LOL... Dont be so sensitive..If I was swearing at you or something like that then fine. But since I wasnt no worries. One thing I can't stand is misinformation. I just hope I made my point. Peace!
Hapkido came from Aikido. I see a few variations of kote gaeshi, a o-soto gari (judo), a shiho nage, and the last one is sort of weird looking but it's basically a kote gaeshi as well...the guy is just turning his back to his opponent which is always a bad idea IMOP.
@ronin2167 check your info dude! Both founders of HKD and Aikido studied from the same Aikijujitsu master around the same time period. HKD and Aikido share SOME similar core principles because they both came from Aikijujitsu. So of course they will have techniques that look the same. But with that said and to clarify for you. Hapkido DID NOT come from Aikido. PERIOD!
NECC94 ever think that the pain is what makes them seem like there jumping ur body goes with the pain if ur the defender go take a class ull jump like fire is in ur ass
Thats not hating, thats a viable observation. yes, they are jumping. The idea for demo hapkido is to make it as flashy as possible. That doesnt mean the techniques arent effective however. those techniques would work just as well if someone resisted. they would just end up going to the floor in a very non-athletic way and probably sprain/break a joint haha.
@dontmesswitdaboz ok thanks for clearing that up. But thats why I like BJJ the most, not very flashy but very very effective. BJJ its all about actual control of your opponent, not just a wrist, arm, etc. but a type of control your opponent is simply impotent against.
@NECC94 BJJ is probably the most useful in a 1v1 street fight, because 9 out of 10 fights go to the ground. Do you practice any other types of martial arts? You should learn at least one striking martial art, and just in case, buy a gun (if you're old enough). Hapkido also has groin strikes, kicks, punches, submissions, and weapons.
@ogonga94 yes, I practice muay thai and boxing, but my strength is BJJ. I am the central american champion of my division, and I am going to the pan ams in march, and to the no gi worlds in november 2011, you can check out my fights in my channel. I am a 16 year old green belt given by Carlos Valente himself. and in january they give me my blue belt.
@NECC94 Thats absolutely true. BJJ is an awesome form of martial arts. I may be impartial to hapkido because i practice it, but if/once a BJJ guy takes you to the ground its pretty much over. even if you know how to defend yourself somewhat, ground fighting exhausts so much more energy faster than sparring. A BJJ guy could just tire you out before submissing you.
@dontmesswitdaboz youre not being impartial,youre being partial.There is nothing amazing about bjj,these days its just for sport in most clubs.The problem with hapkido is like jap jitsu and aikido they dont spar full contact so they have no idea that most of their techs are useless under pressure.The last place you want to be in self defense is the ground anyway,bjj is for 1 on 1 fighting only and risky for biting,blades and eye gouging.In brazil ,all the gracies fights were matched fights.
@billysue2 ..I agree. In a street/bar fight, the last place I want to be is on the ground...however if a person is an expert in bjj, they won't be on the ground long and hopefully get back to their feet to defend themselves.
@akrocuba they may be able to get off the floor but then dont have any effective standing techs,its not an appropriate system for many situations since the only place its effective is on the ground.I have done bjj for almost 15 yrs on and off but have always favoured striking for self defense since i practised thai and western boxing previously.
@billysue2 ...yes, agreed, you need striking as defence. I've been training in boxing, kickboxing, karate and some wrestleing through the years. At the age of 42, I have still not achieved a black belt in any one martial art, but I love to train in everything?...:) I also love to watch the Gracie family fighting vids. It's amazing how they changed the fighting world in reference to MMA. I thinkm it's good to be well rounded.
@NECC94 every art has it's pros and cons. bjj is good but has no take down or standing, i do a few different martial arts and love all of them. not one art is better than the other
You are correct. So many times I have seen someone make that comment about jumping etc. If these techniques are done at full speed in practice arms wrists would be broken. This also lets the other guy practice falls etc.
@NECC94 they are flipping, because if they stand still, their joints will be ripped out of socket. They are "flipping" in an attempt to "flow" with the joint lock. In MMA, when people are caught in an armbar, they often roll to their bellies or backs (depending on how its locked on) in order to flow with the submission to take pressure off.
@abdullahabdulaziz1 You're right, real people wouldn't flip around like these people are doing. They're only doing that so that their joints don't break. If these were regular people who didn't expect these, their wrists would break. If you can find a Hapkido instructor, go watch a class or two, it can be fun. Just be careful you don't go to a bad place where they rip you off by teaching you useless crap. If you don't think something will work, ask them to explain it.
Hapkido is rendered "합기도" in the native Korean writing system known as hangul, the script used most widely in modern Korea. The art's name can also however be written "合氣道" utilizing the same traditional Chinese characters which would have been used to refer to the Japanese martial art of aikido in the pre-1945 period.
its not at all... hapkido is a mix of arts... including aikido... by this is not a korean aikido... HKD include judo and taekwondo moves to create a more great set of techniques...
this style is kok sul. and it indeed carries a few techniques that is close to aikido. both hapkido and aikido share the idea of flow and the use of circular motions in their moves.
Hapkido developed from aikido. The creator of Hapkido was captured by the japanese and learned aikdio while he was a prisoner. He rose through up through the ranks in aikido and when he was released by the japanese he went back to Korea, which is where he was from, and combined what he learned in aikido with tae kwon do techniques and created Hapkido. So basically Hapkido is aikido and tae kwon do combined together
I think your historical overview of hapkido is somewhat incorrect. The founder was kidnapped and taken to Japan. The man who took him was not kind to him and left him on the streets to die. Someone had interceded for him and he was taken in by none other than Sokon Takeda. Takeda adopted him as his son and began teaching him Aiki-jujutsu. After spending nearly 20 years with Takeda, asorbing all of Takeda's teaching, the founder returned home to Korea.
Well I'm just giving the information that my master, master joe kessen, taught me who has been doing tae kwon do and hapkido since the 60's I believe. But we can both agree that Hapkido is pretty much aikido and tae kwon do combined together
The techniques found in hapkido are believed to be derived from Aiki-jujutsu which is a forerunner of Aikido. In fact, it is suspected the founder of Aikido and the founder of hapkido had the same teacher in aiki-jujutsu
@jinfausto in fact hapkido's founder was an student of aiki-jutsu from Master Takeda, one of the best martial masters of it's moment. Browse the wikipedia, there's a lot of quality info (something strange in wikipedia, let me say...)
lol, now that I read your name more closely I see what happened. What up Chase? Also for those that wanted to know, all students wear the diamond weave in our school, and we do Heuk Choo Kwan so our system may introduce moves at different times than other systems.
I know that some dojangs wear the diamond dobok no matter what. For us it is a hapkido uniform and you are not even considered a hapkido student until you make 1st Dan. We in particular do not have a masters uniform, just the same ol stuff.
Hapkido and taekwondo where the two first martial arts used in Korea
Crazy3ZyKiller 4 months ago
@Crazy3ZyKiller Nope, the first Korean martial arts are archery, wrestling, and takkyeon.
6arcsn1sky 2 months ago
WTF!!!? Shame on you Korean
jariworld 6 months ago
LOL... Dont be so sensitive..If I was swearing at you or something like that then fine. But since I wasnt no worries. One thing I can't stand is misinformation. I just hope I made my point. Peace!
126STRNGNFIT 6 months ago
what is mma?
POLDUSTLEAD 6 months ago
Hapkido came from Aikido. I see a few variations of kote gaeshi, a o-soto gari (judo), a shiho nage, and the last one is sort of weird looking but it's basically a kote gaeshi as well...the guy is just turning his back to his opponent which is always a bad idea IMOP.
ronin2167 6 months ago
@ronin2167 check your info dude! Both founders of HKD and Aikido studied from the same Aikijujitsu master around the same time period. HKD and Aikido share SOME similar core principles because they both came from Aikijujitsu. So of course they will have techniques that look the same. But with that said and to clarify for you. Hapkido DID NOT come from Aikido. PERIOD!
126STRNGNFIT 6 months ago
@126STRNGNFIT Why all the hostility? If I'm wrong fine...but no reason to reply in such a manner.
ronin2167 6 months ago
NECC94 ever think that the pain is what makes them seem like there jumping ur body goes with the pain if ur the defender go take a class ull jump like fire is in ur ass
wegrady3 6 months ago
What's the name for the last technique?
Veng3ence 7 months ago
@Veng3ence It's a kote gaeshi except the guy turns his back to the opponent while still applying the wrist lock/twist. Not really smart..
ronin2167 6 months ago
eu pratico taekwondo, e na parte de deefsa pessoal eles ensinam um pouco disso
dheivid2 9 months ago
Love hapkido,..always wanted to learn it, unfortunately i dont think there is anywhere around here that teaches it.
grinch96ek 11 months ago
...good luck with that.
fedorisapimp123 1 year ago
I don't want to hate but they are jumping.
NECC94 1 year ago 4
@NECC94
Thats not hating, thats a viable observation. yes, they are jumping. The idea for demo hapkido is to make it as flashy as possible. That doesnt mean the techniques arent effective however. those techniques would work just as well if someone resisted. they would just end up going to the floor in a very non-athletic way and probably sprain/break a joint haha.
dontmesswitdaboz 1 year ago 10
@dontmesswitdaboz ok thanks for clearing that up. But thats why I like BJJ the most, not very flashy but very very effective. BJJ its all about actual control of your opponent, not just a wrist, arm, etc. but a type of control your opponent is simply impotent against.
NECC94 1 year ago 2
@NECC94 BJJ is probably the most useful in a 1v1 street fight, because 9 out of 10 fights go to the ground. Do you practice any other types of martial arts? You should learn at least one striking martial art, and just in case, buy a gun (if you're old enough). Hapkido also has groin strikes, kicks, punches, submissions, and weapons.
ogonga94 1 year ago
@ogonga94 yes, I practice muay thai and boxing, but my strength is BJJ. I am the central american champion of my division, and I am going to the pan ams in march, and to the no gi worlds in november 2011, you can check out my fights in my channel. I am a 16 year old green belt given by Carlos Valente himself. and in january they give me my blue belt.
NECC94 1 year ago
@NECC94 That's awesome! I wish I was that good, haha.
ogonga94 1 year ago
and by the way. 10 out of 10 fights go to the ground if one of them practices BJJ!!!! hahaahaha. BJJ for life!
NECC94 1 year ago
@NECC94 Thats absolutely true. BJJ is an awesome form of martial arts. I may be impartial to hapkido because i practice it, but if/once a BJJ guy takes you to the ground its pretty much over. even if you know how to defend yourself somewhat, ground fighting exhausts so much more energy faster than sparring. A BJJ guy could just tire you out before submissing you.
dontmesswitdaboz 1 year ago
@dontmesswitdaboz youre not being impartial,youre being partial.There is nothing amazing about bjj,these days its just for sport in most clubs.The problem with hapkido is like jap jitsu and aikido they dont spar full contact so they have no idea that most of their techs are useless under pressure.The last place you want to be in self defense is the ground anyway,bjj is for 1 on 1 fighting only and risky for biting,blades and eye gouging.In brazil ,all the gracies fights were matched fights.
billysue2 1 year ago
@billysue2 ..I agree. In a street/bar fight, the last place I want to be is on the ground...however if a person is an expert in bjj, they won't be on the ground long and hopefully get back to their feet to defend themselves.
akrocuba 1 year ago
@akrocuba they may be able to get off the floor but then dont have any effective standing techs,its not an appropriate system for many situations since the only place its effective is on the ground.I have done bjj for almost 15 yrs on and off but have always favoured striking for self defense since i practised thai and western boxing previously.
billysue2 1 year ago
@billysue2 ...yes, agreed, you need striking as defence. I've been training in boxing, kickboxing, karate and some wrestleing through the years. At the age of 42, I have still not achieved a black belt in any one martial art, but I love to train in everything?...:) I also love to watch the Gracie family fighting vids. It's amazing how they changed the fighting world in reference to MMA. I thinkm it's good to be well rounded.
ROCK ON!!!
akrocuba 1 year ago
@NECC94 What is BJJ?
floppybollox3 11 months ago
@floppybollox3 Brazilian Jiu Jitsu
hsanschag 10 months ago
@hsanschag Ok, re: the Gracies, right?
floppybollox3 10 months ago
@NECC94 every art has it's pros and cons. bjj is good but has no take down or standing, i do a few different martial arts and love all of them. not one art is better than the other
dcosmillo1 9 months ago
@dontmesswitdaboz
You are correct. So many times I have seen someone make that comment about jumping etc. If these techniques are done at full speed in practice arms wrists would be broken. This also lets the other guy practice falls etc.
countsmyth 2 weeks ago
Comment removed
Armandotoossi 1 year ago
@NECC94 Even if they are jumping if they were to do it in a real situation they will go with their hands so that it wont break
seriouse1009 1 year ago
@NECC94 they are flipping, because if they stand still, their joints will be ripped out of socket. They are "flipping" in an attempt to "flow" with the joint lock. In MMA, when people are caught in an armbar, they often roll to their bellies or backs (depending on how its locked on) in order to flow with the submission to take pressure off.
randyds5 11 months ago
@NECC94 ; of course, it´s a demostration. In real life, that hurt so much, that you jump too... :D
diazconias 10 months ago
@NECC94 yes ^^
if you do not just jump you'll break your arm
DAMAROQUENGA 5 months ago
@NECC94 of course they are, it is also part of the training, if you don´t jump and fall properly the twisting lock breaks your joints
gns86 4 months ago
hahaha is this thing really work i dont think so
abdullahabdulaziz1 1 year ago
@abdullahabdulaziz1 You're right, real people wouldn't flip around like these people are doing. They're only doing that so that their joints don't break. If these were regular people who didn't expect these, their wrists would break. If you can find a Hapkido instructor, go watch a class or two, it can be fun. Just be careful you don't go to a bad place where they rip you off by teaching you useless crap. If you don't think something will work, ask them to explain it.
ogonga94 1 year ago
To my knowledge, that kind of dobok are meant for masters only. Color belts should use the plain black or plain white depending the school
Hapki
gns86 1 year ago
from wikipedia:
Hapkido is rendered "합기도" in the native Korean writing system known as hangul, the script used most widely in modern Korea. The art's name can also however be written "合氣道" utilizing the same traditional Chinese characters which would have been used to refer to the Japanese martial art of aikido in the pre-1945 period.
[...]
so hapkido is the korean aikido!
:lol:
ninikolupo 2 years ago
its not at all... hapkido is a mix of arts... including aikido... by this is not a korean aikido... HKD include judo and taekwondo moves to create a more great set of techniques...
mralpro 2 years ago
i just wonder where that kind of techniques came from.. it was just like aikido i see
jinfausto 2 years ago
this style is kok sul. and it indeed carries a few techniques that is close to aikido. both hapkido and aikido share the idea of flow and the use of circular motions in their moves.
dontmesswitdaboz 2 years ago
it originated from aikido
undonetobin 2 years ago
Hapkido developed from aikido. The creator of Hapkido was captured by the japanese and learned aikdio while he was a prisoner. He rose through up through the ranks in aikido and when he was released by the japanese he went back to Korea, which is where he was from, and combined what he learned in aikido with tae kwon do techniques and created Hapkido. So basically Hapkido is aikido and tae kwon do combined together
DODGEDIESELNUT 2 years ago
I think your historical overview of hapkido is somewhat incorrect. The founder was kidnapped and taken to Japan. The man who took him was not kind to him and left him on the streets to die. Someone had interceded for him and he was taken in by none other than Sokon Takeda. Takeda adopted him as his son and began teaching him Aiki-jujutsu. After spending nearly 20 years with Takeda, asorbing all of Takeda's teaching, the founder returned home to Korea.
digdugs57 2 years ago
Well I'm just giving the information that my master, master joe kessen, taught me who has been doing tae kwon do and hapkido since the 60's I believe. But we can both agree that Hapkido is pretty much aikido and tae kwon do combined together
DODGEDIESELNUT 2 years ago
more research on hkd is needed dude
jryanmedia 2 years ago
The techniques found in hapkido are believed to be derived from Aiki-jujutsu which is a forerunner of Aikido. In fact, it is suspected the founder of Aikido and the founder of hapkido had the same teacher in aiki-jujutsu
digdugs57 2 years ago
@jinfausto
Yes , very close at time. Both are the kind of Art that use's an opponent's force and energy against him.
jayce79 1 year ago
@jinfausto in fact hapkido's founder was an student of aiki-jutsu from Master Takeda, one of the best martial masters of it's moment. Browse the wikipedia, there's a lot of quality info (something strange in wikipedia, let me say...)
martin77mdp 1 year ago
Nice Shit !!!! IoI
fakers
MrPhillipnash 2 years ago
hapkido is Korean matriar arts
diembiemphu 2 years ago
What's hapkido?
kanegon313 3 years ago
Hey hey! Im surprised to see myself in this video. Where did you get it?
Sarathi00 3 years ago
lol, is this justin?
dontmesswitdaboz 3 years ago
lol, now that I read your name more closely I see what happened. What up Chase? Also for those that wanted to know, all students wear the diamond weave in our school, and we do Heuk Choo Kwan so our system may introduce moves at different times than other systems.
Sarathi00 3 years ago
some of these look like advanced techniques that would be taught at blackbelt and above and why are they wearing instructors uniforms?
bacurrie45 3 years ago
I know that some dojangs wear the diamond dobok no matter what. For us it is a hapkido uniform and you are not even considered a hapkido student until you make 1st Dan. We in particular do not have a masters uniform, just the same ol stuff.
straycat1674 3 years ago
Yeah I dont understand why they are wearing instructor uniforms either but I guess different strokes for different folks.
could be a marketing ploy to make the students feel better about coming to class and wearing the cool black uniform.
MooneShadow 2 years ago
KOREAN AKIDO
maceioninjutsu 3 years ago
WRONG!
straycat1674 3 years ago
Akido, its called as Sissy Jap ma sports, hapkido, it is called as warrior's arts man. don't you know the differences between these two.
thj1234 3 years ago
joking right? ha... I dont have a sense of humor. you must really dont know the history of hapkido anyway I'm wasting my time... go with god
maceioninjutsu 3 years ago
عمل رائع
MAAAAAAAFIA911 3 years ago
lol the guy without a dobok(HapKiDo outfit) don't does the techninque wrong :P
Sanderandreas1 3 years ago
wish i could do this but the training centres are really rare in the UK
ollie3003 3 years ago
I see Hapkido has both Akido and Judo techniques.
eddiedaskull 4 years ago 4
Well, you got to remember that Choi Yong Sul learned and trained aikijujutsu from Takeda Sokaku.
6arcsn1sky 3 years ago
the dobok is interesting since in manny hapkido schools, that particular black with white diamond repesents a higher rank hapkidoist
Miyabiii 4 years ago
Nice job. Reminds me i need to work on throws...
inkei88 4 years ago
thanks, im actually going for mine in a week and a half. Are you guys tested over Joong Keup Son Mook Soo and Ab Eui Bok Soo for your blue belt test?
dontmesswitdaboz 4 years ago
Cool i train in Hapkido in Australia going for my Blue Belt on Saturday keep up the training
JNR007 5 years ago