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Yari, I'm not familiar with this technique. We may have it in our curriculum under a different name. Can you describe the tech?Yari said:Hi
I've been trying to do aiki-nage when doing Randori, but I always seem to come short. Uke tends to stop short, and doesn't "fly".
Any experience with it?
/Yari
theletch1 said:Yari, I'm not familiar with this technique. We may have it in our curriculum under a different name. Can you describe the tech?
I haven't seen this tech in my style but it seems to me that uke is probably stopping short because he knows it's coming. This tech would almost have to be one that is used against a full force attack on an unsuspecting attacker. I've seen the tech you're referring to somewhere on the net in a video clip and it seemed like a real sacrifice move to me. An attacker who is aware of himself and his surroundings should be able to jump over, blend to the side or just pull up short and give a good football kick to your head. Having said that, I may try this out tonight on an unsuspecting uke that comes barreling in just to see what results I get. I don't think I'd try this on the street though.Yari said:simply put, you put yourself infront of uke's feet, like a ball, and he falls over you.
We put uke in a momentum, and then step infront(and down), so his own momentum puts him over your. If hi doesn't want to land on his face, he does ukemi.
/Yari
theletch1 said:An attacker who is aware of himself and his surroundings should be able to jump over, blend to the side or just pull up short and give a good football kick to your head. Having said that, I may try this out tonight on an unsuspecting uke that comes barreling in just to see what results I get. I don't think I'd try this on the street though.
theletch1 said:By catching the lead foot as it hits the floor and pushing in you could add a little extra forward thrust to the front of the knee, hyper-extending it before he even leaves the ground thus making it harder for him to get up again, thereby allowing yourself time to regain your footing and escape or retaliate. O.K. it makes more sense that way. Yet another aikido technique where the timing has to be immaculate.
Yari, does Nishio style have a seperate curriculum for kids or do they learn a different level of the adults set? Nihon Goshin has a seperate curriculum altogether for kids until the green belt level, then they begin to work the adult techs from the adult white level on up. Many of the kids techniques have a great deal of merit and I've even used some of them during randori to good effect.
Marvin, I've been the victim of mental flatulence my self a time or two. :uhyeah:Marvin said:never mind, brain fart. Step in throw
theletch1 said:Marvin, I've been the victim of mental flatulence my self a time or two. :uhyeah:
I just did aikido this past wednesday... and I still forget the terminology. :uhyeah: Not to worry. We're all learning that for most every style of aikido that's out there there are different terms for everything. The style that I study doesn't even use japanese terms for techniques so I have to try and figure out which technique term to use based on descriptions of the tech. It's great for expanding my research skills but gets a little confusing when I have to come up with 6 or 7 different names for the same tech.Marvin said:it's been a long time since I've done any aikido, I just forgot the terminology!