Favourite Technique?
Please share your favourite technique with me.
Mine is probably irimi nage. Look forward to hearing about yours :) |
Re: Favourite Technique?
my favorite technique is falling asleep, ... i meant meditation, on the mat while sitting in seiza.
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Re: Favourite Technique?
Interesting that you say irimi nage, Thomas. Because I was going to say irimi.
Irimi is the first movement and first technique of every other movement and every technique in Aikido. If irimi is executed correctly, every other movement thereafter can flow effortlessly. If irimi is not executed correctly, no matter what we do, we'll be compensating — through muscling, collusion, over or under extending, etc. — and nothing we do would qualify as Aikido. Irimi nage, in its most abbreviated form, is a single entering irimi movement, cutting through and felling uke. Done. Quote:
Multiple attackers – with lethal intent – require a different strategy. In Segal's randori demonstration, ukes go down with a single movement, and use their ukemi to return and attack him again. In real application of irimi nage, no one is getting back up again. Segal's randori demonstrations are symbolic of Ueshiba's definition of Aikido — life and death in a single strike. Ineffective application of irimi is something that Shoji Nishio would often mention in what he saw as a deterioration in the training and practices of many aikidoka. Nishio's prime focus was always in that first movement. Because if we don't nail that, we're deluding ourselves into thinking that anything that comes after that is going to be effective. So, I might have to say I'm with you on irimi nage, Chris. Because if we can't apply effective irimi, nothing else matters, and it ceases being Aikido. |
Re: Favourite Technique?
More important than technique, Kuzushi.
dps |
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In keiko you have to give uke a chance to protect himself by letting him take ukemi, but in reality there is no ukemi possible, no protection, just broken bones. For example the way Tada Sensei executed shiho-nage when he was younger, was very dangerous for uke, he had to jump high into a forward ukemi in the right moment, otherwise his shoulder ore ellbow was broken. Quote:
It's just a knocking-down-movement that every MMA guy could do, and in cinema its just...oh well. In the aikido expo demontration 1993 he does not show a single irimi-nage in his randori demonstration, he moves slow and sluggish. I don't think he is a good example, but as regards the importance of irimi you are right. |
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Must we refer to Mr Seagal in this debate?I know I am contradicting my own statement here.The 1993 demo is pretty grim. Less said the better .Cheers, Joe. |
Re: Favourite Technique?
Changes all the time. Today it's ikkyo osae, Monday it'll be something else.
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I seem to do Hachi Mawashi a lot in randori
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for immobilization, I like nikkyo. THE PAIN!! ARRR!!
for projection, I like iriminage (haha why are you moving around m- OH SHIII-!!) |
Re: Favourite Technique?
Nikkyo. It's a testometer of how I am feeling when I do it, how I feel about the other person.
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Re: Favourite Technique?
Ikkyo. I think it's the most important one. :)
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People are always looking for "more advanced." Ikkyo's not called "first technique" for nothing. |
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I like Sankyo
the way it hurts and the way it gives me the overall control on my opponent and also the various forms to turn it into a Sankyo-nage. |
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I've always liked the timing and speed of ushiro-ate (see my gif) and all its variations. |
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Ikajo is about breaking balance in the moment of attack, like in ippon-dori. Nikajo is about wrist-locks. |
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In nikajo control of the attacker will be induced by applying a wrist-lock, in sankajo a cross-block will be executed to stop the attack. Ikajo is about braking balance in the moment of attack, just by entering, like in ippon dori (see above). Thats just the explanation for classification of techniques given by katsuyuki kondo. |
Re: Favourite Technique?
From the thread title: "Favourite Technique?" Not best technique, first technique or most important technique. "Favo(u)rite" is nothing to argue about.
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Re: Favourite Technique?
If "favorite" implies what is most in my body, what I tend to revert to when the opening is there, and in fact what I had waking dreams of during the two year period of being off the mat with knee injury/rehab....that is undoubtedly sayunage or in some nomenclatures sokumen iriminage. Sankyo tends to be where my body goes if optimal opening for sayu isn't there.
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Favorite technique.... that one where uke swings and I put a hand on him/her and they fall down, go boom and I don't really know what the heck I just did.... Best...Feeling...Ever!
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Thank you for all of the replies; it's made interesting reading. I think my favourite has now changed as I have pondered more and more; Ikkyo. It's a beautiful thing.
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Re: Favourite Technique?
If 1v1 standing, my favorite is to get a clinch, transition to head and arm, break balance, then a kind of omote head and arm throw into kesa gatame.
Omote in that the inside leg slides through and past rather than pivoting and putting your hips into nage. In this omote form, the action goes angularly to uke's rear "third leg" (as modified by the twisting head and arm kuzushi) rather than up and over nage's hips to uke's front "third leg". Yah, yah. It's not normal aikido. I thought that it would add some spice without being unapproachable to the average reader a'la the daito ryu techniques. |
Re: Favourite Technique?
My top 3 are Ikkyo Ura, Naname Kokyu Nage and Kote Gaeshi, though I do also like Uchi Kaiten Nage and Soto Kaiten Nage.
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