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Thanks for mentioning the word yawara. Never heard of it, so I did some reading on the subject...interesting.Also the hammerfist translates better to weapon use like yawara sticks, so if you are interested in a common platform that is my preference.
Thanks for mentioning the word yawara. Never heard of it, so I did some reading on the subject...interesting.
Reminds me of my foot massage roller!
I prefer a hammerfist almost always, and I find it very hard to believe that its easier to break your hand with a hammerfist over a backfist, any references for that?
Also the hammerfist translates better to weapon use like yawara sticks, so if you are interested in a common platform that is my preference.
Yawara, palm stick, kubaton, fistload, dulo-dulo, whatever you want to call it, there are lots of variations.
One of things I worked on when learning to disarm someone with a knife was, essentially, a hammer-fist strike with the hand I was holding the knife in, striking my opponent with the butt end of the tanto.
Considering that each requires a different method of execution based on position I can't see where a preference would make any difference on which one you chose to use.Are there any good reasons to prefer a hammerfist to a good old backfist.
I've read that contrary to popular belief its easier to injure your hand with a hammerfist.
That doesnt seem to make sense...considering its a softer striking surface???
If I had to generalize the two strikes, I think of hammerfists as just that, a great way to deliver blunt trauma. Even if your a little off, you are still going to be doing some damage. Backfists are more a precision weapon with specific targets to create the damage.
Both have their time and place and have different supporting strategies to use them.
I have seen some people use their backfist in the same way that a boxer uses his jab. A quick distraction and/or setup technique. In fact, if you look at some jab variations they look VERY much like a jab but are slightly varied to be legal in boxing. I think it is called a swing jab.
Any rate, backfists have alot of usages and methods as well when mastered.
Considering that each requires a different method of execution based on position I can't see where a preference would make any difference on which one you chose to use.
Sean
Well the two most popular views are...Comparing a hammer fist with a back fist is like comparing a wrench and a hammer.
Well the two most popular views are...
1. That backfists are for soft targets and hammerfists are for hard targets...and I agree, as long as you can pick and choose. Against a competent boxer just landing any punch is difficult, never mind accuracy.
You never see people breaking bricks with backfists.
2. That the two strikes are completely different in terms of their angle of attack, and therefore there is no sense in comparing them...this vs. that.
And there I dont agree because its the same arm motion for both.
The only difference being a 90 degree twist of the wrist.
When the Japan Karate Association's chief instructor Nakayama wrote his classic back in the 1960s he talked about both as if they are almost identical in the same paragraph.
http://i50.tinypic.com/fcmyk5.jpg
Yawara, palm stick, kubaton, fistload, dulo-dulo, whatever you want to call it, there are lots of variations.