That is one of the most smooth examples of Kushanku that I have seen. It is easy to see the intent behind his movements. We do not need to see the bunkai. His intent is obvious. I could watch his Kushanku over and over for an hour.
I know this is a year late, but an arm can beat a leg a lot of the time. Sure, you can't just hard block a kick that's gonna slam into you, but a well placed and timed soft block can certainly redirect or stuff out a kick
My Sensei who loved breaking rocks and demonstrating breaking boards would just step slightly to the side of the kick and punch the leg at 90 degrees at any point and that leg could not be lifted again for a while if one cold even stand up for the pain. Skill with the constant normal barrage of standard kicks requires special skill and training just for that normal problem.
Yes the bunkai was terrible. Well not terrible per se, but let's say the interpretation was very basic and not practical like most of bunkai found in Shotokan and Wado-Ryu sadly.
@@jean4j_ disons que ce n'est pas du shotokan et du wado ryu. Mais l'interpretation bunkai est bizarre oui, se kata vise principalement les couilles et l'axe du corps.