Kyokushin Karate is mostly about developing your body to extreme toughness....and simple devastating techniques... this is how we train in USA Kyokushin Karate Academy-San Diego, California.....and in addition we practice face attack/defense....osu
The knockdown move / stance is a seiken tsuki. It represents the atemi (finishing blow) after the oponent is down, lost balance, or has been incapacitated in any way allowed Kind regards
@evilherojoseph what psychedashell said + its not legal to punch the head. why? cause theyu hit so hard you could get brain damage. kicks must be dimmed controlled for it to be a valid score, if you overdo it you are out. 1) so, no punching the head, kicks are more viewable and easier to get out of, henceforth the close distance. 2) kyokushin works on body conditioning to sustain heavy blows, while practicing power hits, again close distance fighting.
Thanks for the explanation Aldridge. It makes sense. In Pekiti Tirsia, a knife/stick fighting system, we are taught to follow through with strikes from head to toe under the philosophy that if we miss the primary target (head/shoulder) the follow through will hit a secondary target (groin/foot) and the nonstatic continuous motion will confuse and devastate (like young Mike Tyson throwing "bunches of punches" following through with illegal, but effective, elbows). Are you Kyokushinkai?
I've seen it in K1 done by Kyokushinkai like Andy Hug and Francisco Filho and, obviously, in that context which is more boxing/kickboxing, there is even less need for the formalities, e.g. wearing a gi, etc., of traditional sparring. I started in Shotokan Karate and TKD and currently practice Pekiti Tirsia Kali & Tai Chi, but I still have a GREAT deal of respect for these Ultimate warriors so it is out of respect and the desire for deeper understanding that I am asking for an explanation.
Sorry to ask a stupid question, but does anybody know what, if any, significance there is to the post knockout stance Kyokushin Karateka engage in where they execute a downblock/reverse punch chamber? It certainly looks powerful and beautiful, but other than form does it serve any function since usually the adversary is down for the count? Is there a traditional connotation?
What is the purpose of the move the fighter makes after knocking out the opponent. It looks like a gedan barai with open hand but a little higher? Thanks. Do you have to do all the time after KO? What is the name of the move?
Saad Lostname no. They are not standing there banging away. They are worried about getting taken down at that distance. And once you get kicked in the liver it doesn't matter how tough you are. You are going down.
@evilherojoseph It's not that blocking is illegal, some of these guys can and will dislocate your arm if you try and stop their kicks, sometimes it's just better to get the hell out of the way. Watch a video that's not a highlight reel for knockouts and you'll see that some of these guys have awesome defensive movements.
@corporacionmonstruo hmmm i'd say none of both, you'll find many fighters who don't do it after scoring a down, and it's not in any ritual of kyokushin, it's just a more "martial" way to show you scored, unlike sports karate where they often turn around and yell like idiots while looking at a ref like. i scored, gimma da point.
those were two awesome hook kicks at the end
Karate is very simple.. If you see their movement..some movements look slow but the damage is 100%
木村靖彦の左ミドルいいなぁ
full power kicks are allowed, i´ve never seen anyone banned or disqualified for this
Kyokushin Karate is mostly about developing your body to extreme toughness....and simple devastating techniques...
this is how we train in USA Kyokushin Karate Academy-San Diego, California.....and in addition we practice face attack/defense....osu
The knockdown move / stance is a seiken tsuki. It represents the atemi (finishing blow) after the oponent is down, lost balance, or has been incapacitated in any way allowed
Kind regards
Woah! These were some serious KO's!! Nice job man! OSU!
@evilherojoseph what psychedashell said + its not legal to punch the head. why? cause theyu hit so hard you could get brain damage. kicks must be dimmed controlled for it to be a valid score, if you overdo it you are out.
1) so, no punching the head, kicks are more viewable and easier to get out of, henceforth the close distance.
2) kyokushin works on body conditioning to sustain heavy blows, while practicing power hits, again close distance fighting.
Thanks for the explanation Aldridge. It makes sense. In Pekiti Tirsia, a knife/stick fighting system, we are taught to follow through with strikes from head to toe under the philosophy that if we miss the primary target (head/shoulder) the follow through will hit a secondary target (groin/foot) and the nonstatic continuous motion will confuse and devastate (like young Mike Tyson throwing "bunches of punches" following through with illegal, but effective, elbows). Are you Kyokushinkai?
Its PERFECT!Their texnique is great!!:)))))) OSU
@evilherojoseph They don't strike the head, just kicks to the head in this sport
@laokon thank you!
It's very painful to watch.
@laokon is it mandatory to do it or is something related with respect ?
I've seen it in K1 done by Kyokushinkai like Andy Hug and Francisco Filho and, obviously, in that context which is more boxing/kickboxing, there is even less need for the formalities, e.g. wearing a gi, etc., of traditional sparring. I started in Shotokan Karate and TKD and currently practice Pekiti Tirsia Kali & Tai Chi, but I still have a GREAT deal of respect for these Ultimate warriors so it is out of respect and the desire for deeper understanding that I am asking for an explanation.
Sorry to ask a stupid question, but does anybody know what, if any, significance there is to the post knockout stance Kyokushin Karateka engage in where they execute a downblock/reverse punch chamber? It certainly looks powerful and beautiful, but other than form does it serve any function since usually the adversary is down for the count? Is there a traditional connotation?
ここでは、私が極真空手選手権を表示するこれらのビデオを入手できますか
What is the purpose of the move the fighter makes after knocking out the opponent. It looks like a gedan barai with open hand but a little higher? Thanks. Do you have to do all the time after KO? What is the name of the move?
hey there id like to ask, is it legal in karate tournaments to block a strike going for a the head?noone seems to do this ,they always try to evade
Yes you can block it
MMA guys get more powerful kicks to the body, tough it out and continue
fighting, it has more to do with will power than "extreme body
toughness"
Saad Lostname no. They are not standing there banging away. They are worried about getting taken down at that distance. And once you get kicked in the liver it doesn't matter how tough you are. You are going down.
No, kyokushin karatekas have the best body conditioning hand down, and stronger kicks then most,
@evilherojoseph It's not that blocking is illegal, some of these guys can and will dislocate your arm if you try and stop their kicks, sometimes it's just better to get the hell out of the way. Watch a video that's not a highlight reel for knockouts and you'll see that some of these guys have awesome defensive movements.
@bla7091 Only in competition, you train with head punches.
I can send all the videos kyokushin karate championships you have or some of Ryu Narushima is my idol?
thefallensaiyajin
same
3:27 おあっ!うっ!!!
クソワロタwww
息が止まったんだなwあれは苦しいけどこの選手のリアクションが露骨すぎて草w
@corporacionmonstruo hmmm i'd say none of both, you'll find many fighters who don't do it after scoring a down, and it's not in any ritual of kyokushin, it's just a more "martial" way to show you scored, unlike sports karate where they often turn around and yell like idiots while looking at a ref like. i scored, gimma da point.
só joelhada na cara kkk
6:38この勝ち方はうれしい。笑
負けた方はどんまい
5:25
Man! I cringed just watching those shots. My god.
Liver knock outs🙄
ryu narushima is better