I was taught to point the heal of the support leg at the target (for a round, side, or swing kick) which you do in your video, but you don’t say anything about that. Keith Vitale, Joe Corley, and Bill Wallace all came to my studio in Tucker, Ga in the mid 1980s, and I feel blessed to have trained with all of them.
Much better Sir, I agree to stop chambering knees higher than waist level, which then prevents kicking the side-kick higher. But, again, there is a disregard to kicking siede kick following the rear leg stepping forward of the front legkosa dachi, or behind the front leg, kake dachi. In the first case a modified mawashi geri is to be ended up as a yoko-keri ke-komi, and if stepping behind the front leg an almost real, ushiro-geri -close yoko geri ke kome is to be performed. Best regards. Physiology of waist strtucture always preferes inward or outward angles.Never to the sides straightly. Just comment beetter what you are performing well. Paul.68, retired instructor.
I think Bill Wallace and Keith Vitali were among the first champions who stressed the effectiveness of the streamed line chambering for competition as most of the tournaments sparring rules do not allow any kicking to the lower targets. Thus, they had to modify the conventional chambering in order to score effectively with the body and/or head level kicks in competition.
@@antoniostrina82 Well, Van Damme was hugely influenced by Bill Wallace after all. Wallace had already advocated the chamber long before Van Damme made his screen debut.
Great lesson. I hate when in karte or TKD there is a certain way to chamber when practicality is to best way to chamber. Im karate guy but I subscribe this channel. Thank you. Ps. Now that I looked your video you are karate guy too.
Yes. There are some differeces, though. For example, the Kata or Hyong. In Tang Soo Do they still use some shotokan kata, while in traditional ITF they have modified the whole Kata or Hyong.
The only martial art that teaches correct (best, most effective) execution of a sidekick is INTERNATIONAL TaeKwonDo and Muay Thai/Kickboxing..... Execution of highest power/impact & speed from a strike is all about MOMENTUM..... Muay Thai / Kickboxing / Boxing (and in some cases ITF, International TKD, not WTF, World Taekwondo, the pussified version of real TKD) is the only who practices this. Chambering a kick, lifting your knee up, before kicking is the most stupid thing ever, you totally destroy your momentum/power by doing this when you go in full force & really stepping into it. SOME chamber should happen, but not like this entirely, for a sidekick you want no wasted momentum, you want your foot to go as in a straight trajectory to the target as possible with all your weight/force..... This why Martial Arts (Tang Soo Do, TKD, Karate, Kung Fu) is just a martial art, fun to do, cool for your cardio, mentality etc etc etc..... its cool for MOVIES aswell.... but dont ever think that everything your martial art teaches is the most effective in the real world when defending or attacking. If you are after whats ACTUALLY effective in the real world dont look anywhere else except Muay Thai/Kickboxing/Boxing (for striking) and then BJJ/Wrestling (for ground game/grappling).
My one teacher used to say you're basically squatting to the side. Great explanation of it!
Nice,,,,,Most practical chamber,,,,straight line generates maximum power,,,well done,,class,,,thanks bunch...
I was taught to point the heal of the support leg at the target (for a round, side, or swing kick) which you do in your video, but you don’t say anything about that. Keith Vitale, Joe Corley, and Bill Wallace all came to my studio in Tucker, Ga in the mid 1980s, and I feel blessed to have trained with all of them.
Thank you for explaining this!
Damn I wish I lived close enough to train with you. You seem like a great teacher. I just started 2 weeks ago. I'm in the UK.
How's it going?
Thank you for your explanation. Greetings from Bolivia.
Thank you very much for clarifying this. This helps a lot.
Much better Sir,
I agree to stop chambering knees higher than waist level, which then prevents kicking the side-kick higher.
But, again, there is a disregard to kicking siede kick following the rear leg stepping forward of the front legkosa dachi, or behind the front leg, kake dachi.
In the first case a modified mawashi geri is to be ended up as a yoko-keri ke-komi, and if stepping behind the front leg an almost real, ushiro-geri -close yoko geri ke kome is to be performed. Best regards. Physiology of waist strtucture always preferes inward or outward angles.Never to the sides straightly.
Just comment beetter what you are performing well. Paul.68, retired instructor.
I think Bill Wallace and Keith Vitali were among the first champions who stressed the effectiveness of the streamed line chambering for competition as most of the tournaments sparring rules do not allow any kicking to the lower targets. Thus, they had to modify the conventional chambering in order to score effectively with the body and/or head level kicks in competition.
@@antoniostrina82 Well, Van Damme was hugely influenced by Bill Wallace after all. Wallace had already advocated the chamber long before Van Damme made his screen debut.
great skills!
Very nice! I like to say point the knee towards the opposite shoulder. Of course you can do a heel kick also. Thank you!
Good form , kick and ixeo
Great kick power !
I agree
Which do you think is more powerful between rear leg and lead leg side kick?
Great lesson. I hate when in karte or TKD there is a certain way to chamber when practicality is to best way to chamber. Im karate guy but I subscribe this channel. Thank you.
Ps. Now that I looked your video you are karate guy too.
Is tang soo do like a more tradional tkd itf?
Yes. There are some differeces, though. For example, the Kata or Hyong. In Tang Soo Do they still use some shotokan kata, while in traditional ITF they have modified the whole Kata or Hyong.
Tang
Soo Do😊
Right.😊
Tong Soo Do. Chinese Hand Technique as direct translation!
Basically shotokan karate.
@ According to history as hidden in the public, where did Shodokan originate from ?
Good kick, but your bringing your feet together when you kick. Need to drill yourself to not bring your feet together and drop the hips into the kick
th-cam.com/video/1UzWEqhjjOw/w-d-xo.html
The only martial art that teaches correct (best, most effective) execution of a sidekick is INTERNATIONAL TaeKwonDo and Muay Thai/Kickboxing..... Execution of highest power/impact & speed from a strike is all about MOMENTUM..... Muay Thai / Kickboxing / Boxing (and in some cases ITF, International TKD, not WTF, World Taekwondo, the pussified version of real TKD) is the only who practices this. Chambering a kick, lifting your knee up, before kicking is the most stupid thing ever, you totally destroy your momentum/power by doing this when you go in full force & really stepping into it. SOME chamber should happen, but not like this entirely, for a sidekick you want no wasted momentum, you want your foot to go as in a straight trajectory to the target as possible with all your weight/force..... This why Martial Arts (Tang Soo Do, TKD, Karate, Kung Fu) is just a martial art, fun to do, cool for your cardio, mentality etc etc etc..... its cool for MOVIES aswell.... but dont ever think that everything your martial art teaches is the most effective in the real world when defending or attacking. If you are after whats ACTUALLY effective in the real world dont look anywhere else except Muay Thai/Kickboxing/Boxing (for striking) and then BJJ/Wrestling (for ground game/grappling).