I have seen hints of that stiff legged "back kick" movement about a third of the way through. It isn't there the way I learned it, but I have seen odd stiff legged crossing side step at that point. I would love to know the bunkai.
If sill interested in an answer, we do it the same way, but bunkai often varies from the person teaching you to teaching you. To me it is a throwing movement - I have seen moves like this in Judo and the application works really good. When in kokutsu/nekoashi dachi you hold your opponent with the hikite hand in shuto and the other one performes like a downward nagashi uke style move it could mean like holding one hand on the body of the opponent and the other is grabbing e.g. the arm while pushing down. The stiff leg is lifted to throw the opponent (so your hips touch in the application). If the opponent does not fall down, move to kake dachi and lift the opponents arm up (nagashi style hand to body, hikite hand upward, face to upper hand) to break posture. If still no fall, continue in shiko/kiba dachi (varies from style to style) and perform lower gedan barai with shuto, this is always a throw in our style - you push your knee into the knee from the opponent and "gedan-barai" his upper body down. But again, this is just one form of bunkai application that makes sense to me. I am neither sure or in the position to claim it to be the "only right" application. Would like to know different applications, too! Karate is family, not hate.
It's not a back kick. It is a "drunken movement", I.e.exaggerating going with the pull of an opponent, then stomping the rear foot down on their knee/leg. Thus, making speed and power to a stomp, meanwhile allowing them to present the target. That's the old application. Applications in kata are much closer than in competitive sparring, essentially grab/punch range all the time. Including kicks.
Excellent thank you very much for posting! Hai
I have seen hints of that stiff legged "back kick" movement about a third of the way through.
It isn't there the way I learned it, but I have seen odd stiff legged crossing side step at that point.
I would love to know the bunkai.
Not the way i learned it either
If sill interested in an answer, we do it the same way, but bunkai often varies from the person teaching you to teaching you. To me it is a throwing movement - I have seen moves like this in Judo and the application works really good. When in kokutsu/nekoashi dachi you hold your opponent with the hikite hand in shuto and the other one performes like a downward nagashi uke style move it could mean like holding one hand on the body of the opponent and the other is grabbing e.g. the arm while pushing down. The stiff leg is lifted to throw the opponent (so your hips touch in the application). If the opponent does not fall down, move to kake dachi and lift the opponents arm up (nagashi style hand to body, hikite hand upward, face to upper hand) to break posture. If still no fall, continue in shiko/kiba dachi (varies from style to style) and perform lower gedan barai with shuto, this is always a throw in our style - you push your knee into the knee from the opponent and "gedan-barai" his upper body down.
But again, this is just one form of bunkai application that makes sense to me. I am neither sure or in the position to claim it to be the "only right" application. Would like to know different applications, too! Karate is family, not hate.
It's not a back kick. It is a "drunken movement", I.e.exaggerating going with the pull of an opponent, then stomping the rear foot down on their knee/leg. Thus, making speed and power to a stomp, meanwhile allowing them to present the target. That's the old application.
Applications in kata are much closer than in competitive sparring, essentially grab/punch range all the time. Including kicks.
Thank you sensai
Thank you sensie
Sensei*
Osu!