduce them to the art (Shihan Hiroshige, if you care).
Sadly, I don't think most of the other masters will listen to him, they care about tradition too much.
DaBhaalspawn 3 months ago
@boris999222666 Its not allowed because oyama killed a guy with a punch to the face.He was so devastated about it that he forbidd it in tournaments, simple :)
XxSoulRazoRxX 2 weeks ago
@XxSoulRazoRxX if that is true (pardon my ignorance) it just proves my point that a punch is a devastating attack and that at the core of every martial art you MUST learn to deal with it. TKD also suffers for this as it promotes a low gaurd with little regard for the fastest strike possible the punch.
boris999222666 2 weeks ago
@XxSoulRazoRxX And how do you prove that one?
NoSuchUnbearable 1 week ago
@boris999222666 lol try getting punched in the face by Kyokushin Grandmaster Mas Oyama, then tell me should there be punches in Kyokushin Tournament. But you're lucky Mas Oyama's not around anymore. In any case, at least do a tiny bit of research before you comment negatively? Thanks ^^
zlalalaz 6 months ago
what is this some sort of gay off?
mattycbase 10 months ago
5 painful minutes
70rm3n70r 11 months ago
they play soft
they dont wana hurt each other
brazilain plan
madmax84s 1 year ago 6
i would actually watch the whole thing if it was not for the music. i like watching this kind of stuff in its pure form.
timlbs 1 year ago 4
Looks like feetodour is wearing shin-instep pads. is this a demonstration!?
EvoLeoM3 2 years ago
...Who?
EPR89 2 years ago
It wasn't such a low intensity match, proof of it was the wazari at 2:47.
Marcelo07 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Their punches don't look that strong, compared to other styles, this match at least doesnt look like a martial arts match at all. Kyokushin is a awesome art but these two don't look that good.
mmatkdfit 2 years ago
its the final of a long tournament both fighters won about 4 fights before this one
oiram48 2 years ago
@mmatkdfit really? filho and feitosa don't look that good? filho has defeated 4 separate K1 champions (hoost, aerts, hug and bonjasky) and feitosa was runnerup in K1 final twice.
aldridge1 3 months ago
it's not agressive
guylopez93 2 years ago
There's a reason: Feitosa respects Filho too much. He practically gave the match to Filho. I'm sure he didn't use 100% of his power against Shihan Filho.
fkacuta 2 years ago
wrong answer. Filho respects Feitosa too. Filho is better. He is World champion Karate Kyokushin and K-1 Yokohama. And Glaube ?? Badass
marriver78 2 years ago 2
I dont know what to say about this match, is a little too low energy, it looks more like a demostration match then a final, and what is with the 3 minute round 1 round match, in kyokushin the matches are on a 3:3:1, or 3:2:1 minutes basis per each round. I gues the rules are diffrent in brazil.
beliverX 3 years ago
The low energy could be due to the fact that it's a final. It happens, that finals are less entertaining - particularly heavy weight matches - since the fighters have come a long way through a hard tournament. Tired, possibly with damages and so forth.
PerOleLind 2 years ago
No. The reason is that they know each other very well. Filho knows Feitosa power, and Feitosa knows Filho very well...both trained together for several years...sparred several times (and probably KOed each other many times)...and Filho was his senpai, so there's a lot of respect here.
fkacuta 2 years ago
feitosa, not feitoza
mikthebeast 3 years ago
Osu ! great video thank you
OSU !
MasOyama1 3 years ago