Great stuff Sensei. I have recently had the pleasure of training with Gavin Hall here in Edinburgh UK. He has always spoken extremely highly of you too. Thank you for this explanation and demonstration.
Kia Ora from New Zealand Sensei, I am a student of Sensei Kevin Shaw he speaks very highly of your Karate and I really enjoyed your book as well, great explanation of barai and use!
Why is he doing tai sabaki during gedan barai, and not during gedan uke? Plus, the faster (i.e. closer to attacker's knee) you block, the less time attacker has to get to you. When blocking so near your stomach, the mae geri is already at full length, you are not blocking anything (unless you evade the attack, like he did, but this is not being honest, because he did not evade during gedan uke). The only difference is: barai/harai is a rotating sweep, while plain uke is not. PS: also the distance between uke and tori seems to be different when doing gedan barai (longer distance) and gedan uke (shorter distance)
Agree. Anybody who stands static while someone atacks them would be a fool. Moving to the side is essential for setting up your counter. What do I know though 🤷♂️
Great stuff Sensei. I have recently had the pleasure of training with Gavin Hall here in Edinburgh UK. He has always spoken extremely highly of you too. Thank you for this explanation and demonstration.
Kia Ora from New Zealand Sensei, I am a student of Sensei Kevin Shaw he speaks very highly of your Karate and I really enjoyed your book as well, great explanation of barai and use!
I remember Kevin a very strong karateka please give him my best regards I have fond memories of my visits to New Zealand
@@SenseiGrahamRavey thank you Sensei i will🥋🙏🏽
Really impressive. Did karate some 34 years ago and I remember it was tough. Heard some rumours it’s gotten soft nowadays. Not this though obviously!
Yes I totally agree with you the majority of Karateka are getting soft and are only interested in applications to the kata and not in hard training
Why is he doing tai sabaki during gedan barai, and not during gedan uke? Plus, the faster (i.e. closer to attacker's knee) you block, the less time attacker has to get to you. When blocking so near your stomach, the mae geri is already at full length, you are not blocking anything (unless you evade the attack, like he did, but this is not being honest, because he did not evade during gedan uke).
The only difference is: barai/harai is a rotating sweep, while plain uke is not.
PS: also the distance between uke and tori seems to be different when doing gedan barai (longer distance) and gedan uke (shorter distance)
Agree. Anybody who stands static while someone atacks them would be a fool. Moving to the side is essential for setting up your counter. What do I know though 🤷♂️
Great sensei! Thanks a lot
Domo Arigato!!!
Don’t stand on the trajectory line 😂.
👍
This Sensei is such a robust Budo Ka. Lucky those who are learning Karate Do from him.
Ossu!
Peace and harmony,
Sensei Maharaj 😊
It is a attack on the leg
Wrong use less and miss Unterstand