Hmmmm....🤔 Eles que lutem pra entender o que eu escrevi, acham que só eles que conseguem escrever em línguas malucas, vamos ver se eles me entendem agora 😁
Really awesome video! thank you for sharing this. This does makes me very curious about one thing though. Can anyone explain why so many "slap" the shinai to the ground after tsuki? or try to slap the opponents shinai down right after. I have seen this behavior before but never reflected on it before seeing it so many times in a row in this video. The shimpan does not seem to care, but I've always been instructed never to let the shinai hit the floor. Is there a reason for doing this? Would really like to know if someone can explain.
Gabriel Grünberg I think if the sinai was a Katana, you know that real sward, we need to pull it powerfully from the neck because the muscle around the neck get grapping the katana strongly so this action is needed when we do tsuki for waza, I guess, and it's easy to back off from tsuki that doing pull down to get back sinai from tsuki with force . so i think we often hit the ground with sinai when we are doing it. just my opinion :) could youunderstand what I mean by this? for I'm not that good at English ^^;; Thank you
that's what I heard, too. Some years ago I was taught at one seminar with an 8th Dan that it was a bad habit and we should not do that, and half a year later another 8th Dan told us that to score a valid katate tsuki ippon, you need to pull the shinai down - not to hit the ground of course, but to cut the throat after the thrust. He reasoned that the ippon is to be awarded after the pulling motion, as part of zanshin. While I do that pull downwards, I still try to not hit the ground. It just seems unnecessary to me and no one in their right mind would smash their blade into the ground.
Geh Kacken I agree with yours. I guess that's a not that good habit as well so we try not to hot the floor as possible as we can and that's the best skill that we are getting :) you know~ not that easy Let's keep trying! Thanks
For a long time I thought it was because in the case you accidentally shove the shinai under the tsukidare this fast "pull out" would prevent any further damage to the receiver. But it seems that it is actually just a bad habit. Still my version felt so logical. :D