I trained in Shorin Ryu Matsubayashi Ryu. In tenth grade some boys were making fun of me, so I told them to set up one of our heavy Science books and with my fist only an inch from it, I could make it fly across the room. They laughed and set the book up. With my fist one inch away, my wrist turned out, I executed the "circular punch" and sent the book 20 feet away. Not a kid in school ever bother me again after that.
My Favorite kata.
It's great
For Matsubayashi-Ryu, it is called "Tomoe-Zuki" or "Circular Punch."
We call it awase-zuki (合せ突き). Don't know if there is another name (I think it's U-punch in English, but I'm not sure.) - sometimes different styles and schools call techniques differently.
What is you Gi made out of?It sounds like you have your own foley artists.
This guy can move, some techniques are lost in the speed and the jodan punches are a little high, but wouldn't know it when he is hitting you!!
In Goju-ryu, the kata is also named Gekisai dai Ichi - Attack and Smash One.
it is Gekisai Dai Ichi. But the Karate Alliance made a union of all the katas so this kata was kalles Fukyugata Ni, which is correct. its still Gekisai Dai Ichi but it was labeled as Fukyugata Ni for the record. :)
Ula aferum bu işi biliyisun
Does anyone know the name of the 2 fisted punch at the end?
In 10 years nobody answered this poor man.. he's probably so grief stricken he lives under an overpass now..
It's called Tomoe-Zuki (Circular Block and Punch)..
From Master Nagamine's book, This is used with Zenkutsu-dachi (Front Forward Stance) or nekoashi-dachi (Cat Stance) to deliver a blow to the chest and abdomen simultaneously.
We have called this morote tsuki for years, due the the block being call morote uke, augmented (two handed) block.
@@sib9309 it might be due to some variations between schools, but what he finishes the kata with is called yama tsuki in my school. As for morote tsuki, in my school it's like two mae tsukis on the same level, ending thumb to thumb.
Лучше исполню только Я🙂👍
He's probably a physically small person, like an Okinawan to do kata like this. Probably no larger than 5 ft 6 inches and very lightweight with no fat.
Master Nagamine was this tiny little man, the Master of our Style Matsubayashi Ryu. He was called, the Tenacious Pine Tree for his abilities, he was small but very powerful little man.
This is a shorin ryu Kata. The goju ryu Kata gsekisai da ichi is very similar, but there are differences. First and easy to notice, it misses the uraken at 0:20 and 0:25. The judan uke in goju rye are slower, with deep breathing. I practice seibukan but i like the goju ryu better.
To this video: he stands to high and the feet positions/movements are not clean.
As a former Senpai of Matsubayashi Ryu, that's what Master Nagamine intended when he went back to Karate's Basics, he took out the unnecessary foot movement, our feet placement is precise and simplistic, meant to be natural, twisting as we apply power, not before. I have Master's book on another screen "The Essence of Okinawan Karate" which verifies that he is in fact doing it as our style demands, but in our style, we're allowed to make minor mistakes in foot work and precision or say make the wrong block, provided we utilize our power and do the move.. He is doing this correctly, all I seen were a few minor mistakes where we try not to lift our foot of the ground unless we're moving it, getting ahead of the move. But it happens.
In Matsubayashi Ryu my Sensei explained to me as Senpai and when we grade, we watch for the things we need to help a student improve on for their next coming months, and that failure to utilize power is an automatic fail above all else.
NICE EXECUTION
for a black belt i would give you 3 points for that kata. got power but the form is not good enough. Myself i'm a belt from goju ryu and my sensei is teruo chinen.
You can tell this fella has practiced this kata a million times at least. Very sharp, snappy and fluid application of power. Stances are dead on. Very very good.
Fukyugata Ichi and Fukyugata Ni are F1, and F2.. The very first two Kata you learn in Matsubayashi Ryu to get your Yellow Belt. They're the one's you will always be most practiced at.