I envy you. I've always wanted to train under his tutelage. I was learning Bujinkan for quite a few years and when my sensei said he was coming to the UK I was so gutted that I was starting uni on that week.
@@jon82489 sorry hoban lovely man I meet him many years ago always takes time to explain the technique and your foot work even replyed to a few emails I sent him good God that was way back in 1991 thanks for your reply .
HAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAAAAAH!!!!!!///!THANKYUO. LOVELY. GRANDMASTER OF HUMAN ART !! //"""wish yu. Much &many. Happy beautiful years of your life. ,, and still. Again. ,, thanks!!
8:30 the statement made regarding the assertiveness in the technique's execution compared to Sensei's demonstration seems to return to another statement he made in this video: ua-cam.com/video/T5vqd92TYmE/v-deo.html what is important is to not show what you have
That looks nice in slow practice but let’s see it fast and have someone hide somewhere unknown to him and defend against a real attack without weapons for safety.
@@ironjohn After years of training in Bujinkan I can tell you the pain is real. I want to see you when your muscles are numb, your bones are broken or you scream in pain because your wrist, shoulder, elbow, knee etc. is bend and twisted more than you can take. What is worth your sparring when a guy gives you one lucky punch and you drop like a bag of corn? Watch karate-tournaments and see, how fast a black-belt falls.
Look how many black belts have been beaten by boxers and Thai boxers in a few seconds. Bujinkan... Japanese historical researchers have found no evidence that ninjas existed. Bujinkan, Genbukan and other "martial arts" born from fantasy.
Why do you think that sparring has any relevance to a "real fight"? Sparring is practice for reciprocal ring-sports, with a typical pattern of: Your turn, my turn, your turn, my turn. Real fights should be: My turn, my turn, my turn, my turn, walk away. If you screw up, and he gets the first shot off (and you're not already on the floor bleeding), we want it to go: Your turn, my turn, my turn, my turn, walk away. One should, of course, spar, roll, and pressure test skills in as many ways as possible, but if you're standing, facing your opponent and duking it out in the street, you've really screwed up.
@coca gelada the original curriculum for the Bujinkan and others ( Genbukan, Yoshin Ryu Jujutsu etc.) Is legitimate Koru Jujutsu with Ninjutsu weapons and applications. Problem with groups like this, is that they became cults for profit. The curriculum became watered down larping to gain more members which equals more $$$. 😔
Trained for 4yrs in this as a kid. 10% useful, the rest... dreaming.Fights don't stop and pause like how they teach and train. People don't just stand there. That's why not one of these techniques are in the ufc
@@seanmckinley522 the attacker stands still after their first attack as the defender carries out a block and a string of attacks. There's no sparring, sparring would prove its inneffectiveness. Name me one ninja ufc fighter who didn't resort to ditching the techniques and trying to fight like an unskilled kid. In fact, I'll give you one, Steve Jennum. He was supposed to have been a ninja but did no techniques I was ever taught, that's why he won a fight. He managed to fluke an overhand ridge hand strike that could just have well broke his own arm that was fully extended when he threw it. People have a lot of time, money and sweat invested in these micky mouse arts and do not want to admit they wasted so much on them. Like I said, 10% worked...
If you even know what MMA is then you would understand that MMA uses parts from various schools. And back in the day, Steve Jennum won UFC 3. Steve Jennum was a student of the Bujinkan Taijutsu. MMA has changed a lot but according to your logic, Steve Jennum won via LARPing. The main reason many of these movements are performed slow is because of the way the joints are manipulated. You cannot buy armor to protect the way your joints rotate, at least presently there is no such armor but maybe in the future they might have armor that protects against being pushed/pulled in a direction that can break the joint.
@@theGreaterAwareness it looks like a lot of a joint lock techniques are taken from Shaolin Qinaa. I wasn't being totally serious either. I've seen both good and bad bujinkan instructors
Yep a 70 pound old man will just chestbump two big men and make them go flying over the room. If you think that is in any way realistic you need to stop and think about what you're seeing and doing.
Was honoured to train with Grand Master Hatsumi and studied Ninjutsu for 24 years, miss his wisdom
I envy you. I've always wanted to train under his tutelage. I was learning Bujinkan for quite a few years and when my sensei said he was coming to the UK I was so gutted that I was starting uni on that week.
what's funny is that people call our art fake and yet don't realize who the american is at 0:45 is one of the creators of the Marine Martial Arts
Would that be Jack hoban and even hatsumi was Invited to forth brag to teach the us military more of a demo but shows hes highly regarded
@@aidenfletcher6503 Yeah it is Jack Hoban
great musician too I think he has an album
@@jon82489 sorry hoban lovely man I meet him many years ago always takes time to explain the technique and your foot work even replyed to a few emails I sent him good God that was way back in 1991 thanks for your reply .
@@jon82489 yes he played a song or to at hatsumi s birthday.
Respect for Soke Hatsumis sparing Partner. How often he wants to cry for pain.
This old man form Jiraiya is really famous even for Ninja moves wow
no wonder why they casted him [Gosh Dang!!!]
Man he has strength
This man is a legend in my life. I wouldn't be who I am today without his influence.
Hes a fraud
@@swiperfox8794 I am so happy that you lived in the 1960s in Japan to be a witness of the truth.
I love Hatsumi
❤❤❤
HAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAAAAAH!!!!!!///!THANKYUO. LOVELY. GRANDMASTER OF HUMAN ART !! //"""wish yu. Much &many. Happy beautiful years of your life. ,, and still. Again. ,, thanks!!
Not where we trained. We blew out the dust of old floorboards and broke them & repaired them. Repair Ninja under Master Dion.
8:30 the statement made regarding the assertiveness in the technique's execution compared to Sensei's demonstration seems to return to another statement he made in this video: ua-cam.com/video/T5vqd92TYmE/v-deo.html
what is important is to not show what you have
That looks nice in slow practice but let’s see it fast and have someone hide somewhere unknown to him and defend against a real attack without weapons for safety.
You wouldn't be able to see that cause then it would either be really cruel for the partner or really fake.
Do you realize who Maasaki Hatsumi is ? Who he trained under ? Ever heard of Takamatsu ?
They move slow because they don't want to dislocate or break anything on the sparring partner.
@@tepandflash5950 😂😂😂
Break fall is breakfast.
Fantasy
"Martial" Arts:
Kata, technique, kata, technique.
Sparring or real fight 0.
@@ironjohn After years of training in Bujinkan I can tell you the pain is real. I want to see you when your muscles are numb, your bones are broken or you scream in pain because your wrist, shoulder, elbow, knee etc. is bend and twisted more than you can take. What is worth your sparring when a guy gives you one lucky punch and you drop like a bag of corn? Watch karate-tournaments and see, how fast a black-belt falls.
Look how many black belts have been beaten by boxers and Thai boxers in a few seconds. Bujinkan... Japanese historical researchers have found no evidence that ninjas existed. Bujinkan, Genbukan and other "martial arts" born from fantasy.
"Martial" Arts:
Kata, technique, kata, technique.
Sparring or real fight 0.
Why do you think that sparring has any relevance to a "real fight"?
Sparring is practice for reciprocal ring-sports, with a typical pattern of: Your turn, my turn, your turn, my turn.
Real fights should be: My turn, my turn, my turn, my turn, walk away.
If you screw up, and he gets the first shot off (and you're not already on the floor bleeding), we want it to go: Your turn, my turn, my turn, my turn, walk away.
One should, of course, spar, roll, and pressure test skills in as many ways as possible, but if you're standing, facing your opponent and duking it out in the street, you've really screwed up.
Where is KAKUTE for KILL 😢
"Suuuuper realiista!!!".....🙄
Mucha coreografía veo en el video técnicas con catana nadie anda en la calle con eso ningun ladrone te ataca asi
Nobody just gonna let u take there sword tho 🤦🏽♂️
Muita firula!
@coca gelada the original curriculum for the Bujinkan and others ( Genbukan, Yoshin Ryu Jujutsu etc.) Is legitimate Koru Jujutsu with Ninjutsu weapons and applications. Problem with groups like this, is that they became cults for profit. The curriculum became watered down larping to gain more members which equals more $$$. 😔
Nella realtà l'avversario non stá fermo!!!
Jiraiyya father...
Trained for 4yrs in this as a kid. 10% useful, the rest... dreaming.Fights don't stop and pause like how they teach and train. People don't just stand there. That's why not one of these techniques are in the ufc
The moves are done slow so you learn the technique then you build the speed up
@@seanmckinley522 the attacker stands still after their first attack as the defender carries out a block and a string of attacks. There's no sparring, sparring would prove its inneffectiveness. Name me one ninja ufc fighter who didn't resort to ditching the techniques and trying to fight like an unskilled kid. In fact, I'll give you one, Steve Jennum. He was supposed to have been a ninja but did no techniques I was ever taught, that's why he won a fight. He managed to fluke an overhand ridge hand strike that could just have well broke his own arm that was fully extended when he threw it. People have a lot of time, money and sweat invested in these micky mouse arts and do not want to admit they wasted so much on them. Like I said, 10% worked...
Soke Most of your stuff ist full of S.... Nowbody attaks like that! Even dont youse of guard Omfg. No way!
Can you tell me what language you are trying to speak?
@@gekiryudojo You can understand me. And thats enough. I dont think i need to write a essay?
this is just martial arts.
not a NINJA
I didn't know you could become a black belt by LARPing
If you even know what MMA is then you would understand that MMA uses parts from various schools. And back in the day, Steve Jennum won UFC 3. Steve Jennum was a student of the Bujinkan Taijutsu. MMA has changed a lot but according to your logic, Steve Jennum won via LARPing. The main reason many of these movements are performed slow is because of the way the joints are manipulated. You cannot buy armor to protect the way your joints rotate, at least presently there is no such armor but maybe in the future they might have armor that protects against being pushed/pulled in a direction that can break the joint.
@@theGreaterAwareness it looks like a lot of a joint lock techniques are taken from Shaolin Qinaa.
I wasn't being totally serious either. I've seen both good and bad bujinkan instructors
@@urbanwarfaremmammakungfuco6752 NINJUTSU COME FROM SHAOLIN ..YOU'RE RIGHT ..REALLY RIGHT
@@ericnypome1195 warrior monks
@@jon82489 yes
He makes it up as he goes this guy is a fraud
Is a multi millionaire I heard
ne ho viste di stronzate ma come queste, sono fuori dalla realtà della strada.
Yep a 70 pound old man will just chestbump two big men and make them go flying over the room. If you think that is in any way realistic you need to stop and think about what you're seeing and doing.
Hai play