I like to thank the club instructors for involving lots of EXCELLENT lower graded people !! It was a pleasure to see such great attitude and commitment ...
So many all mighty specialists came here only to criticize the video... It's a well-done performance, though. Some things could be used in combat sports if properly trained under resistance, and some couldn't (that's quite obvious and natural). There is no need to undermine their work on account of that. It's a nice job. Congrats
I didn't come here to criticize. I guess I could just keep my views to myself and move on. The other side of the coin is if I see something that I am sure isn't real or workable in real life I feel I should speak up about it. I do a channel as well and I understand that criticizing for the fun of it isn't really ok but criticizing to help should be accepted. If it isn't then it isn't those that criticize that really has the issue it is those that can't take a close and real look at what they are doing and accept that just maybe it isn't practical or the best thing. And again, me included, we all think were right and others are wrong. The best thing is that your right for you and I'm right for me.
People don't seem to understand that everything will be revealed in actual sparring. There's no need to be no keyboard warrior. You don't like something, try it out in sparring or have someone try it on you. It will either work or it won't. At least you can then speak from experience. Now you dissing people on the net based on the voice in your head.
Hapkido done correctly is effective. It depends on the teacher and the training realism. There needs to be realistic self defense drills against resisting opponents as well as good free sparring and wrestling. I dig the rolling omo platas.
Before anyone talks bad about Hapkido remember most if the world's military use Hapkido. So I guess there is something to it. Hapkido is the official military art in korea.
Hapkido is awesome...its a great compliment to almost any striking art (IMHO) with its variety of joint locks, throws, etc...I enjoyed it just as much if not more than taekwondo (cross trained in both years ago). Wanna take it again someday...
I love this martial art. I practiced a little bit with Master Sang in Miami, while learning Tae Kwon Do. It really makes sense to combine this training with any other martial art. I used it one time in. Federal Prison to take down a big guy, and it was fast and effective.
It really works man...The crazy part is it works with almost any common striking art from a cross training perspective (karate, taekwondo, muay thai etc)...A very good system for learning self defense in the hands of the right teacher...
For all the trolls, they are practicing techniques. Most of them are novices and it’s transparent. Once they get to 2nd dan and above. You won’t have anything to criticise then. Martial arts is a learning curve you are always trying to adapt what you Learn and personalise what you have Mastered.
Estão de parabéns, excelente demonstração de hap ki dô, na prática, qdo necessário , eventualmente. Só espero que ele, nem o taekwondo, não entrem nas olimpíadas, e se tornem o que são hoje, deformados, inúteis como defesa pessoal, tornando se mero balé de kimonos. Treinei judô por muito tempo, e depois dessas mudanças discordei e parei. Estou pretendendo o hap ki dô, que é parecido. Gostaria de saber sobre suas academias em São Paulo, capital, e a federação de hap ki dô. Parece ser eficaz, em im corpo a corpo. Parabéns, turma, gracias!
looks like a very good school tbh quite fast, I notice your more on the aikido side not to many kicks or it could just be the presentation, hapkido is a mixture of more direct aikido and teakwondo, its brutal hapkido, I wish I did hapkido
Yo también practico HKD, además lo enfocamos sobre un ataque callejero más realista, para que nos sea más útil, funciona en la vida real después de años de práctica.
This is the kind of class I want to take in addition to Tae Kwon Do. I also want to take Brazilian Jujitsu. I have tried it before & it was REALLY cool.
My wife is Japanese, Kumamoto and laughed at your comments !! She holds the 4th black belt grades in Judo ... Judo holds very strict guidelines and surely it did not go well with others ........ AND she also lived in Pusan and hold the 1st degree Black belt Jin Jung Kwan Hapkido
Evidently, Hapkido is the ultimate self-defense against escrima. I am training in BJJ now, but trained hapkido for two years in Korea. If I wasn't training BJJ or a pugilistic martial art like Mui Thai or boxing, I would train Hapkido again.
Very impressive! There's a lot of connexions with jiu-jitsu. I practiced this martial art during some years. Also, I would like if you can make a new editing of this video, but with two motion speeds. One in normal speed and the other in slow motion. In this way, we can more appreciate all the subtilties of any defense technics. Thank you for sharing with us this fascinating video. 👍👌
Alot of practical applications here...jiujitsu/ judo. Some i would question with WWE-ish " throws" ( over emphasis with rolling shoulder locks as well )... but the arm/ wristlock engagements looked good
Yeah...the koreans took traditional japanese jujitsu and added a korean twist to it. I took it for a year or so back in my younger days...pretty good for self defense in my opinion since it has striking and grappling.
@@chriscooper8210 they didnt took it. The original founder had no connection with the japanese. Do your research or it'll come and bite you. Like right now.
@@UandMeDasame Hapkido was heavily "influenced" by Daito Ryu Aikijuijitsu (forgive my spelling). When I said they took it I dont mean that they stole it SMH 🤦♂️...And for the record I've done my research on the art and even practiced it for a few years along with wtf style taekwondo.
IMO the most effective martial arts along with korean taekwondo and jeet kune do, Hapkido, jeet kune do, and taekwondo the ultimate combination, krav maga an hapkido would work nice hapkido jeet kune do and taekwondo and krav maga them 4 you would be invinsible
Very good video. I wish I had taken Hapkido or Kenpo instead of Kyokushin. There was no versatility in my art. Hapkido has the fastest feet and Kenpo has the fastest hands. Remember, when watching these, that everything that hits hurts. And, from experience, I can tell you that the bad guys have NO martial art experience, they're just extra tense from all the crack they ingested. They won't stand there and loosely point a gun at you. They'll be moving around super tense, or they'll rush you with a right cross, or they'll blitz attack you when you walk around the corner of a building without enough room for fight or flight, or when you look down at your keys, look away from them coming towards you, or think it'll never happen to you. Regardless, all martial arts, except Aikido, condition the body to take more punishment than they need to give out. There just isn't enough space in any one particular video to convince all you looky loo know it alls to understand that.
Es un deporte precioso, pero........, Yo no me enfrentaria a un arma de fuego tan a la ligera , pues el atacante no te va ha apoyar el arma en la nuca para nada ni te van a dejar la mano para que se la cojas y la luxes, la calle es otra historia y eso deberían de enseñarlo también el enfrentamiento en la calle contra un arma de fuego o un arma Blanca puede ser un suicidio
Estoy de acuerdo, solo que alguien que no sabe de artes marciales o las ignora, pues normalmente lo hace de arimar un arma de fuego en la cien, pero al menos yo que por lo menos conosco un poco de artes marciales, jamas me dejaria acercar un individua y yo con arma de fuego.
Ich finde Hapkido sehr gut in Bezug auf meinen Bewegungsdrang. Im Straßenkarte empfand ich es nicht immer als wirksam. Des öfteren ist es sehr schwierig, einen Hebel beim Gegner anzusetzen. Und, um den Gegner vorher mit einem Schlag zu "lockern "ist es auch nicht immer gut bestellt. So mancher Straßenkämpfer hat unerwartete Nehmerqualitäten. Aber trotzdem ein höchst interessantes Selbstverteidigungssystem. Es hat mir über viele Jahre sehr viel Spaß gemacht.
All I'm seeing here is World Jujitu Federation Techniques with a small mixture of Aikido, and Goshin-Jitsu. And before anyone jumps in to say I don't know what I'm talking about. I was with WJJF Prof Clark, John Steadman in the 80's and 90's. I have been in the martial arts for 52 years now, and am a Master myself now. Nice demo, bit wooden.
This is good Hapkido. The general principle is like that of the old Kung Fu, before Shou Lin. The same principle is seen in Silat. Taijitsu, Judojitso are similar, just lots of catch, less arm bar, more flips.
This is perfect the same of Jiujitsu (JJJ move) with some modern karate movements. It is not related Taekkyeon or anything korean things in it. Someone Can you pls try to explain which part of this is "Korean tradition" and not a jiujitsu? Also one more things additional. Basically movement of AIKI JIUJITSU and MODERN JAPANESE JIUJITSU (like in this video) is different. So you can not say excuse "hapkido is from aiki jiujitsu." They are just took movement of modern Japanese jiujitsu and saying it is Korean hapkido or so, clearly. Can you try to counter argue that?
@@ikrammaududi6205 thank you☺️ may I also ask what exactly the martial art involves and it usefulness in different categories if that isnt too overbearing😅🤗
SOLO OBSERVA EN PAUSA LOS TIEMPOS EXACTOS 0:11 , 012 0:15 0:16 (0:20 TANTO RECIBIR UN DISPARO COMO HERIR MORTALMENTE O DE GRAVEDAD A UNA PERSONA DEBEN EVITARSE) la posibilidad de que el arma sea disparada es mayor al desarrollar estas técnicas, en cualquier dirección y en perjuicio de las victimas o victimarios, aún cuando de ambos lados se quisiera evitar o considerar como ultima instancia .... con estas técnicas seria lo primero mayormente probable que sucederá. 0:41 sin codo o sin mano, 0:47 peligra cabeza, 0:49-0:50 diSparo al pecho factible.. y así solo en los primeros minutos se detecta linea de fuego, arma, persona gatillo ... en tal configuación que no puede menos que ser ALARMANTE TANTA NEGLIGENCIA ...
Against more than one opponent you really don't want to go to ground . Because somebody might have a knife . Always assume someone has a knife on them. Some people.can pull a knife very fast.
I was tried to being hard while join lock training. Just try to get it more realistic. But it just get worst. I almost broke my left hand bcs of it. And really hurt myself lol
Actually I don't really see none of them. Maybe some Judo. Aikido, Karate and judo are Japanese and Kung Fu is Chinese. Hapkido es Korean and it has more in common with other Korean martial arts like Sipalki or Kuk Sool Won.
@@sebastianalessandrello9832 - I can't speak for the other arts, but Hapkido joint locks and Aikido's joint locks are practically the same. I've trained in Aikido before training Hapkido in Seoul. My very first impression is how similar the joint locks between the two were.
@@talkshowhost3512 👍yes it does and I agree. If im not mistaken Hapkido is a mixture of Daito Ryu Aikijuitsu mixed with native Korean arts? I took hapkido along with wtf style taekwondo and enjoyed both. IMHO japanese juijitsu seems to be a little more linear whereas hapkido techniques (from my experience at least) are a little more circular in execution. I could be wrong though
It's hard. I studied this style for years while working in some pretty violent bars at night. You have to be fast and accurate, which can be hard. Joint locks work great in a melee-style bar brawl, though, where you're just peeling bodies apart and dragging then outside.
If I was a woman and I had to fight off a guy, I think I would want to teach him a good lesson. Not just enough to get away and make him find someone else, but maybe more like something that the cops wouldn't have trouble finding at the hospital. Or maybe even worse, that's going to slow him down quite a bit the next time he tries that with someone else. I don't think you would be looked at as being in the "wrong" for something like that, but still what you do must be legally allowed in your city and state. So if it's allowed by law, I would use as much force as I could legally. You don't know how many other people you would be doing a favor, like maybe me.
The techniques are good but when the guy at 0:46 tried to do an armbar, he literally stood up from mount to go for an armbar. Kinda sloppy because your opponent has a lot of room to escape from that
Just under every hapkido video there is this comments about how the students suck, how they would get beaten in a street fight etc. Of course the technics should be accurate but if you are So concerned with this, write advices on which technics they should practice and improve. At least you wouldn't discourage kids and be helpful a little bit. And This is a martial art. Its only goal is not to make you unbeatable in street fights. It's a discipline and it has a philosophy. They should improve but just constantly doing sport and learn the philosophy of it must be apreciated too.
I agree with you for yellow belts up they do a good job and it is lot work and a lot of pain. You get thrown or throw someone its hard work and you only get better from there on for they can do movement. Look at Black belts flow is the real difference for it is more natural. Hapkido is about being natural in movement that why the water principle is key to have good movement in Hapkido and its hard to master. My suggestion is they have the basic movement technique now make it flow like water through practice. Good comment.
This was GREAT, but ... the PREVENTION of having a gun pressed to the back of your head is the goal ... a PRIMARY PRE-EMPTIVE STRIKE is the key ... or BANG, BANG, you're done!
Nice Hapkido video. However anyone that close to you with a gun deserves to have it taken away. If they pulled a gun on you you should have been dead long before you get within 30 feet of them. I don't care for gun disarm videos because well first off it is only people who train in a "dojo" setting that think it would really work that way. In real life you try to disarm a gun you'll either die trying or never get close enough to touch the person, and die trying. Of course there are morons who may actually try to rob you by putting the gun in your face like that, I guess. I think it is irresponsible to get people believing gun disarms would work that way. I am quite sure that anyone who teaches that has never actually done it for real, in a real loaded gun going to shoot them way. If they had, they wouldn't be around to teach it. Every one of those people who are "disarming" those guns will be dead in real life if it ever happened to them and they tried that stuff.
I like the music Your hand gun disarms are unrealistic the primal flinch factor has not been taken into consideration. An are you really going to perform break falls on the streets like all your students are doing with their self defense.
Porter dude Even world war 2 combatives had techniques where to throw someone u would have to hit the dirt urself.Face it sometimes u just have to hit the ground
Do not count on that with Hapkido. Wrestlers have rules in Hapkido it does not. Their base goal is to eliminate the opponent in 4 seconds or short like a second. When you see real Hapkido attacks it is a second and half and person may not get get up for its choice by the Hapkido person if he does.
Wrestling is also a martial art. The UFC has had some famous wrestlers who used their takedown/ground control skills to get to mount and then ground and pound their opponent. A wrestler against a predominantly standing martial artist is probably going to have an advantage.
This is inspiring but I don't really think it works as smoothly as depicted. In fact if you don't score with that first strike, I think you can find yourself in quite a jam. So, hit and run would be my advice; either that or make sure you slow somebody down enough with that first technique so that you can get away with further strikes. I would like to see someone who finds themself needing to fight back to use enough force to keep a perpetrator from just finding a more vunereble target, if the law in your area allows it.