Post your Sanchin Kata Video here

Differences in moves, techniques, emphasis and applications.
Locked
User avatar
Van Canna
Posts: 57244
Joined: Thu Mar 11, 1999 6:01 am

Post by Van Canna »

Rick really locks down the shoulders and recruits the lats and initiates the strikes with the hips in this drill. Those are not arm punches he's throwing!

It is all there in Uechi, each component develops in subtle and not so subtle ways.

But it is all in the understanding and ability of the student to put it all together as his studies evolve.

Rick is a prime example of this body mechanics understanding and excellence.

When we watch the boxing clips, we see why it is your whole body that strikes a blow, not just your appendage.

We must train and refine our studies along the natural way.

And under stress, it is natural for the body to want to enlist its whole mass for gross motor application.

To train with such a concept in mind is the difference between the amateur and the professional sensei.
Van
Guest

Post by Guest »

Good Comments Van.

The boxers who throw arm punches end up horizontal like the ones on the boxing clip. Makes me believe in god, it is definetly better to give than receive :multi:
We must train and refine our studies along the natural way.
You bring a smile to my face my friend, Rick B and I had a discussion about natural striking . :) Last time I talked to Jimmy, he told me the same thing. I believe you guys have it right. :lol: If you can't relax and use your body you got nothing. 8)
Rick Wilson

Post by Rick Wilson »

Rick B will be dropping by to go into more depth about what he is doing.

He just has try and remember what his password was and what old email address when he registered or reregister….

:wink:
Guest

Post by Guest »

Van Canna wrote:It is all there in Uechi, each component develops in subtle and not so subtle ways.

But it is all in the understanding and ability of the student to put it all together as his studies evolve.
Right on Van, it's the "cross-trainers" that are going to bring the Renaissance to Uechi Ryu. Sensei's today should encourage any Black Belt who is willing to train in a new art, be it JKD, Wing Chun, Boxing, Muay Thai, Aiki.*, any of it, with the intention of finding out more about Uechi Ryu and not about filling in Uechi's percieved gaps (see Benzocaines comments in the Aiki.* thread). Reason being is that us Uechi people have been sitting on top of Uechi Ryu's valence shell for years and very few people have gotten past it. Some people are content with that, while others know there is more down there and are hungry for it. If your Sensei is bogging you down in your studies, WALK! He's not just hurting you, he is hurting the style.
Rick Wilson

Post by Rick Wilson »

Okay this video clip has three view points of my Sanseirui.

The clip was done for instructional purposes so the first two are performed slowly and the third one has a little more of the normal speed I would use.

http://www.wilsonkarate.com/videos/rick_sanserui3.wmv
User avatar
CANDANeh
Posts: 1449
Joined: Wed May 15, 2002 6:01 am
Location: Jeddore
Contact:

ahaaa...now I remembers me thinks

Post by CANDANeh »

"For a touch of history on Rick B:

In Nova Scotia he was “Student #7” in a Uechi class run by some guy called Jim Maloney"

Hollis street dojo maybe? Or Portland street in Darthmouth? If Sackville dojo it was much later time and he would have been in class with my twin brothers. Name always dinged a bell when you mentioned him Rick but thought it was just age thing.
Acceleration on thrust and contact followed by powerful recoil, and everything flows together nicely. Thank you Rick Bottomly for sharing
Léo
Rick Wilson

Post by Rick Wilson »

Leo:

Rick B is from the Duncan Mcleod, Louie Carrette, Bill Pierce, Chester Collier, Dave Barsley, Bobbie Gargon crowd (excuse their name spelling) early days.
Guest

Post by Guest »

Possibly the Robbie St & Kempt Road dojo Leo. Not sure. Rick B. goes way back. Think he was a shodan in early seventies. Definetly way before my time.

I started in the old Hollis street dojo. I've often wondered if there is still a dojo there? That dojo was a special place for me. Damn I think I'm missing Halifax today. To many Bluenose Uechika keep crossing my path. :wink: . I always long for the east in the fall, I miss the maples.

BTW young Mike sure has a south shore accent if you give him a pint of two. :roll: He speaks fondly of you and Victor and plans to drop in to visit you and your dojo possibly this fall early winter.
Rick Wilson

Post by Rick Wilson »

Found this on the web:

Isshinryu Sanchin:

http://www.reversepunch.com/martialarts/sanchin.wmv
Stryke

Post by Stryke »

What a hard ass !!! , I could do it but would I want to !!!!

I sure would want someone who could hit me harder with those boards .

cool find Rick !!
fivedragons
Posts: 1573
Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2005 7:05 am

Post by fivedragons »

:D After a year or two of my obsessive compulsive karate mania, my sweetheart enrolled herself and her children in an Isshin ryu class at her YMCA. They are learning their first kata - Seisan, and they are all loving it. There is something priceless about the way she smiled the other day when she put on her brand new gi and showed me her kata. Seems that the teachers know what they're doing. No b.s. about that school. I love being the attacker for her exercises. The teacher for the children's class has a red belt, and from what she's told me about the way he handles the little ones, he deserves it. :D
Rick Wilson

Post by Rick Wilson »

:D :D :D :D
cdoucet
Posts: 66
Joined: Wed Sep 28, 2005 2:19 pm
Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia
Contact:

Post by cdoucet »

Rick- Very nice seichen. I really like how fluid that is.. especially after the 2nd groin strike" and then the pivot to next move (I would guess the application for this is catching the kick and breaking the leg).

I had to watch that part about 20 times to catch the movements because of how well you blend both movements.

I also like the little strike that you do after the wrist blocks..

the one move that I seem struggling on is hand movements when you go back in to the cat stance.

I do have one question. at the opening are you doing 2 strikes?
When I learned this as a block and then strike... I sappose that you could apply the block as a strike because of conditioning?

I'm definatly impressed..
Chris
Rick Wilson

Post by Rick Wilson »

Hi Chris:

Thank you for the kind comments.

The strike after the wrist block is pure David Mott Sensei. 8)

I do think of the opening as two strikes the first moment often used as a block (it works as a block too) is an excellent ripping striking.

I pretty much think of everything as a strike first and intercept second.
Rick Wilson

Post by Rick Wilson »

A nice clip from Richard aka Spike:

http://www.wilsonkarate.com/videos/rich ... e_kata.mpg
Locked

Return to “Focus on KATA”