oldnewbie
Purple Belt
Can anyone explain the application on would use with the kicks to one's thigh in the kata?
Thanks
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Originally posted by arnisador
We've had a lot of discussion of this and similar issues before--you might search for Tekki or the alternative name Naihanchi on this site.
Applications include kick blocks by blocking a groin kick with the shin once it's up there, or blocking a low kick by sweeping it out of the way with the side of your foot as it moves up there. Also it could be avoiding a sweep or kick, or avoiding a weapon strike aimed at your shin. It could also be a sweep of your opponent, with a little imagination.
Some people imagine that the kata is for fighting on your back and it's something like a hooking move from Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. I am skeptical of that, personally.
arnisador said:It could also be a sweep of your opponent, with a little imagination.
arnisador said:We've had a lot of discussion of this and similar issues before--you might search for Tekki or the alternative name Naihanchi on this site.
Applications include kick blocks by blocking a groin kick with the shin once it's up there, or blocking a low kick by sweeping it out of the way with the side of your foot as it moves up there. Also it could be avoiding a sweep or kick, or avoiding a weapon strike aimed at your shin. It could also be a sweep of your opponent, with a little imagination.
Some people imagine that the kata is for fighting on your back and it's something like a hooking move from Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. I am skeptical of that, personally.
kenpojujitsu said:All pretty good answers.
But don't be skeptical of the ground application.
people think BJJ invented ground fighting. But they did not. They got the idea from Judo and other Japanese Martial Arts. There has always been ground fighting applications applied to the kata.
BlackCatBonz said:it was kind of weird how you never ever heard of the secret groundfighting bunkai before the whole mixed martial arts craze.
BlackCatBonz said:.yet it was kind of weird how you never ever heard of the secret groundfighting bunkai before the whole mixed martial arts craze.
Andrew Green said:That is because it is not there
kenpojujitsu said:All pretty good answers.
But don't be skeptical of the ground application.
people think BJJ invented ground fighting. But they did not. They got the idea from Judo and other Japanese Martial Arts.
bignick said:Got the idea? How about having an instructor who was blacklisted from the Kodokan from teaching judo, so he started calling what he did "jujutsu" and teaching it to the Gracie family.
TheBattousai said:The Naihanchi kata, as with other kata, true applications are really only known by creater or person doing the kata (for those who do freestyle). Unless you ask them what they percieve, you'll never really know. But as it has been said; for others, they can see other applicable techniques in any given movement whether the practitioner knows it or wasn't thinking of that way to apply it during the kata. Its mainly about perseption, I know people who take what looks like a side kick and they show that it can be a throw, and very effectively too I may say. Its just a matter of bunkai (analyzation) and oyo (application).
kenpojujitsu said:All pretty good answers.
But don't be skeptical of the ground application.
people think BJJ invented ground fighting. But they did not. They got the idea from Judo and other Japanese Martial Arts. There has always been ground fighting applications applied to the kata.