U may not agree cause its 2022 but i dont care kunfu karate etc is superior to mma depends on how?much u practice a martial artist is smart mma is a brut goez back to story of david vs goliath goliath a brut david a small smart man my opinion
I agree with your comment about martial arts being much more Superior to MMA in our training we think about seconds to win the conflict for not there to fight we're there to neutralize the subject in a second or two
As a Japanese culture student and a martial artist that started in the Japanese arts and ended up in Chinese martial arts on a similar journey I absolutely love stumbling onto this channel
There are a couple of great examples here on the importance of practicing against more than one opponent. One is the important lesson of dispatching your attacker(s) with the least amount of energy spent while engaged and two, your ability to escape these threat(s) as quickly and safely as possible. By remaining in place, after the threat is no longer and you continue the engagement(s) you now become the aggressor and risk the chance of being charged with assault and battery, yourself. Great video!
Looks good, but that's about it! in reality it doesn't work, an attacker hits fast, you can't block his hand, think of a boxer you can't see his hands let alone block, i'm an old man now, but none of these techniques could be dangerous for me in an emergency .This only works if agreed, or the opponent hits really very slowly.
@@barmherzigerengel286 - Well that’s not completely true! I sparred against a ‘Golden Glove’ friend of mine many times and the frustrations I put on him were countless. Toe to toe and punching only, he out performed for sure, but remember he only trained with ‘two weapons’. It’s called ‘self defense’ usually against a ‘thug or bully’ in the first place. If the Martial Arts had no effect or practical purpose, why does it exist today. Just going back a hundred years or so, ‘boxing methods’ were almost comical and for entertainment, mostly. Why would someone want to limit their mind, body and spirit? Remember that commercial from way back when, “Go for the gusto. Go for Schlitz.”? LOL.
@@tevman69 I have learned Kung Fu since my childhood from a Shaolin master I am now 57 years old, I do not call myself a master, but as a knower, what I learned is that you never know what your opposite wants to do, and there are street fighters without rules , because even a kung fu master, his ability does not help much, Bruce Lee was right when he said, one should not be guided by a style of martial arts, I find Bruce Lee Jeet Kune Do very good there is a lot of boxing Can contain and he avoids superfluous movements, while I was young I would practice and learn Jeet Kune Do. Muay Thai is also very good because you avoid high kicks like in wing chun.
@Wayne Green There's always someone better than you, it's good to be able to fight back to run away. You never know who you're up against, street fights are different, there are no rules. When you fight in a ring you have rules and a referee, paramedics are ready and doctors, you don't have all that on the street.
@@barmherzigerengel286 - Each ‘labeled’ martial art, is A System, not A Style. The practitioners, as individuals’ are their own ‘system’. Even when you watch ‘synchronize Kata’, executions may only very slightly but, they vary. Hence, style. Just like those that try to copy paintings, drawings and etc., It can NOT be as the original is. Seeking your own discipline, as best you can, is unique. The very best to you, Sir!
I think that which techniques he choses is secondary. His level is really high, what matters is how he flawlessly performs adapting to the situation. Actually, I don't think it is possible to universally recommend certain techniques since there are so many variables (the martial art level and specialty of the defender, the size / strength, the attackers, etc). He is showing what HE would do and how he would do it. It is really a pleasure and an inspiration to see how he moves. Superb basics, coordination, agile, with strong hands, and a lot of practice. You need to have "twisted" a lot of people in your training to be able to handle their joints and use their inertia as he does.
Miyahira Sensei is one very scary person. Even his demonstrations that are slowed down and held back look quite uncomfortable for the Mach attackers. Full speed and power would be very devastating.
こんにちは。新しい映像をありがとうございました。私はロシアに住んでいて、伝統的な柔術をやっています。 正確にはやっていないのですが、見ていて新しいことを学ぶことにとても興味があります。できれば伝統的な柔術の師匠と一緒に動画を作っていただけないでしょうか。 P. S 日本語の学習が進んでいないので、ネットの翻訳機で翻訳しました。
Superb. Very good indeed. Although the chaps aren't striking back, you can se that once in a vulnerable spot, a master would easily break anyone. I dare say we should have kung fu lessons in ALL schools over the world. From year 6 onwards? Along those lines. Perhaps in 300 years...
Hello 宮平先生, i am a traditional southern kung fu practitioner pass down from my father at New Zealand and 7th Generation 白眉派拳法 practitioner as well, would love to meet you in person in the future to exchange Self Defense Techniques ideas..🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
I have used these techniques for years in life-&-death combat. To see them published so publicly is surprising since I had to study for years & prove myself before learning them.
Thank you for sharing Master Miyahira, he is very very wise and skilled! Lots too think about! (White Crane is an absolute force) True Qi, Karate, Divine power!
There's no White Crane or karate here, he doesn't practice those or anything related to them. He practices a few different traditional styles from Hebei province in northern China.
Maybe he's referring to the Tibetan White Crane(Pak Hok Pai) which is Guangdong style that portrays its Northern origins too (with stomping, shoulder ramming, grappling and wrestling techniques).
He makes it look so easy and fluid but I know better than to judge. The easiest takeaway is the kick to the knee when someone is coming while you're sitting. Wow!
Martial arts are techniques of killing, it's not as enjoyable and playful as other techniques like Taekwondo during peace times, but it's extremely useful in dangerous situation like warzone.
6:00 I think your only worry someone grabbing your throat is if they can do eagle claw squish and crush the throat in 1 second. If they try normal choke you will just KO them. Some few men train to crush the windpipe instantly instead of choke. Then you might both die.
La secuencia de técnicas me resultó una mezcla de karate y aikido, muy buen video, ma ha gustado mucho. Deberían de hacer más videos con esta temática : posibles casos reales y las posibles técnicas de defensa personal que podrían servir en dichas situaciones. Tiene mi like el video. Más videos asi por favor.
Спасибо большое за интересное видео! Хотел спросить. Данный мастер представляет одно какое-то боевое искусство или сразу несколько направлений? В частности хотел узнать, когда мастер делает круговые движения переходящие в броски или заломы это Цинь На или Багуачжан?
He practices parts of various styles from Hebei province. I think his main style is Cha Quan and also Baji Quan. He also does some other stuff like Yang Taiji, Kou Shou Fanzi, I think a little bit of Chuo Jiao. He doesn't practice Bagua zhang. Qinna is a classification or techniques. All traditional Chinese arts have Ti (leg techniques, kicking, tripping, sweeps, knees, etc.), Da (hitting techniques like punches, palms elbows, shoulders and general striking) Shuai (throwing techniques)' and Na (grabbing techniques like joint locks, throat grabs, hair pulling, etc.) Qin na is. Another term for grabbing techniques. All Chinese martial arts have grabbing, it's not it's own style.