The different aspects each day are wonderful. It's like a physical vocabulary: nouns one day, verbs the next, adjectives, etc. I have now been following you for a number of months. Yours is the only Channel I keep coming back to. I do hope to join your paid material when every cent I have is nor absorbed by 4 children. It will happen. It will happen...
Another day, another drill. Additional key take away, florette 3 and 4 used to protect hand if behind timing and alter timing. Previous to this, I did not think about the directing of energy of the opponents blade goes up towards you if contact is made on these two angles. Paul may have saved my old face down the road.
O hell yes. I’ll have to watch this over and over to get this. Then to Lake to practice. I can’t do all the reps in your training days but I’m trying. 54 with recovering back injury. Thank you again this is so awesome of you. 🥋
One of the best trainers to watch...you are taking too much care of fine detailes bro....thanks a lot of your efforts and can I aske you to post using Kukuri knife, I have one but it's not easy to manipulate
Great ! Super deal 30%off, thank you very much. I just begin courses training. Very very good a easy to understand even if you speak English as badly as I do😄. In the first course i've already got two questions and I'm fixing my technique. 👏🏻👏🏻😋👍🏻🙏🏻
The best way I can explain what I'm talking about is strike your normal high forehand strike, real quickly rotate your wrist palm up, rotate your wrist palm down, keet rotating to palm up & you can strike the same angle or different forehand angle middle line or low line.
Paul, as far as a florette that I'm familiar with is like almost doing a fient then rotating your wrist to strike the same angle or different angle. You don't use your whole arm because that's what a Redondo is. When you're talking about the first part of the strike are you like striking with the spine of the blade. Also is a doblete or double strike like 2 Redondo strikes? I just know that a florette is all the rotation of the wrist & not whole arm.