Would any one summarize for us why the white one was the winner please? Like what good stuff he did, and what bad stuff did the red one did? Thank you 😊
It's all about precision, dynamism, posture etc. For example when you're doing Mae (the first one they did) it's important to do your cuts till one exact point, don't go further, just cut till the handle of your sword is in line with your right shoulder when your pulling out the katana. You must also keep your moves coordinated and move at the right pace.
Talking about developing character: Ide Tomota and Yosoichi Sato Sensei watching you doing kata... If this doesn´t threat to crack your full Ki Ken Tai, I don´t know what will.
how can one call them self a master when thy do not train with others " bokin " spar ? it is like some one playing baseball and calling them self a master at the kanobo ?
Wow. Just...wow. Hypnotically beautiful!
Beautiful iaido
Hadda say it....thank you.
Would any one summarize for us why the white one was the winner please? Like what good stuff he did, and what bad stuff did the red one did? Thank you 😊
It's all about precision, dynamism, posture etc. For example when you're doing Mae (the first one they did) it's important to do your cuts till one exact point, don't go further, just cut till the handle of your sword is in line with your right shoulder when your pulling out the katana. You must also keep your moves coordinated and move at the right pace.
@@numiksx9833 Thank you 😊
Talking about developing character: Ide Tomota and Yosoichi Sato Sensei watching you doing kata... If this doesn´t threat to crack your full Ki Ken Tai, I don´t know what will.
I liked Shiomi's Tsukikage, assuming he's a MJER practitioner.
how can one call them self a master when thy do not train with others " bokin " spar ? it is like some one playing baseball and calling them self a master at the kanobo ?
不愉快な
extremely boring