Empty hand technique w/ GM APO Manuel Taningco 2 | Willow System & Integrated Filipino Martial Arts
Вставка
- Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
- In this video GM APO Manuel Taningco shows how the scissor hand transitions into the off balancing of your opponent and submission locks on the ground.
More information on GM Apo Manuel Taningco
kaliamerica.com/
www.tamamartia...
www.daytonmuay...
Facebook: TAMA Martial Arts Center
FOLLOW FMA PULSE
Website: fmapulse.com
Facebook: / fmapulse
Instagram: / fmapulse
#filipinomartialarts #kali #eskrima #escrima #arnis #FMA #martialarts #manueltaningco #kaliamerica #willowsystem
Mabuhay
Very nice technique today.
Merry x-mas
Salamat po
Same to you compadre.
Apo, you just added WORLDS to my puter kepala series! Salaamat Po!
Glad he was able to add to your training methods. Pugay!
Nice, very similar to many FMA and Southeast Asian styles. The Majahpahit Empire fighting style must have been huge.
I train kung fu and this is extremely similar to tai chi lol. I wonder if China and Philippines has any connection with each other. I also see alot of similarities between FMA and Silat as well. Maybe the very very true core of fighting arts, it's all fundamentally the same. Just aesthetically different at some parts.
Anthony Ton historically the Philippines was a main trading central the drew countries from Southeast, South, and East Asia. Long before the Spanish came, the Chinese were already trading/settling in the Philippine Islands. With a lot of trading and interaction with different countries, a lot of their cultures (including martial arts) was thrown into the melting pot of Filipino Culture.
Now I wonder what fighting looked like before these styles were invented lol.
it is straight, I bend it, it is bent I straighten it to bend it and make it fall...
the systema makes more sense. When you are leaning you do not straighten the opponent.
Figure 4 into an arm and head manipulation 😎
Sometimes you just end up in that position. Especially if the opponent is resisting, you just have to adapt into the position that's given to you at that moment.
Very bad. Too many mistakes that give the opponent the opportunity to counterattack. The opponent is almost always standing stable, the instructor has no idea how to get him off balance and put him in an uncomfortable position, and this must be done at every stroke of the combination. Plus he's got dead legs, he can't get out of the line of attack.