Thank you. I dont use finger push since years. That was the complete wrong direction. It haüüens just by itself without any finger or wrist action. Only the loose arm is important.
@@samothchipmah2407 Yes, I found out from your answers to others. You do it with the whole loose arm and body coordination. I wonder if this way is a final natural style, or it is an individual top mastery that others can't duplicate. Your eventual students can tell. After a long quest. 🖐️
@@Jan-sb2ql Imo it is the holy gral of no spin and throwing im general if you want the highest speed with little effort. Baseball, volleyball, javelin, stone skippers, and martilarts all use this mechanic.
@@samothchipmah2407Thank you for saying it. !! I trained Wing Chun for long and with great masters before strength and speed of movement emerged from kind of flexible relaxation. That's why I enjoy watching your mastery, knowing it is not easy to get it. Some people never find it, no matter of decades of training, it's also part of inborn character. This cat-like soft power is indeed part of top masteries in all human arts. Kudos 🙏
@@Jan-sb2ql very well said. For me it was really a long time to get there, but only because I threw years with push style. With a good teacher you can get that quite fast.
That is super easy explained. Nothing, just dont open your hand. Thats all. It happens in the most perfect way all by itself if mange to let your arm loose like a rope. That is not easy to learn.
I completely stopped the index push. I only care about the arm motion and right muscle use. The rest happens automatically. No release work or anything like that.
Sieht etwas aus wie der Slang Stil tatsächlich durchaus ähnlich vom Timing her. Habe es gelernt von den Russen aber leider macht mein Tennis arm nicht mit bei sowas dauerhaft die selbe Bewegung zu machen und ich muss schon beim Fliegenfischen mich zurück halten. Ich werde alt. 😅
Short answer: Yuri Fedin Long Answer: I managed to evolve my own throw into a whip style after two years of no spin throwing, and personally the knife is never in my palm. Your wrist isn't as flexible as your finger and the whip-like motion generates the most force at the fingertip. The butt of my knife usually rests at my second knuckle. As for pressure, it all comes down to your own feel. Everyone throws different at the end of the day, just gotta trial and error it until you get sticks, then calibrate.
@@kakuzu12345 @robbytucker12345 No not Fedin. I used the fedin grip for years, but thats long time ago. I hold the knife very deep in the hand. The whip has nothing to do with the finger. The finger does no action. The whole body is the whip, the relaxrd arm is the rope, all motion comes from the body. Arm muscles do nothing, just the muscles which hold the knife. There is no wrist or finger action, everything just happens by itself perfectly, when the motion of the arm is correct. I dont hold the knife tight, but the hand is closed all the time. No finger opening when the knife goes out. That is only working with this technic, but thats the way to throw real no spin, where the knife stops spinning completely.
Ur overwhelmingly talented sir. Ur always pushing and finding new inventive ways to throw . Thank u
I commented under your other comment. Thank you
One of my favorite styles. I love the natural power it offers.
Thank you
Finger-push makes blades sounding, as heard in slow motion. Altogether - the power of nature 💪😀
Thank you. I dont use finger push since years. That was the complete wrong direction. It haüüens just by itself without any finger or wrist action. Only the loose arm is important.
@@samothchipmah2407 Yes, I found out from your answers to others. You do it with the whole loose arm and body coordination. I wonder if this way is a final natural style, or it is an individual top mastery that others can't duplicate. Your eventual students can tell. After a long quest. 🖐️
@@Jan-sb2ql Imo it is the holy gral of no spin and throwing im general if you want the highest speed with little effort. Baseball, volleyball, javelin, stone skippers, and martilarts all use this mechanic.
@@samothchipmah2407Thank you for saying it. !! I trained Wing Chun for long and with great masters before strength and speed of movement emerged from kind of flexible relaxation. That's why I enjoy watching your mastery, knowing it is not easy to get it. Some people never find it, no matter of decades of training, it's also part of inborn character. This cat-like soft power is indeed part of top masteries in all human arts. Kudos 🙏
@@Jan-sb2ql very well said. For me it was really a long time to get there, but only because I threw years with push style. With a good teacher you can get that quite fast.
Fluid like the the sea snake churrs Boss!
Thank you
👍
Incredible ❤
Thank u sir
If its possible pleaze explain what u do at the end of the throw
Thanks
That is super easy explained. Nothing, just dont open your hand. Thats all. It happens in the most perfect way all by itself if mange to let your arm loose like a rope. That is not easy to learn.
@@samothchipmah2407 thanks a lot sir
How much finger-pushing is involved in that style? Or is it just sliding out of your hand?
I completely stopped the index push. I only care about the arm motion and right muscle use. The rest happens automatically. No release work or anything like that.
Wow!😮🤔🖐️@@samothchipmah2407
Sieht etwas aus wie der Slang Stil tatsächlich durchaus ähnlich vom Timing her. Habe es gelernt von den Russen aber leider macht mein Tennis arm nicht mit bei sowas dauerhaft die selbe Bewegung zu machen und ich muss schon beim Fliegenfischen mich zurück halten. Ich werde alt. 😅
Ja die dauerhaften Bewegungen können problematisch werden. ich hatte viel Probleme, aber mit der technik bin ich seit langem absolut schmerzfrei.
What's ur grip pressure like on this throw. Are u pinching like fedin or is Handel set deeper in palm of hand
Short answer: Yuri Fedin
Long Answer: I managed to evolve my own throw into a whip style after two years of no spin throwing, and personally the knife is never in my palm. Your wrist isn't as flexible as your finger and the whip-like motion generates the most force at the fingertip. The butt of my knife usually rests at my second knuckle. As for pressure, it all comes down to your own feel. Everyone throws different at the end of the day, just gotta trial and error it until you get sticks, then calibrate.
@@kakuzu12345 @robbytucker12345 No not Fedin. I used the fedin grip for years, but thats long time ago. I hold the knife very deep in the hand. The whip has nothing to do with the finger. The finger does no action. The whole body is the whip, the relaxrd arm is the rope, all motion comes from the body. Arm muscles do nothing, just the muscles which hold the knife. There is no wrist or finger action, everything just happens by itself perfectly, when the motion of the arm is correct. I dont hold the knife tight, but the hand is closed all the time. No finger opening when the knife goes out. That is only working with this technic, but thats the way to throw real no spin, where the knife stops spinning completely.
@@samothchipmah2407try to imagine it 😮
@@masgiver tomtom once said it's like the knife drops out of a (palm)pocket
@@watermarkscorner2256 thanks
Curious: how you handle the knife.
How I hold it? Deep in the hand, index on spine.
@@samothchipmah2407 what about knife balance point, is it affect index finger position?
Uraa...