GJEC
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LOUGHBOROUGH ENSHIN
Posts: 3,218
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ENSHIN
Nov 17, 2014 2:22:31 GMT -5
Post by GJEC on Nov 17, 2014 2:22:31 GMT -5
It seems a bit like car design to me.
To start with every model was different but these days the smart brains come up with designs that are pretty similar.
Gary
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ENSHIN
Nov 17, 2014 10:49:37 GMT -5
Post by MMX on Nov 17, 2014 10:49:37 GMT -5
While doing a bit of research into Akira Masuda's Freestyle Karate Project from my limited knowledge it looks quite similar to Enshin ( or what I know of Enshin ) can those in the know shed more light on this for me particularly in relation to throws used ? I have not looked into it.
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ENSHIN
Nov 17, 2014 11:37:55 GMT -5
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Post by slaine on Nov 17, 2014 11:37:55 GMT -5
Has anyone got a link or links to the Enshin syllabus online if any exist ?
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GJEC
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LOUGHBOROUGH ENSHIN
Posts: 3,218
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ENSHIN
Nov 17, 2014 13:53:56 GMT -5
MMX likes this
Post by GJEC on Nov 17, 2014 13:53:56 GMT -5
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ENSHIN
Nov 17, 2014 14:11:19 GMT -5
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GJEC likes this
Post by slaine on Nov 17, 2014 14:11:19 GMT -5
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Post by meguro on Nov 25, 2014 9:24:09 GMT -5
I was thinking about you Enshin folk and your three second time limit for holding, and it occurred to me that one handed throwing technique would be ideal for those circumstances. Here's a vid of a one armed osoto gari (ura nage in your parlance).
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GJEC
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LOUGHBOROUGH ENSHIN
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Post by GJEC on Nov 25, 2014 11:54:03 GMT -5
I was thinking about you Enshin folk and your three second time limit for holding, and it occurred to me that one handed throwing technique would be ideal for those circumstances. Here's a vid of a one armed osoto gari (ura nage in your parlance). Nice Some place more emphasis on throwing, some more on striking although we are all expected to practise the skills. Me? I like to grab and strike then turn it into a throw rather than go straight to the throw, knees being my favourite 'persuader' to get the opponent off balance and good to meet Mr Floor. Gary
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ENSHIN
Nov 27, 2014 8:36:31 GMT -5
GJEC likes this
Post by meguro on Nov 27, 2014 8:36:31 GMT -5
Some place more emphasis on throwing, some more on striking although we are all expected to practise the skills. Me? I like to grab and strike then turn it into a throw rather than go straight to the throw, knees being my favourite 'persuader' to get the opponent off balance and good to meet Mr Floor. Gary Gary, sounds like you've played a lot of ice hockey.
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Post by MMX on Mar 22, 2015 18:19:43 GMT -5
Video history of Joko Ninomiya in the Kyokushin Days...
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Post by meguro on Mar 23, 2015 18:05:19 GMT -5
What's interesting is that almost everyone in the video left Kyokushin to do their own thing: Azuma (Kudo); Nakamura (Seido); Oyama Shigeru (World Oyama); Ninomiya (Enshin).
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GJEC
Member
LOUGHBOROUGH ENSHIN
Posts: 3,218
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ENSHIN
Mar 24, 2015 2:29:43 GMT -5
Post by GJEC on Mar 24, 2015 2:29:43 GMT -5
Old stags push young stags out of the herd.
Gary
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ENSHIN
Mar 24, 2015 6:16:38 GMT -5
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Post by slaine on Mar 24, 2015 6:16:38 GMT -5
What's interesting is that almost everyone in the video left Kyokushin to do their own thing: Azuma (Kudo); Nakamura (Seido); Oyama Shigeru (World Oyama); Ninomiya (Enshin). Yes interesting , what do you think one can draw from that , if anything ?
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ENSHIN
Mar 24, 2015 6:17:03 GMT -5
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Post by slaine on Mar 24, 2015 6:17:03 GMT -5
What's interesting is that almost everyone in the video left Kyokushin to do their own thing: Azuma (Kudo); Nakamura (Seido); Oyama Shigeru (World Oyama); Ninomiya (Enshin). Yes interesting , what do you think one can draw from that , if anything ?
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GJEC
Member
LOUGHBOROUGH ENSHIN
Posts: 3,218
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ENSHIN
Mar 24, 2015 7:29:07 GMT -5
Post by GJEC on Mar 24, 2015 7:29:07 GMT -5
A few things
1). Mas Oyama made promises he didn't keep
2). He realised knockdown was a money spinner and changed the ethos from 'all in' to knockdown
3). Anyone with the drive and gumption to climb the greasy pole rarely wants to stop at number 2
4). Anyone who disagreed was publicly humiliated
Gary
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Post by meguro on Mar 24, 2015 9:14:07 GMT -5
What's interesting is that almost everyone in the video left Kyokushin to do their own thing: Azuma (Kudo); Nakamura (Seido); Oyama Shigeru (World Oyama); Ninomiya (Enshin). Yes interesting , what do you think one can draw from that , if anything ? Some like tradition, some believe they can improve on it. Mas Oyama himself broke with tradition, but then things stalled and innovation stagnated and then petrified into a new tradition. The guys with ambition and a different take and the confidence that they could do it better tried.
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