Kyokushin karate speed kick tutorial
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- Опубліковано 18 лис 2006
- A tutorial on fast turning kicks used in karate, but which can also be applied to other martial arts. The master is Japanese and the cut is from a Japanese entertainment feature show. I don't have enough time to try and translate what he is saying, but you can work it out from his actions what he is trying to express. (If anyone wants to add a Japanese translation in the comments, go ahead!).
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Beautiful kick I Have been taking muay Thai for 8 years but man that's a powerful beautiful round kick love the snap to the kick also
Kick like Karate not Muaithai. Always chamber the knee when you throw roundhouse kick. Not necessary for Low kick though I still do chamber the knee alittle
@@yongjiean9980 kyokushin used both snap kick and follow through like muay thai
Without doubt one of the best kickers around, regardless of your style or discipline this man is fantastic, great technique, a credit to his style and a credit to Karate.
He explains how to execute the technique a few times. He explains how you lift the knee up with your leg tucked in, extend your leg out to use a snapping motion, tuck it back in, and return to the stance. Keep in mind that this is a former world champion. His flexibility, strength, and technique are absolutely amazing.
this fighter has a very beautiful clean style, it's lovely to see hem practisising his kicks, i'd love to be as good as he is
Its really interesting for me to see these Kyokushin karate kicks in detail like this, for once to be able see the differences between karate and the kicks I would do in muay thai. Its amazing the detailed difference between them. Good interesting video.
This man is a very complete athlete. He's bulky, yet his kicks are highly trained. Those are amongst the best kicks Muashis I have ever seen. Plus you can see that his endurance level is way high. Respect
This is Kenji Midori.....The shortest and lightest ever Karate world champion......he is famous for his powerful Mawashi(the kind of kick he demonstrated in this video)
his kicks are amazing ! amazing power and speed. Basic technique, but mastery in execution
incase some of you didn't understand, he said a good way to train is to hold your knee up for 30 seconds and finish it with 3 snap kicks, every day.
Food for thought: no martial art is useless, it all comes down to the individual practising the style and 'how' they use it. There's techniques and applications that can work in most real life situations but it is up to the practitioner to choose which technique and it's application, to use.
I practice Wado Karate, I don't care what style you do this man is awesome, what a kicker, one of the best I have seen,
I always think karate sucked, but a head kick that broke 2 bat force me to change my mind. His extremely fluid movement , and demonstration that is both extremely fast and powerful is amazing.
Fantastic technique ! So powerful and fast. Respect !
Probably one of the best roundkicks i have evrer seen.
Yeah Ive only known about kyokushin for like a year, but from what I have seen it is truly awesome, I have loads of respect for the people who practice this, I would love to learn this!
He is my hero. When I was a kid I watched him fight at the 5th world championship. His kicks are not just fast but really powerful. Try breaking two baseball bats with a high kick, I don't think many people can do that.
that is some of the best kicks i have ever seen
Great technique. This guy on the video is a real master.
Thanks for posting the translation.
Domo arigato gozaimashita!
Very good balance, power, control and stable technique specially his standing leg very sturdy. Excellent power kicks and good body angle. A true Master, two thumbs up!
This kick is used constantly in MA competitions to knock out opponents effectively. It just isn't overused in kyokushin, like, say, TKD head kicks. I know. I am a current TKD practitioner (6 years) and way too many people I've sparred use head kicks too much when a body kick would be the better choice. Oh well, I guess thats what happens when your MA overall focuses on being fancy and not practical. But I don't regret my training, it has made me quite flexible. I like to learn kyokushin though
For the those who don't respect this clip, let me put in my two cents as to why this is one hell of a kick. Yes, there are two sticks (seem to be bats) but here's the kicker (npi) there is nothing holding the top of the bats that will brace them for impact. Therefore, his kick has to be faster than the bats can react by leaning or tilting with his kick. So, the bats break before they even realize they've been hit.
Great speed, he has.
Beautiful and poweful kicks.
This guy definitely rocks, and watching him doing his fine Karate is absolutely inspiring!
OSU! from a German Goju-Ryu guy...
Kyokushin is a style. It is one of the hardest, if not the hardest karate style.
Invented and made famous by the "God Hand" himself Mas Oyama.
It incorporates some Tai Chi elements in it. (Especially breathing techniques)
One of the key markers you're kyokushin practitioner, without testing his skills, is the Gi. (form and markings)
Nice Clip Keep posting videos like these
I dont care what its called. Those kicks could seriously ruin someones day! Hip rotation, power and accuracy displayed was fun to watch.
He wouldnt go for a street fight, he would just laugh, plus at Kyokushin training you are learning not just hot to punch, you are learning something more important-respect :)
dammmm!! this art is so impressive! all i can say is GSP is argueably 1 of the best mma fighters in the world today and Kyokushin Karate is his principle dicipline. i'm sold
This style of karate seems cool as hell!
Fantastic power and technique!!
you are right man. Very impressive skill..
cheers
excellent answer!!
That's some good kicking right there!
can anyone kick harder than this guy? he's the best i've seen.
thankyou for translating :)
That helped me with my kicks Ty
and of course a lot of respect and love for kyokushin!!
i used to be a karateka before i turned nak muay : )
Kyokushin is my life!OSU
Master Surchai Sirisute who is one of the greatest Muay Thai masters today studied both both Muay Thai and Karate when he was only seven and became a black belt at twelve. He said he learned from karate the philosophy of discipline and respect.
Impressive! I wish I can also do this!
i am a kyokushin fighter and this guy is a real kyokushin legend , he and Matsui shokie are the legends of kyokushin
i love the title at the start "super-duper fast" thats just the way my sensei describes a kick. lol
I don't speak Japanese, but he's teaching the basics of kicking which is the snap kicking going from A to B, A-you lift your leg, and B-snap and back...it's how my Sensei taught me...:D
Awesome kick great master
Thanks bushi. I wanted to accredit this video to Midori, but I lost the first section of the video which had his name, so couldn't recall who he was. Well...'lightest' fighter??? He looks like a pretty well-built guy to me!! I wish I could have strong limbs like that.
You are the definition of an internet tough guy.
This is good - Very good
he seems like a cool teacher
Great balance and power.
That is Kenji Midori. Known as "the little giant". Kyokushin legend. The kicks are quite practical. Practical in the sense that someone who really knows what he's doing wouldn't pull a stupid kick out of his ass at an inopportune time
that guy has some major power!!
Excellent kick ! Impressive and effective.
KungZoo- Thank you for sharing.
Excelente karateka, nos muestra porque su arte marcial tiene el prestigio, la efectividad y el porte que caracteriza al karate kyokushin.
En sus patadas se logra visualizar el porque hay más knockouts de patadas en combates de karate que en los de tae kwon do.
He has good power in his kicks, I'll give him that.
A fantastic video...thanks for this, KungZoo!!. I started this great M/A at 53, and am going for my blue belt...best thing I have ever done for myself..any help for us older guys would be awesome. Yes, this is considered one of the toughest of the martial arts..the fighting can be brutal!...
OSU!!
I started at 50 and just got my blue at 54, and lost my third match last week, against a 44 year old. The low kicks are certainly brutal.
i started again after 30 years. did go jyu ru as a teenager. started kyokyushin 8 months ago as a 46 year old man and graded to green belt in 8 months. i do train alot though almost daily and never really stopped in 30 years. doing all sort of cardio/ bang work. i been a muay thai man in my 20's . the skills are transferable. the sparring i brutal but i do insist on body conditioning which has made be better. just train hard and soon you get faster and stronger. The training is brutal more brutal then thai boxing but then again i was young.
great kicker!! really powerflull kick!!
Nice balance and powerful
wow this is very usefull
Midori, a great leyend of kyokushin karate, OSU!
We don't use a point system in Pwang Gai Nun Ryu (Uechi Ryu), so if someone in the dojo wants to do kumite, they have to use protective gear (and we have a couple black belts I wouldn't let kick me with a double layer of padding!) Shihan makes a point of getting us to use hip movement; that roundhouse kick in this video is a good example, but we try to get the sokou-sen for contact (no, I can't do it, just can't make my foot that way!) rather than the top of the foot.
he does this 'yell' to enhance his speed and power, its a mental thing which gives his strikes a boost
very common in asian martial arts
I like Kyokushin Karate (they got killing body punches), Masutatsu Oyama was a great man, probably the greatest fighter of his time! Kudo is really nice aswell, love the technik of that martial art... ( a traditioanal martial art has a spirit) .
Aaah awesome, thank you
I agree with you especially if they are waist level only or in sport, competition or point fighting.
AMAZING
i practice shotokan, my father was a kyokushin fighter, that's why my kicks are deadly.
joey143anna how many years?
thats POWER right there..
this guy must have the most powerful kicks in the world, i hav'nt seen anyone in the ufc with kicks like his. if anyone knows of someone with better kicks i'd like to check them out and compare.
he has a nice form of kicking. I like his style. Im also more of a kicker than a puncher. This inspires me good :>
Osu! One of the best kyokushin practitioners alive.
Fantastic kicking technique..
Couldn't agree with you more! I am very surprised that there is a Kyokushin Dojo there. The farthest north on the East Coast I knew of there being a dojo was NYC.
Great vid.
Exactly. Even in competitions, high kicks can create a problem for the person throwing them. If you throw a high kick, your center of gravity has shifted and you now have less to balance on. At our gym we had a lot of people that would learn to throw high kicks, and throw them all the time. These people were also the people who got planted on their butts the most. But hey, I'm sure some internet ninja will tell me idk what i'm talking about
Muy bueno el video!! que potencia en sus patadas tiene este karateka japones.
@alwayscoolone If he had thrown that kick the same way he did in the video with the heel flat, he would have twisted his knee badly and probably injured it. Kyokushin has adopted a lot of the same mechanics of executing mawashi geri from Muay Thai after being some of the first karateka to take their challenge to fight, hence why their mawashi geri are different from other more traditional styles.
Prefect/powerful
His nick name is little giant, he never missed any open tourniment in Tokyo, until he became a Shihan. Midori was a legend in Japan. This invisible power has come from years of full contact tourniments. Midori should be a role model or all stand up fighters today. OSU.
Midori Kenji is a tough guy - awesome kicks!
I am attempting a 100 Man Kumite for charity in September 2011.
Simplicity is key, that's why I like karate so much. The more I do it the basic moves don't seem so basic.
wow! that kick sound
You're right about his actions translating for him. He's talking about getting the knee high on the chamber and using the follow through to snap the kick. Using the momentum of the knee lift. Something to that effect. I'm better with Korean, but also speak a little Japanese.
Yes, I think he's suggesting to work on knee chambering 30 times in one session.
man, he's got great form
nice, strong kicks.
I also practice Shotokan (since 1980)
Every martial arts is the same, the difference is the amount of training you did. Midori sensei become as strong as he is right now is because of his relentless training not because he is a kyokushinkai
super right
True
He's very skilled.
There is a good way of solving this argument and very simple: submit a video of yourself doing the kick as you understand to be correct and highlight the differences. Also submit a video of urself blocking the hypothetical kick. I'm sure that's enough to convince anyone.
yo, i made boxin for three years now, and practiced jiu jitsu for 1 and a half, and now im more a complete fighter. cuz i incorporated the kicks to the knowledge of punches i previously had. (im talking about traditional jiu jitsu here)
im looking forward to practicing some bjj next year, so as to get more skills in ground fighting.
gl, and the key to be a good warrior, is only to keep training. (Y)
Very Good Kicks :) 5 stars
@jamesvdave totally agree with you
the kyokushin kicking technique works for kyokushin rules
and thai boxing kicks for its rules
Nice video! Kyokushin ownz
I can hit pretty hard on a bag. But Ive never broken anything like a baseball bat.
karate for those who dont know is a from of forming the soul. it forges the body to become a body of pour power that can break stone. look at the movie " the art of killing " the art was basically made to defend your self againts the samurai.
This karate guy know what he is doing and how to inspire ather:-)!!! He is very cool!
good point, people criticise way to fast. Most of them probaly have zero experience in martial arts so they don't even know what their talking about
You would defenetly fall in love with kyokushin, that`s what i did. some of the students at my dojo where former shoto kan but changed to kyokushinkai!
It`s also known as the worlds most brutal fighting style, well atleast thats what NY magazine wrote ;)
I want to learn how to do this perfectly!!!
Raw power
@Stopher804
a combination of exploding with the whole body (like a muay thai kick) and the swinging and followthrough of a kyokushin kick is the most powerful
(the european kickboxing style is like that) traditional thai kicking is that they dont swing the lower part of the leg, they just explode with the hips and let the leg act like a pole
the thing that makes the karate kick weaker is that they snap back
You can see the fear in the eyes of the one that holds the punching pillow. OSU!