I think the Hatsumi classes are bit tough. If shihan often have trouble
understanding what he is doing, I've got a snowflakes chance in hell of
understanding. Having said that, when I was in Japan in March I did see
Hatsumi absolutely smash Darren Horvarth. Darren Horvarth is a monster,
he's bigger than Ed Lomax. He's not in the same league as Ed or a number of
other Australian shihan for that matter but that's not the point....the way
soke tossed him around like a piece of litter is the point.
Nice moves, though I find hard to understand the need for other belt colors
besides white (for 10th kyu), green (for 9th to 1st kyu) and black (shodan
and beyond). About the "blablabla coreographed moves", all I have to say is
that about all the bujinkan videos you're gonna find here on youtube will
be coreographed. Whoever, I hope you don't think that these demonstration
videos actually show the full content of bujinkan's training system.
Besides, nice moves!! Ninpo Ikkan!!
It's all about who you train with and how dedicated you are to learn. For
me personally the answer is certainly yes, it works. I trained for 12 some
odd years before taking a security job where I was regularly in street
fights. Over time I ended up fighting a lot (50+ fights) of untrained
people who were much larger, stronger, and in better shape than I was. I'm
still here to talk about it and I never got injured so I must've taken
something from the training.
@negativeionz0 Speaking as one of Ed’s students, we do sacrifice comfort
for realism. Ed is a great teacher of ninpo taijutsu. I trained in 2 other
martial arts prior to bujinkan, have a black-belt in one of them (after 6
yrs of training), and can honestly say that ninjutsu is one of the least
pretentious martial arts out there. There is very little focus placed on
grades and titles, and more focus on personal development and attitude.
It is very childish to reduce every video thread to a MMA discussion. If
you need lots of belts and encouragement and competition and trophies...
combat arts are not for you. If you want to learn how to move, think,
adapt, etc, then give a combat art like taijutsu a try. This type of
training is not for everyone, and it appears from watching Shihan Ed Lomax
that these students sacrifice some comfort for the sake of realism.
A UFC fighter would never fight someone trained in Bujinkan Ninjutsu, for
the simple reason that Bujinkan Ninjutsu is one of the only remaining
Martial Arts that teaches no rules fighting. Any part of the body is an
acceptable target, not like these fruits in UFC who want rules against neck
and groin strikes, and rules against manipulation of small digits on the
body.
As a matter of fact, a lot of the techniques in the Bujinkan are outlawed
by UFC. Gouges, holding clothing, small joint manipulation, nerve strikes,
even "timidity". When we train, all of these come into play, and yes, they
really hurt. I'm sure that a budoka could easily hold his own against a UFC
fighter, at least long enough to injure him and get away.
these other groups you refer to are from students of the Bujinkan that
quit. eg BBD - Irish ex-shidoshi Brian MacCarthy (was 8th dan which is
below shihan in Bujinkan), Genbukan from Japanese ex-student Tanemura (also
was 8th dan in Bujinkan), and Jinenkan by Japanese ex-student Manaka (was
10th dan which is first of the shihan/master ranks in Bujinkan).
I'm starting tonight at the Hombu dojo in South Africa, One of the best
dojo's around. I like reading the positive comments about Bujinkan. and I
agree with zuser, with the right technique you could take out anyone. At
the higher levels of achievement I think 4th dan you develop a deeper sense
of your surroundings and become able to sense attacks
i do kyokushin karate im 13 and im 4th kyu( green belt black tip) going for
3rd kyu( brown belt) sometime mid next year i was wondering if any one
thinks if it would be a good or bad idea for me to start training in a form
of ninjutsu,i mean i first started karate because i liked ninjutsu when i
was younger and i dont no if i shuld...
@9mm034 that's a silly question, it can take some people more years than
others to get a black belt in Ninjutsu, it's not judged on how long you
have been training for, its judged on the amount of time, effort,
commitment and hard work you put into it, and also some black belts are not
as skilled as some Brown belts, or possibly lower
its not even the techniques, its the way of moving that this art teaches
you that allows you to use it in any situation, brilliant :). was at a
seminar by Pedro Fleitas gonzalez in ireland this weekend really enjoyed
it, some lads from the Atlanta dojo had sayings on their tee shirts like "
if you die , we split your gear"
It's not choreographed, but it is tightly edited. This clip is of Ed
teaching in his dojo in Adelaide. He's living in Japan at the moment so you
won't see him if you visit his dojo, but I can almost guarantee he'll be at
all the soke classes and you'll probably see him at quite a few classes of
the shitenno.
@chooky85 the instructor at Campbelltown is Andy, he has loads of years
training and security work experience so well worth it. It's a small class
so you will get plenty of personal assistance. Call 0420 546 317 to get his
contact details as I gather they are changing venue at the moment.
I train in cincinnati, you have the opertunity to be able to train in
Bujinkan and Stephen K Hayes Toshindo. Not 15 minutes from each other as
well. They have subtle diffrences, but Jeffs classes in dayton are great as
well as Hayes, My friend in the bujinakn knows his daughter, marrissa
@connorbcfc1875 Ninjutsu is all about being effective. Mainly the
techniques are counter-strikes, but all are relevant and applicable to real
combat situations. However, it ultimately isn’t the art, it’s the fighter.
Don’t go around looking for the perfect martial art.
just so you know, a UFC fighter tried one of theese guys, he was locked in
a death'grip in a few seconds, ofc the UFC fighter thought he could just
roll himself out of the death'grip, and he got a neck-injury... So yea, i
would love to see something like that on tape ;)
@RenzitoARG None of this is coreographed…at all. And after you meet Ed you
become pretty fucking certain he’s do just fine in a real fight. This is
just him demonstrating techniques at half-speed for the sake of the class
who have to copy them exactly.
Thay Vo Hoang Yen Australia Adelaide 11-5-2013 chua benh liet
Hai Video Pro [email protected] Thay Vo Hoang Yen Dia Chi: 1 Trung tam phuc hoi chuc nang va duong sinh Vo Hoang Yen Tel: 039 3896156 - 093 ...
+con gio vo tinh Thầy chữa ở Việt Nam, bị cấm, bị phạt, Thầy chữa bệnh không lấy tiền, ai cúng dường thì đem mua gạo tặng người nghèo, tiền đâu nộp phạt? Dù vậy, một tháng 30 ngày, Thầy vẫn dành ra đến 15 ngày để chữa ở Hà Tĩnh và Bình Thuận là 2 tỉnh thành cho phép Thầy hành nghề. Chẳng qua là ở Việt Nam không ai quay phim up lên youtube. "biết thì thưa thốt, không biết thì dựa cột mà nghe", phát biểu linh tinh chỉ làm người khác ghét.
Chong cong san: Please read this before you can make unfair judgment for master Vo Hoang Yen//www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-doctor-is-listening/201301/6-lessons-we-can-learn-eastern-chinese-medicine
TRUNG TÂM PHỤC HỒI CHỨC NĂNG & DƯỠNG SINH VÕ HOÀNG YÊN LƯƠNG Y VÕ HOÀNG YÊN GIÁM ĐỐC Đ/C : .........Thôn :yên Khánh ,Xã Cẩm Vịnh,H.Cẩm xuyên ,T. Hà TỉnhHưng An Tự,Thôn 3,Xã Gia An,H.Tánh Linh,t.Bình ThuậnĐT: 0932 084 094 - 0932 628 468 - 0913 626 917Email :[email protected] day la so lay hen cua thayThôn tin này là ở VN nha bạn ơi .và ko có đia chỉ chính xác chỉ biết vậy thôi
2015 Australian GT Championship - Adelaide - Race 1
2015 Australian GT Championship - Adelaide - Race 1.
While I think it's reasonable (didn't know at match fixing) I'm embarrassed
to say as a young kid I thought that blunders like the first run out that
seemed to happen very frequently were a result of India and Pakistani
players being complete morons. Now unfortunately I think it's more likely
that it was match fixing
It's sad, but I'm sure you're right. So much money in the game for their not to be corruption I guess. I'm embarrassed to say I've never watched an IPL game (I'm still not a fan of the short form) but if I were to guess I'd say Shane Warne. Great cricket player but a sack of shit as a person imo.
Australians, new zealanders and south africans all have been involved in fixing as well. IPL is probably totally fixed. i am sure australians playing there have no choice but to oblige. I remeber some Rajasthan Royal matches that viewed more like wrestlemania. And guess who was the captain :)
+bizogi If they were purposeful they were better disguised. Seemed more a result of brilliant fielding to me. In contrast the Pakistani opener may have been dismissed as the result of incredible laziness but it didn't appear that way. Should probably give him the benefit of the doubt though.
Bunch of cheats the West Indies, the knew it came off the Visor. If
Australia won that game they would of won the series, and became the number
1 team in the world.
+AFFTL As far as I can remember, bowlers and fielders always appeal every time there is a slight chance that the batsman is out and it is up to the umpire to decide if the batsman is out or not.And It was a decision made by your fellow countrymen, mate. If you want to call anybody cheat, should it not be your countryman, Mr. Hair?
Ooooh it's a Grammar Nazi, get a life loser. I never claim Australia can do no wrong. I just claimed what is a fact that the West Indies cheated in this game.
+AFFTL Don't YOU mean should "have" instead of should "of"? Funny how Australia can do no wrong in the eyes of fans but when another team does it oh no bloody cheats. It's why I can't stand them, to be honest; holier than thou nonsense.
Get some life? Don't you mean get a life. So umpires never make mistakes. That's why you see on Cricket coverage all the time on relays of Umpires making mistakes. Courtney Walsh admitted in a interview in 1998 that the Ball came off the Visor. Cheats.
Impossible to tell weather Junior Murray was Out or not. The players didn't cheat they thought he was Out. The West Indies players did cheat, they knew it came of the Visor.And Junior Murray wasn't a Batsman, he was a Wicket Keeper. He couldn't Bat, and wouldn't of made a difference.Australia should of beaten the West Indies in that series, and been World Number 1 two years before they were.
+bongo155 i wonder how fast viv could bat if he had to handle such a weak batting line that of india.besides he never had to face the west indian giants.test cricket is not t20.here style,technique and patience matters rather than strikerate.this is the reason why our ipl big bullies provide such a pitiful performance in test cricket which is an examination rather than exhibition
It doesn't change the scoring rate in that test but you said "back then" not "scoring was so slow in that test". There were many players who scored their runs quickly back then. Ian Botham springs to mind along with countless others. Your comment was a stupid one and you have proven yourself to be stupid. Resorting to profanity when someone questions you is the true sign of a moron.
+BongSau83Viv could score quickly. More often at test level he did not. Also, how does that change the scoring rate in this test? If India had actually scored at a decent rate this series they would have won it instead. of DRAWING IT 0-0, fucktard. They played against one of the worst, if not the worst Australian team of all time and dominated the series yet couldnt win it.Also, fuckface, West Indies were fastest scoring team of the 80's. They were also the best team of the 80's. Rest of teams rarely scored at more than 3 runs at over. Look at how many DRAWS there were, especially between India and Australia.