The first puts his hand before your opponent off balance. And the rule says so. The case when the rule applies only when his strike was enough to take the opponent's balance, before it is Hansoku make.
The second actually enters the blow and take the balance of the opponent, so he can grab the leg and proceed with any coup.
First one was a faulty call from the ref. The rules state that if you start the technique you can grab the leg to complete it. The first player tried a kosoto gake and grabbed the leg right after. It was correct, but I suppose the ref didn't see realize it. In the second one, he starts (briefly) with Tani Otoshi and goes to Kata Guruma. The Tani Otoshi makes the throw legit. That said, I think that rule is nonsensical.
The first puts his hand before your opponent off balance. And the rule says so. The case when the rule applies only when his strike was enough to take the opponent's balance, before it is Hansoku make.
The second actually enters the blow and take the balance of the opponent, so he can grab the leg and proceed with any coup.
Ricordopoxa01 1 month ago in playlist Desportos de Combate
First one was a faulty call from the ref. The rules state that if you start the technique you can grab the leg to complete it. The first player tried a kosoto gake and grabbed the leg right after. It was correct, but I suppose the ref didn't see realize it. In the second one, he starts (briefly) with Tani Otoshi and goes to Kata Guruma. The Tani Otoshi makes the throw legit. That said, I think that rule is nonsensical.
sylverdrag 6 months ago
No differrence, both hansoku-make!
ikdeeutnie 7 months ago