Sokugi Taikyoku Ichi Kyokushin Kata
Uploader Comments (senseijohn1971)
All Comments (23)
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@Karateforlife777 It's both actually. The correct term for the move here is mae geri keage. Mae geri is the technique itself. "Keage" and "Kekomi."
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Its is taikyoku sono nii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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I thought in this Kata it's supposed to be a Mae Keage"? Not a mae geri?
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Pay no heed to the haters, Lia. Your technique is superb.
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Kata are soooooooo NOT useless! Only a useless instructor would leave you with such an impression. The most deadly techniques in karate lie hidden in kata, and are most decidedly NOT for sport; rather they are for knocking out, crippling and maiming. Check out a Ryukyu Kempo class or two if you can find one, then realize the wealth of knowledge you lack about kata! lol
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Katas are useless... But she still has great technique..
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Very nice mae geri's to the face!
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yes i agree, the kensetsu geri im learning is a kick to the knee joint NOT a yoko geri side kick! im pretty sure kensetsu means joint kick anyway...
A reasonably great performance, but I am not quite sure why this is called Sokugi Taikyoku sono Ichi. It should show mae keage as opposed to jodan mae geri. Besides, the kensutso geri, the way I learned it at least, has to aim at the knee level, not the top of the hip.
I suppose this is just another one of the differences between different organisations.
tumfa 2 years ago
It is kansetsu geri, I see how it may seem ambiguous. Kansetsu geri is a strike to the knee joint by definition, the strike is just above the knee cap in a decending motion, very important to be able to eaise the knee as high as possible.
senseijohn1971 2 years ago
The camera is also held at ground level looking upwards, it is more difficult to see the height but it is decending to the top of the knee.
senseijohn1971 2 years ago
there may well have been a change in the oreder of the sokugi kata, but refer to the official video\cd for the correct order, Ichi,mae geri. Ni,mae keage. San,uchi and soto keage.
mach1952 4 years ago
Followinf the Matsushima kata manual by Hanshi John Taylor, ichi is done as seen in the video, ichi-kansetsu then mae; ni-yoko then keage. Don't know why there is a difference and I'm not going to get into arguements over which one is right, I look at it as that's the way those higher up want to see it, so that's how I will do it. Osu.
senseijohn1971 3 years ago