No hate, but this is not a mae geri keage, in fact this is not a kick at all. The way your leg goes straight can be a very good exercise to warm up but it's really inefficient as a kick.
In Kyokushin, mae keage is a front rising king, no snap. mae geri is front snap kick. In our dojo we usually do mae keage as a warm up then move into mae geri, hiza geri
@@kbSagoo yes this technique is really cool as a warm up, but I have Learnt Shotokan and kyokushin and I've never seen a mae geri keage done this way before, I mean we never called this technique a maege geri keage.. just some warm up exercise (I hope i was clear, I know my englis is far from perfectly fluent)
The striking point of this kick is with the heel, on the way down!! To educate yourself please watch UA-cam footage of the late Andy Hug, RIP. Who was world famous for this technique. Great explanation Sensei! Osu!
Osu from South Africa!
Osu! Greetings from the Dominican Republic
Very beautiful
Osu
No hate, but this is not a mae geri keage, in fact this is not a kick at all. The way your leg goes straight can be a very good exercise to warm up but it's really inefficient as a kick.
In Kyokushin, mae keage is a front rising king, no snap. mae geri is front snap kick. In our dojo we usually do mae keage as a warm up then move into mae geri, hiza geri
@@kbSagoo yes this technique is really cool as a warm up, but I have Learnt Shotokan and kyokushin and I've never seen a mae geri keage done this way before, I mean we never called this technique a maege geri keage.. just some warm up exercise
(I hope i was clear, I know my englis is far from perfectly fluent)
@@Azure676 Do you know speak in Portuguese?
@@antonnysales1079 I'm really sorry but I only speaks English and French
The striking point of this kick is with the heel, on the way down!!
To educate yourself please watch UA-cam footage of the late Andy Hug, RIP. Who was world famous for this technique.
Great explanation Sensei! Osu!