Konnichiwa watashi no tomodachi.
Hello, my fellow Karateka.
This is my first post on a forum so please be gentle. :-)
I have been studying Wado Ryu on and off for the past few years and wanted to get back into it as I missed the training. Also I found my old syllabus.
I remember everything except for 'Zenshinshite jodan, Renzuki chudan.' Now I have tried searching the website for keywords and another forum, Google etc but I can't find an exact explaination.
If my memory serves me correctly, in my old club we used to have, 'Left Fighting Stance, then, left tobikomizuki jodan with (sliding forward in same stance), then basically a gyakuzuki chudan.'
However, from reading on the web, some say what I remember and others say, 'Left fighting stance, step back leg forward into Right Fighting Stance and tobikomizuki with right followed with a gyakuzuki chudan.'
I am lost, please could someone explain to me the correct way to conduct these during renraku waza?
Ichiro
Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Hi Ichiro,
Welcome to the forum.We used to do these combinations some years ago as part of the grading syllabus, step forward as in ayumi ashi, the one you remember is okuri ashi (sliding forward and punching with the leading arm).
We did that also.
Steve.
Welcome to the forum.We used to do these combinations some years ago as part of the grading syllabus, step forward as in ayumi ashi, the one you remember is okuri ashi (sliding forward and punching with the leading arm).
We did that also.
Steve.
Steve Greenwood.
www.chezvalade.com
www.chezvalade.com
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Thank you very much for taking the time to answer. However, I an still lost. Which way is it? Are you saying that zenshinshite is ayumi ashi and that I should step back leg to front then do tobikomi jodan, gyakuzuki chudan?steveig wrote:Hi Ichiro,
Welcome to the forum.We used to do these combinations some years ago as part of the grading syllabus, step forward as in ayumi ashi, the one you remember is okuri ashi (sliding forward and punching with the leading arm).
We did that also.
Steve.
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Hi ichiro,
Probably like ohyo gumite ipponme.
AJ
Probably like ohyo gumite ipponme.
AJ
AJ van Dijk
President & Chief Instructor Wadokai Holland
General Secretary FEW Federation European Wadokai
http://www.WadokaiOnline.com - Wado Books // Wado DVDs
http://www.wadokai.nl
http://www.fewkarate.com
President & Chief Instructor Wadokai Holland
General Secretary FEW Federation European Wadokai
http://www.WadokaiOnline.com - Wado Books // Wado DVDs
http://www.wadokai.nl
http://www.fewkarate.com
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Thats the way we did it.Ichiro wrote:Thank you very much for taking the time to answer. However, I an still lost. Which way is it? Are you saying that zenshinshite is ayumi ashi and that I should step back leg to front then do tobikomi jodan, gyakuzuki chudan?steveig wrote:Hi Ichiro,
Welcome to the forum.We used to do these combinations some years ago as part of the grading syllabus, step forward as in ayumi ashi, the one you remember is okuri ashi (sliding forward and punching with the leading arm).
We did that also.
Steve.
Steve,
PS As AJ says ohyo ipponme.
Steve Greenwood.
www.chezvalade.com
www.chezvalade.com
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
steveig wrote:Thats the way we did it.Ichiro wrote:Thank you very much for taking the time to answer. However, I an still lost. Which way is it? Are you saying that zenshinshite is ayumi ashi and that I should step back leg to front then do tobikomi jodan, gyakuzuki chudan?steveig wrote:Hi Ichiro,
Welcome to the forum.We used to do these combinations some years ago as part of the grading syllabus, step forward as in ayumi ashi, the one you remember is okuri ashi (sliding forward and punching with the leading arm).
We did that also.
Steve.
Steve,
PS As AJ says ohyo ipponme.
Konbanwa,
Domo arigatou!
Ohyo gumite ipponme makes perfect sense! Thank you all for your replies. Much appreciated.
Ja mata!
Ichiro
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Ichiro as in Suzuki? You a Mariner's fan?Ichiro wrote:
Konbanwa,
Domo arigatou!
Ohyo gumite ipponme makes perfect sense! Thank you all for your replies. Much appreciated.
Ja mata!
Ichiro
Bob Nash
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Hi Ichiro, can I ask where you train?
Reason is ohyo kumite is not set in stone neither is renrakuwaza so - unless your current sensei has a preference - you might want to consider both ayumi ashi and okuri ashi ways equally for more balanced training.
oneya
Reason is ohyo kumite is not set in stone neither is renrakuwaza so - unless your current sensei has a preference - you might want to consider both ayumi ashi and okuri ashi ways equally for more balanced training.
oneya
Reg Kear.
Wado Kokusai San no Ya.
http://www.sannoya.com
Wado Kokusai San no Ya.
http://www.sannoya.com
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Konnichiwa,Gusei21 wrote:Ichiro as in Suzuki? You a Mariner's fan?Ichiro wrote:
Konbanwa,
Domo arigatou!
Ohyo gumite ipponme makes perfect sense! Thank you all for your replies. Much appreciated.
Ja mata!
Ichiro
Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle Mariners baseball. The first Japanese born player to play stateside and break a few records on the way.
Oneya-san,oneya wrote:Hi Ichiro, can I ask where you train?
Reason is ohyo kumite is not set in stone neither is renrakuwaza so - unless your current sensei has a preference - you might want to consider both ayumi ashi and okuri ashi ways equally for more balanced training.
oneya
I will keep in mind ayumi ashi and okuri ashi. Train both for speed, technique and power.
Ja mata
Ichiro
Re: Zenshinshite jodan, renzuki Chudan
Masanori Murakami pitched for the San Francisco Giants in 1964. He was the first Japanese to play in MLB.Ichiro wrote:
Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle Mariners baseball. The first Japanese born player to play stateside and break a few records on the way.
Ja mata
Ichiro
Ichiro was not even born yet. Yu Darvish is your man. His father is Iranian and his mother is Japanese. Best pitcher in Japan is now playing for the Texas Rangers..making 60 million dollars for six years...
Bob Nash