Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
How do you slide up the rear foot with no weight on the front leg?Could you please be a little more specific?
I am a EBMAS student, we use Leung Tings footwork to the best of my knowledge. Our advancing step is as follows:
front foot, with no weight on it steps down a short distance in front of us, and we slide the near foot up while maintaining no weight on the front leg. there are multiple steps and different footwork depending on where our opponent(s) are located.. What exactly is a "short flat walk" ?
How do you slide up the rear foot with no weight on the front leg?
Based on the above descriptions, I suppose really rough ground or ground with random debris would be quite disruptive to this movement technique?
It sounds like the rear foot is always being dragged... High friction between sole of rear foot/shoe and ground would be quite detrimental, no?
Indeed, would wear your shoes out too.
I usually wear a platform rear shoe if I think I am going to get into a fight, just in case the sole on a normal shoe would wear out whilst I was moving in.:ultracool
Nabakatsu and geezer, thanks for the explanations, but they don't seem to make sense to me. If you are using you front leg to pull yourself at all you have to have enough weight on the leg to create enough friction to keep that foot in place while you pull the rest of your body forward. I could understand if you said it was 70/30 or 80/20, maybe even 90/10, but 100% of your weight on your back leg seems to me a violation of really simple law of physics.
How many of you use the short flat walk for advancing? Do you find it more useful than other ways of getting to your opponent? How long did you have to practice before it became second nature?
Never heard of this walking, the rush and push comes from the back leg, burst of movement, gliding towards your target.
Never 100% on back leg, you would be a pushover.