very nice. i am particularly taken by mr.vasiliev's fluidity; the moves are very natural and seem to come from a deep understanding of how a human moves rather the from memorized techniques.
The idea at 1:55 is what this video really needs to be about. If you go to all the 'real' cases of stabbings, they do not come from a distance. I appreciate the distance approach for training purposes but this is not 'realistic'. In the end, you have to train in confined spaces like the Madrid stabbing in a crowded train. The standard football grab to the chest, followed by the multiple stabs... The grab to the chest is obviously to secure the target first. No one is going to stab to fail...
@kingofaikido There's PLENTY of up close work, both armed and unarmed, against various weapons, etc. There are all kinds of idiots with knives on the streets, including trained ex-military personnel, gang-bangers, wannabes, those who've trained in Chinese or Japanese arts, Indonesian or Filipino arts (watch out!), hunters, crazies, etc. In my town, there's a trailer park where stabbings happen a couple of times a year, usually by drunk family members. Vlad loves to show close quarters work :)
@kingofaikido I think you have missed the whole point that Vlad is putting across; thats okay. The long distance is done in training so the student can learn to read the movement of the opponent and his knife or weapon. That way he can learn to blend with the attackers movement. But to learn to do that you have to do it slow and obvious first. Eventualy you get to the point where you can take the knife before your attacker even knows hes disarmed. Vlad and others can do this but
@kingofaikido but it would defeat the purpose of teaching people slowly to being with. Systema doesn't teach you a book of techniques to draw upon. It teaches you to hone and refine your natural instincts and movement so eventually you can do all this without stress because to you it is natural. That of course requires a different style of training like what you see here and thats why alot of people dont that systema is on a whole other level. You have to try it out.
Buen video y buena demostración. Muchos dicen que eso no se puede hacer y que es imposible, pero lo cierto es que necesitas entrenar mucho, recibir instrucciones de una persona realmente preparada y concentrarte para que cuando te suceda puedas defenderte. (Soy practicante de SAYOC)
@angelvenezuela2009 Usualmente la gente que dice eso, son precisamente el reflejo de lo que dicen. Tienen una calidad de vida empobrecida, autoestima baja, y muchos pretextos para realizar cualquier actividad, sin mencionar las repetidas quejas por todo lo que les pasa.
Entrena mucho y suerte! (Y yo practico Systema Ryabko)
That's bloody awesome! This only confirms my opinion that Russians are the toughest in the world. Thanks for the video.
MaximumMagnum 2 weeks ago
Such choreographed nonsense. Just doesn't work that way in real life.
kramnodd9 1 month ago
very nice. i am particularly taken by mr.vasiliev's fluidity; the moves are very natural and seem to come from a deep understanding of how a human moves rather the from memorized techniques.
kalevraa 3 months ago 3
thanks for posting. great work
Taktek2012 3 months ago
The idea at 1:55 is what this video really needs to be about. If you go to all the 'real' cases of stabbings, they do not come from a distance. I appreciate the distance approach for training purposes but this is not 'realistic'. In the end, you have to train in confined spaces like the Madrid stabbing in a crowded train. The standard football grab to the chest, followed by the multiple stabs... The grab to the chest is obviously to secure the target first. No one is going to stab to fail...
kingofaikido 3 months ago
@kingofaikido There's PLENTY of up close work, both armed and unarmed, against various weapons, etc. There are all kinds of idiots with knives on the streets, including trained ex-military personnel, gang-bangers, wannabes, those who've trained in Chinese or Japanese arts, Indonesian or Filipino arts (watch out!), hunters, crazies, etc. In my town, there's a trailer park where stabbings happen a couple of times a year, usually by drunk family members. Vlad loves to show close quarters work :)
StopMoColorado 3 months ago
@kingofaikido I think you have missed the whole point that Vlad is putting across; thats okay. The long distance is done in training so the student can learn to read the movement of the opponent and his knife or weapon. That way he can learn to blend with the attackers movement. But to learn to do that you have to do it slow and obvious first. Eventualy you get to the point where you can take the knife before your attacker even knows hes disarmed. Vlad and others can do this but
ginjaninja1988 3 months ago
@kingofaikido but it would defeat the purpose of teaching people slowly to being with. Systema doesn't teach you a book of techniques to draw upon. It teaches you to hone and refine your natural instincts and movement so eventually you can do all this without stress because to you it is natural. That of course requires a different style of training like what you see here and thats why alot of people dont that systema is on a whole other level. You have to try it out.
ginjaninja1988 3 months ago 2
Great work!! Thanks for sharing!
MrShock2010 3 months ago
Nice video
jmmurdy 3 months ago
Buen video y buena demostración. Muchos dicen que eso no se puede hacer y que es imposible, pero lo cierto es que necesitas entrenar mucho, recibir instrucciones de una persona realmente preparada y concentrarte para que cuando te suceda puedas defenderte. (Soy practicante de SAYOC)
Saludos Cordiales!.....
angelvenezuela2009 3 months ago
@angelvenezuela2009 Usualmente la gente que dice eso, son precisamente el reflejo de lo que dicen. Tienen una calidad de vida empobrecida, autoestima baja, y muchos pretextos para realizar cualquier actividad, sin mencionar las repetidas quejas por todo lo que les pasa.
Entrena mucho y suerte! (Y yo practico Systema Ryabko)
giosekkai 3 months ago
nice moves!
toreswe 3 months ago
جح
m05999274478 3 months ago