I like where your head's at.
The insistence upon the very only bestest mostingly effectivist technique always ever all the time around here gets kind of ridiculous.
Printable View
Greetings,
Vernon:
I have absolutely nothing against ANY kind of lock done in a street situation if the opportunity presents itself to do so or if there is a need to do it. The issue with the OP is not the lock at all. It is how the OP arrived at it. I have watched this thread meander to the effectiveness of a lock or a backfist. The problem is the series of movement. It is flawed.
mickey
One day someone's going to pull it off probably using a technique similar in concept to what YKW was trying to explain in his clip (you pull, I push) and then more peeps will start using the "Americana" as a take down and people like LeRoux will swear up and down that it's one of their approved proven techniques.
meh :rolleyes:
Aikido isn't on my high list, but just f**k'n around one night in Judo, I did a something similar to this, but with intention and it completely floored the guy (circular stepped outside his initial grip, grabbed his wrist, turned hard and to the side, used my other grip for leverage, and lo-and-behold, the technique worked :eek: ). Conceptually, it's not far off from an Americana. Someone WILL pull it off in a spectacular way someday, others will follow.
Yeah, why perpetuate your inferiority complex by perseverating about ineffective techniques on a message board for a marginal, historically diluted, outdated style when you could just admit to yourself that you're never going to amount to anything more than a mediocre martial artist and thats okay because it doesn't matter that you'll never be a champion, you can still train, be safe and have fun.
"Hi Kurt!":D
There's no such thing as a mediocre martial artist.
You are either able, or unable.
don't you love it when some guys heads explode when they see an 'impossible' technique working in a match...then it becoming more common place. like how mma comentators **** themselves when head kick KO's started coming out often, cuz 'thats dangerous, low percentage stuff'
remember the old proponents of 'never kick above the waist' LOL now you get head kick KOs on a regular basis.
if i train the **** out of something thats medium percentage, then it can very well become high percentage for me. especially under the circumstances that most sport guys will never train the reversal/reaction/defense against things that are 'not possible'
i remember watching peoples brains ooze out their ears when cung le got his first body side/back kick tko