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Kung-Fu Joint Locking Reversals #1

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Uploaded by on Feb 29, 2008

Just some basic locking and unlocking principles from an old instructional series from 1994. Hope some of you can get something from it.

Master Parrella's Kung-Fu Centers
231 Voice Road
Carle Place, NY 11514
516 739-8888
www.nykungfu.com

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Uploader Comments (kungfu531)

  • Tearing tendon or muscle is NOT breaking the wrist. I'm sure if you turned the wrist around it would certainly break, but that is not the object of this 'compliance' technique.

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All Comments (12)

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  • @TheStonedMind Sounds like your haven't learned too much from martial arts, if that's the way you talk to people.

  • i respect u sifu michael parrella

  • In my school we would say 1)shame on your opponent for putting both his hands on only one of yours and 2)All your movement in this reversal is really pointless because it's easier in almost any joint lock to JUST STEP IN and, for example, crash him with your body weight. Or just hit him while both of his hands are on one of yours...

  • @NFLHBO

    Check out YouTube:" Street Chinna Joint Locking and Bone Breaking Techniques" by this black sifu and tell me this has no practical application!

  • i take brazilian jiu jitsu, muay thai and briefly studied pradal serey in cambodia. suck it.

  • @TheStonedMind

    You obviously have no mart. arts training. check out kung fu san soo and take a lesson. That's street fighting.

  • no kung fu has fighting abikity

  • these guys are making up moves from pieces they got from various b.s. masters...they have circus tricks and no fighting ability

  • a simpler defense is to place the free hand palm up under the hand that is locked and lift, try it. makes that lock totally useless and the person either has to disengage, do something else or have a staring contest

  • I know the initial technique as "nikyo" from aikido. The counter-technique is really nice to watch - just one remark: There is no "pushing down" in nikyo (at least as we do it). You -roll- your hand around the arm into uke's or yout own center. -Pressing- your hand (or worse: both hands) down only affects the wrist - that is what makes the counter possible.

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