It would be so awesome to see a comparison of kenjutsu ryuha - what period it comes from, who was the founder, where its mostly taught, what are its weapons and characteristics, training methotds, equipment etc. This would be really interesting and educative! :)
I have read positive things about this sensei... Now i see it, and about the shinkage ryu too, good video, I simply would have liked the participants to have enough space for their correct practice
Please give us the occasional episode of this. I realize a master class doesn't happen near you every month or every year. Thank you for bringing us this content when you have the opportunity! Now show us your sparring with these techniques 💖
I remember the show 'Deadliest Warrior' on History Channel or something. And one episode, it feature Celtic Warriors vs Persian 'immortals,' which another term for 'warrior.' And the big argument for the Celts, which seemed to fall flat with the show moderators and the computer simulation, was this idea of a Celt having the best iron for the best swords AND this reality that they big and they fierce, cuz they so big. And. From what I seen from this clip, 9cm off tip or whatever is about looking good in the mirror, first, then looking good with sword to people learning from you. It a semi scam, if you think of Conan the Barbarian, with big sword, coming down on you. You should cultivate strength and see how many weapons you can use, from x type of strength. Then combine agility. It not so much the sword, until you have massive strength, grow with age. The latter not easy, but enough information for smart person, male or female or of any size, figure it out.
Maybe the 9cm thing is overly specific but the guard he was demonstrating is undoubtedly effective. It presents a threat to your opponent and covers multiple lines of attack and you find very similar guards in many fencing systems from different cultures all over the world. If it was a scam I doubt it would show up so consistently in different martial arts.
@@Sir.Alonne 9cm feels like mistranslated tradition - it feels like it should be less about 9cm and more about the blade's center of percussion/point of rotation. Like, somewhere along the line a student asked for too much details, the teacher exacerbated said 'just go with 9cm', that student went on to teach, and now everyone is too much about 9cm when it's more about just where the blade turns naturally...
It would be so awesome to see a comparison of kenjutsu ryuha - what period it comes from, who was the founder, where its mostly taught, what are its weapons and characteristics, training methotds, equipment etc. This would be really interesting and educative! :)
I have read positive things about this sensei... Now i see it, and about the shinkage ryu too, good video, I simply would have liked the participants to have enough space for their correct practice
Please give us the occasional episode of this. I realize a master class doesn't happen near you every month or every year. Thank you for bringing us this content when you have the opportunity!
Now show us your sparring with these techniques 💖
Thank you very much for share this seminar
This is how I learned the basics of the Katana, I thought this was the common
Very cool video thanks for sharing
Thank you all so much for the video 👍🏻
I've been practicing his moves at home. Good stuff!
It be cool if you guys do a video on ninjutsu too. It's kinda like this. Awesome video btw
thanks
That was a great video.
Excellent seminar. Enjoyed watching it. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏👏
Looks like a drunken style of fighting.
Can someone explain to me why they are crossing their feet in footwork? It's a big nono in most of the combat sports and fencing.
빠른직선
Like yagyu shrinkage ryu?
🙂
#GhostOfTsushima
I remember the show 'Deadliest Warrior' on History Channel or something. And one episode, it feature Celtic Warriors vs Persian 'immortals,' which another term for 'warrior.' And the big argument for the Celts, which seemed to fall flat with the show moderators and the computer simulation, was this idea of a Celt having the best iron for the best swords AND this reality that they big and they fierce, cuz they so big. And. From what I seen from this clip, 9cm off tip or whatever is about looking good in the mirror, first, then looking good with sword to people learning from you. It a semi scam, if you think of Conan the Barbarian, with big sword, coming down on you. You should cultivate strength and see how many weapons you can use, from x type of strength. Then combine agility. It not so much the sword, until you have massive strength, grow with age. The latter not easy, but enough information for smart person, male or female or of any size, figure it out.
Maybe the 9cm thing is overly specific but the guard he was demonstrating is undoubtedly effective. It presents a threat to your opponent and covers multiple lines of attack and you find very similar guards in many fencing systems from different cultures all over the world. If it was a scam I doubt it would show up so consistently in different martial arts.
@@Sir.Alonne 9cm feels like mistranslated tradition - it feels like it should be less about 9cm and more about the blade's center of percussion/point of rotation. Like, somewhere along the line a student asked for too much details, the teacher exacerbated said 'just go with 9cm', that student went on to teach, and now everyone is too much about 9cm when it's more about just where the blade turns naturally...
@@DarkwarriorJ yeah probably
Asians smart
Bro wtf?
Jesus loves you all ❤ God bless
Jesus love guys
@@myersonshareetque2076 🙏❤️