@deejin25 don't you thinks its obvious?...I mean if you can figure it out don't you think they would of known what they lack?its not even that they lack striking to the face or even grappling lol its because they train for their kumite thats why people see it as if they only strike to the body and not do a grapple...they do have street defenses and MMA type of training(well depending on the dojo)take Bass Rutten(kyokushin black belt) for example-he uses kyokushin stance and punches to da face!!!
all these "osu" ideas are really off. 'Osu' is short version of おはようございます(ohayougozaimasu-good morning, lit: it is early) used amongst working class people and is very casual and not usually appropriate in other dojos than karate dojo. in kyoukushin it derives from the noun 押し(oshi-pressure) and the verb 忍ぶ(shinobu-to endure). and 押す(osu) in itself means to push(e.g. a button). so this expression is sort of a way of saying you will do your best always and never tire. you push and endure anything
Osu! Is the contaction of "Oshishinobu Osu" It was an expression used by the Samuari class to indicate: "I understand, I don't understand, but I will do as you say." Osu has become a sound of "inspiration, salutation, agreement, do you best not matter what." Osu!
@cumanagoto samurai would not use this kind of language. karate is not samurai MA, but farmer MA. 'Osu' is working class language. extremely rude if used in work situation or in e.g. a kenjutsu dojo. not knowing too much about old japanese, i know as much as modern 'keigo'(honorific language) and modest, extra-modest language in modern japanese is the remainder of typical 'samurai language', if you will.
@Devoti I disagree with you. My understanding of "Osu" is provided to me via my travels to Japan and friendships with many Japanese martial arts instructors native to Japan. Your belief that the samurai class had an exquisite language and never vituperated is a fallacy. Furthermore, to believe that Karate was simple a farmer's martial arts prove to me that you are historically misinformed.
@cumanagoto i claim no exquisiteness, honorific, modest and extra-modest is the grammatical terms i have been taught, might not be used everywhere for all i know. however the old language was very separated due to the living conditions of the classes and because Japan wasn't really(in some opinions) one country until around 1868. it is hard to imagine how separated the classes was, e.g. most peasants did not know there was an emperor. +are you saying that samurai practiced karate?
@NimaSun Any art that has what kyokushin has, plus the things kyukushin lacks: ie grappling, tai chi principles, ongoing training in defense of face punches, knife training, projectile weapons, stickfighting, pressure point strikes, oriental medicine. while I really love and admire Kyokushin, I know Kyokushin doesn't focus on these much and some not all, no grappling and only a little kansetsu waza.
@deejin25 It actually depends on the Sensei. My sensei did 4 years of jiu jitsu before Kyokushin and we practice grappling (not as much as I would like) some. We fight with knives, escrima sticks, wrist locks and do quite abit of throwing during the summer. When we kumite in class it is based on who you fight depends on whether you strike to the face. Some people in the class are trained in mma and boxing and are much fun to scrap with. I do agree with you that much of it is body kick boxing.
@Snakeshit287 Yeah the advantage of modern times is that we can cross train, you see kenpo guys doing jump kicks, taekwondo guys boxing and kyokushin doing grappling and eskrima. the point is that even with a a limited base any art can be expanded and improved over time.
@deejin25 don't you thinks its obvious?...I mean if you can figure it out don't you think they would of known what they lack?its not even that they lack striking to the face or even grappling lol its because they train for their kumite thats why people see it as if they only strike to the body and not do a grapple...they do have street defenses and MMA type of training(well depending on the dojo)take Bass Rutten(kyokushin black belt) for example-he uses kyokushin stance and punches to da face!!!
sleepyaznkid93 3 months ago
a sStrong OSU from BRASIL..!!!
MauricioCantao 8 months ago
all these "osu" ideas are really off. 'Osu' is short version of おはようございます(ohayougozaimasu-good morning, lit: it is early) used amongst working class people and is very casual and not usually appropriate in other dojos than karate dojo. in kyoukushin it derives from the noun 押し(oshi-pressure) and the verb 忍ぶ(shinobu-to endure). and 押す(osu) in itself means to push(e.g. a button). so this expression is sort of a way of saying you will do your best always and never tire. you push and endure anything
Devoti 8 months ago
these forms are very similar to the ones from shotokan ryu
XIANYAMA 11 months ago
Kazumi and Matsui ;)
c0d24live23 1 year ago
Both great masters of kyokushin and both holding high the memory of our Sosai Mas. Oyama. OSU!
kashpc 2 years ago
Is the guy on the right is Hajime Kasumi ? He's look familier to me .
Romus011 2 years ago
yes he is
FaridYM 2 years ago
yes he is, and there's also ryu narushima after the part from kazumi
FaridYM 2 years ago
I like them both , Kazumi and Ryu and I would say I like Kyokushin the most too.
Romus011 2 years ago
Osu !
This is not a Yakusoku kumite !
This is Sanbon kumite! ( 3 steps )
Osu!
kyokushinpower 2 years ago
...which is a type of yakusoku kumite along with ippon kumite.
kempobrad 2 years ago
Shokei is who they based the street fighter chacracter ryu after.
JumokKhan 2 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
rly? ryu'ss been out for a long time O.o
Ethical08 2 years ago
esse karate é muito bom..^^ this is karate is very god very nice
pietrocasas 2 years ago
thanks, is he the lider of one organization?? what is his relantionship with Midori Kenji? are they unfriendly?
karateman83 2 years ago
whats the name of the Sensei?? I saw him n the Discovery Channel martial arts programm
karateman83 2 years ago
Good video showing some good, solid techniques.
Thanks for sharing.
pat13wx 3 years ago
sweet
christwarrior56 3 years ago
how long should i practice
christwarrior56 3 years ago
ten thousand days to become an expert.
OkamiOkiba 3 years ago
three thousand days to be a beginner though!
osu!
michinco 3 years ago
In that case I'm very much a beginner then. I shall train hard.
Osu!
mrtaekwon 2 years ago
What does Osu mean?
marcuskalvo 4 years ago
Osu! Is the contaction of "Oshishinobu Osu" It was an expression used by the Samuari class to indicate: "I understand, I don't understand, but I will do as you say." Osu has become a sound of "inspiration, salutation, agreement, do you best not matter what." Osu!
cumanagoto 4 years ago 5
@cumanagoto samurai would not use this kind of language. karate is not samurai MA, but farmer MA. 'Osu' is working class language. extremely rude if used in work situation or in e.g. a kenjutsu dojo. not knowing too much about old japanese, i know as much as modern 'keigo'(honorific language) and modest, extra-modest language in modern japanese is the remainder of typical 'samurai language', if you will.
Devoti 8 months ago
@Devoti I disagree with you. My understanding of "Osu" is provided to me via my travels to Japan and friendships with many Japanese martial arts instructors native to Japan. Your belief that the samurai class had an exquisite language and never vituperated is a fallacy. Furthermore, to believe that Karate was simple a farmer's martial arts prove to me that you are historically misinformed.
cumanagoto 8 months ago
@cumanagoto i claim no exquisiteness, honorific, modest and extra-modest is the grammatical terms i have been taught, might not be used everywhere for all i know. however the old language was very separated due to the living conditions of the classes and because Japan wasn't really(in some opinions) one country until around 1868. it is hard to imagine how separated the classes was, e.g. most peasants did not know there was an emperor. +are you saying that samurai practiced karate?
Devoti 8 months ago
it also means respect
iamdanigga 3 years ago
SHOTOKAN THE BEST FROM ITALY
B5K68 4 years ago
Why is it better than Kyokushin? Care to explain?
NimaSun 3 years ago
@NimaSun Any art that has what kyokushin has, plus the things kyukushin lacks: ie grappling, tai chi principles, ongoing training in defense of face punches, knife training, projectile weapons, stickfighting, pressure point strikes, oriental medicine. while I really love and admire Kyokushin, I know Kyokushin doesn't focus on these much and some not all, no grappling and only a little kansetsu waza.
deejin25 1 year ago 2
@deejin25 It actually depends on the Sensei. My sensei did 4 years of jiu jitsu before Kyokushin and we practice grappling (not as much as I would like) some. We fight with knives, escrima sticks, wrist locks and do quite abit of throwing during the summer. When we kumite in class it is based on who you fight depends on whether you strike to the face. Some people in the class are trained in mma and boxing and are much fun to scrap with. I do agree with you that much of it is body kick boxing.
Snakeshit287 5 months ago
@Snakeshit287 Yeah the advantage of modern times is that we can cross train, you see kenpo guys doing jump kicks, taekwondo guys boxing and kyokushin doing grappling and eskrima. the point is that even with a a limited base any art can be expanded and improved over time.
deejin25 5 months ago
Great movie which can helps sempai in training. For me geogeous ;) OSU
maciekagh 4 years ago