You have the right to do this, if you let them get under your armor they will take it off, some off the best sensai's use to do this if you left your self open, it's a skill, it's on purpose and it does hurt lol.
I've seen a training once where 2 guys in full bogu armor fought eachother, trying to knock the other down by tackling him and then try to rip of his men, kotés , do and tare. Of course no hits were allowed on unarmored parts but it was a heck of a laugh. XD
My sensei was litterally watching this in the dojo and all i heard come from his office the whole 2 hours i was teaching was his response to this video. "OOOOOOOOOHHHHH SHIIIIIIIITTTTT!!!"
wow this is the first time I see someone's men just fly off like that. Would it still be a valid point if you hit the unprotected opponent?. I know that youre still allowed to strike your opponent if he/she drops the shinai. Strike, that is, before the shinpan calls for time.
I think a long time ago, if your men flew off, it was either a hansoku for you or a ippon for your opponent. When you drop your shinai, the strike to the men counts only if it is deemed as a continuation of a valid waza. For example, if you knock your opponents shinai out of their hands while at tusbazeriai, then go ahead and hit men, that wouldn't be ippon. If you do a maki men and knock the opponents shinai out of their hands in the process, it is an ippon.
You are quite correct. I made that comment like 11 months ago. I am much more experienced right now and I wonder what the the hell was I thinking when I asked that. lol
It depends ^^ One time in the dojo, I hit my brothers unarmored Arm with my Shinai and he just got a little haematoma. I'd say a bokuto could be really dangerous, a shinais hi rather painfull but not deadly.
@MrLeegene I know they are just legends, but Musashi killed people that way. With a staff at 13, with a carved boat oar against the fight with Sasaki, and then later in life. But really though, yeah you can inflict some nasty damage with a hardwood sword. Id even believe it if someone could crack a skull.
@fiddlersblack ... not a good idea to even attempt sparring or training with a bokuto... bokuto is made for iatio training and to stiffen your wrists and arms so when you do being using a metal blade, you dont hurt yourself or another. also a friend was sparring with a bokuto and he got hit in the chest with it and it ended up collapsing his lung,
@rafhalimaxd Seeing your videos, I can see you are a beginner. You should know that kendo is considered japanese fencing. There is a famous book titled "This is Kendo: The Art of Japanese Fencing" by Junzo Sasamori that confirms this.
@steev5 if you mean americans in general...we don't say 'sayonara' because we aren't japanese and it isn't part of our language o.O, that seems like a pretty obvious answer to me
Kumdo and Kendo are essentially the same thing, with minor differences but they are really so small that it's not worth discussing here. I practice kendo in the US but in a year or so I'll be moving to Korea to teach, so I'll be attending a Kumdo Dojang there. It's still Kendo, just in a different language -if there is a difference, what's to say I have to practice anything other than my own Kendo. I understand what you mean though; I'd be sad if the philosophy and spirit was gone.
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
why the fuck you copy us japanese and somewhat them chinese!? why do the fuck do u koreans think u guys r better than japanese!? besides racial ignorance orcourse. and most of all, why the fuck u guys think ur the baddest and the shit!? unlike u guys we dont fast forward our kendo videos n definately are not scared of no mini communist country like pyonyang! not such a great country like japan and yet u guys have no shame !?
koreans always focus more on the technique then the "philosophy" behind it, for example, in kumdo (korean kendo) they don't bow on the beginning, and there are less rules...
ooooo 0:27 shame!
theolord 1 month ago
If this were 16th Century Japan, he may have had his samurai helmet on but the dude just got stabbed in his neck.
2015ww3 7 months ago
You have the right to do this, if you let them get under your armor they will take it off, some off the best sensai's use to do this if you left your self open, it's a skill, it's on purpose and it does hurt lol.
CrimsonPersona 11 months ago
What the hell?! What was that? A "TSUKIMEN"?! That was on porpouse!
RazielFalkirk 1 year ago
woah, his men just went flying off!! 0_o
asianlikeramen 1 year ago
さいごのvideo わ はずかしかったですね~><
o0jun0o 2 years ago
I've seen a training once where 2 guys in full bogu armor fought eachother, trying to knock the other down by tackling him and then try to rip of his men, kotés , do and tare. Of course no hits were allowed on unarmored parts but it was a heck of a laugh. XD
theharrierdude 2 years ago
dear god i can't imagine how humiliated this guy felt.
yparkx94 2 years ago
two weeks ago, I did the same thing to a girl of our Dojo... I felt so sorry...
de1010de 2 years ago
Poor guy!! Its the first time I see a men flying in a geiko
KyuuriLover 2 years ago
My sensei was litterally watching this in the dojo and all i heard come from his office the whole 2 hours i was teaching was his response to this video. "OOOOOOOOOHHHHH SHIIIIIIIITTTTT!!!"
Halarious!!!
Delmo67 2 years ago
WOW i was like WTF when i saw the tsuki that removed the men lol :/
Oscuro1987 2 years ago
OH SHIT MAN!? that not cool...that,s why in brunei tsuki is forbid by our sensei only dan rank can only do that stage with sensei permission...
combat602 2 years ago
wow this is the first time I see someone's men just fly off like that. Would it still be a valid point if you hit the unprotected opponent?. I know that youre still allowed to strike your opponent if he/she drops the shinai. Strike, that is, before the shinpan calls for time.
ChaoticAnamnesis 3 years ago
I think a long time ago, if your men flew off, it was either a hansoku for you or a ippon for your opponent. When you drop your shinai, the strike to the men counts only if it is deemed as a continuation of a valid waza. For example, if you knock your opponents shinai out of their hands while at tusbazeriai, then go ahead and hit men, that wouldn't be ippon. If you do a maki men and knock the opponents shinai out of their hands in the process, it is an ippon.
timsk 3 years ago
I see, thanks you.
ChaoticAnamnesis 3 years ago
I dont think its sensible to hit the dude with no men protection on the head cus it would give him one hell of a concussion or even kill him.
MrLeegene 2 years ago 6
You are quite correct. I made that comment like 11 months ago. I am much more experienced right now and I wonder what the the hell was I thinking when I asked that. lol
ChaoticAnamnesis 2 years ago
@MrLeegene
It depends ^^ One time in the dojo, I hit my brothers unarmored Arm with my Shinai and he just got a little haematoma. I'd say a bokuto could be really dangerous, a shinais hi rather painfull but not deadly.
fiddlersblack 9 months ago
@fiddlersblack true. bokuto would really hurt. can't imagine what it would be like to get hit in the head with it swining full speed.
MrLeegene 9 months ago
@MrLeegene I know they are just legends, but Musashi killed people that way. With a staff at 13, with a carved boat oar against the fight with Sasaki, and then later in life. But really though, yeah you can inflict some nasty damage with a hardwood sword. Id even believe it if someone could crack a skull.
LotusDragon09 9 months ago
Comment removed
HipposHateWater 6 months ago
@fiddlersblack ... not a good idea to even attempt sparring or training with a bokuto... bokuto is made for iatio training and to stiffen your wrists and arms so when you do being using a metal blade, you dont hurt yourself or another. also a friend was sparring with a bokuto and he got hit in the chest with it and it ended up collapsing his lung,
KELLERMANisBACK 4 months ago
@KELLERMANisBACK
ye... that what i was talking about.
ToriRocksAmos 4 months ago
We do. We call it japanese fencing.
steev5 3 years ago
@steev5 fencing has nothing to do with kendo ... don't fuck up
rafhalimaxd 1 year ago
@rafhalimaxd Kendo is fencing.
steev5 1 year ago
@steev5 wtf dude? seriously.... dammit...how dumb americans can be....
rafhalimaxd 1 year ago
@rafhalimaxd Seeing your videos, I can see you are a beginner. You should know that kendo is considered japanese fencing. There is a famous book titled "This is Kendo: The Art of Japanese Fencing" by Junzo Sasamori that confirms this.
steev5 1 year ago
@steev5 so what? ..... just one guy who said a nonsense stuff
rafhalimaxd 1 year ago
@rafhalimaxd Being stubborn and staying ignorant is everything against the spirit of kendo. Let go of your ways.
steev5 1 year ago
@steev5 haha i lol'd
rafhalimaxd 1 year ago
lol!
btw, i dont really like the idea of kumdo/gumdo
why dont they just said it is kendo?
beside, Korean claimed that kumdo is their origins, not come from kendo..
well, im not a racist, and im not Japanese neither. but i really appreciate the spirit of kendo, spirit of bushido, and spirit of budo.
hidecariduit 3 years ago
Kendo is a japanese word; kumdo is a korean word. Why don't american's say 'sayonara' instead of 'goodbye'?
steev5 3 years ago 7
firstly, maybe we should compare it to : why we dont called it FENCING instead of KENDO?
just read wikipedia to find "kumdo", and you will see some things new.
or, just ask kumdo practitioner (better if he/she is korean)
hidecariduit 3 years ago
@steev5 americans DO say sayonara though, lol
seanschwei 1 year ago
@steev5 we say 'sayonara' as well o.O my dojo at least. 'konbanwa' when entering, and 'sayonara' when leaving
Omgausername6 1 year ago
@Omgausername6 I was talking about americans not kendokas.
steev5 1 year ago
@steev5 if you mean americans in general...we don't say 'sayonara' because we aren't japanese and it isn't part of our language o.O, that seems like a pretty obvious answer to me
Omgausername6 1 year ago
@Omgausername6 That is my point. Korean don't say kendo because it is a japanese word. The korean word for the art is kumdo.
steev5 1 year ago
Kumdo and Kendo are essentially the same thing, with minor differences but they are really so small that it's not worth discussing here. I practice kendo in the US but in a year or so I'll be moving to Korea to teach, so I'll be attending a Kumdo Dojang there. It's still Kendo, just in a different language -if there is a difference, what's to say I have to practice anything other than my own Kendo. I understand what you mean though; I'd be sad if the philosophy and spirit was gone.
Shinsengumi77 3 years ago
lol, fast forward = hilarious
megamonkeyathotmail 3 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
why the fuck you copy us japanese and somewhat them chinese!? why do the fuck do u koreans think u guys r better than japanese!? besides racial ignorance orcourse. and most of all, why the fuck u guys think ur the baddest and the shit!? unlike u guys we dont fast forward our kendo videos n definately are not scared of no mini communist country like pyonyang! not such a great country like japan and yet u guys have no shame !?
wataruae86 4 years ago
What the hell are you talking about?
lolinternetslol 4 years ago
koreans always focus more on the technique then the "philosophy" behind it, for example, in kumdo (korean kendo) they don't bow on the beginning, and there are less rules...
just as with taekwondo/karate
Hyperknuck1 4 years ago 2
You really displayed how educated you are by making clear arguments and posting them with very clear lenguaje. I salute you...
/sarcasm...
darkrathamantis 3 years ago
wat the fuck!!!!!!!!!go sucka dick
sedanhousain 3 years ago
HAHAAAAAAAAAA
kendokaboy 4 years ago
This is the old film(reloading video) ?
BabyandKenJ 4 years ago