Posts Tagged ‘ashi sabaki’

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February 22, 2008

Keiko today was breaking everything down all the way down to basics. This meant that we started without even a shinai in ashi-sabaki and then we worked our way up to fumikomi and then striking small but still in a full arc without fumikomi, just suriashi all for nearly if not over an hour before men-tsuke and even then really relaxed waza, “Hi, how are you” rather than the downcrushing tendency we all have with overstriking men.

Waza included kote-ojigaeshi-men (take your time), kote-men (pause), men-suriage-men (point up, not lift up). Keiko itself was pretty great, with me up against sensei and scoring some nice kote and even a men or two. Felt relaxed but was told I still use too much forearm power.

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Hayashi Sensei Keiko

September 13, 2007

Hayashi Sensei visited, which meant that there were a lot of visitors and a late start. Godan and up only could sit on the Sensei side. In lieu of the usual warm-ups, we did a sequence of leg-based stretches: lunge-walking, deep-lunges, ayumi-ashi with a koshi-focus, lifting the right foot high before stepping forward, big-lifting-ayumi-ashi, big-lift-hold-put-down-ayumi-ashi, backwards and forwards fence-straddling, deep squats, fumi-komi both Godzilla-style and straight-puddle style, one-steps with a focus on pushing on the opponent’s tsuki. The foot-raising style has two effects—it improves balance and forces all of the weight to be shift to hidari-ashi. Oddly, all of these were done with shinai in hand.

After a longish break, we ended up putting on men. Kirikaeshi is meant to be done with a focus on kaeshi—catching the opponent’s strike with the aim of deflecting it into kaeshi-doh or kaeshi-men. The sequence, so rapid-fire, of kaeshi moves Sensei showed was impressive, including do-kaeshi-men, which I’d never seen before.

Men, men-debana-men, men-nuki-doh, kote. Small men is only for attacking forwards. Debana-men can be performed immediately when the opponent steps in. We hit men from three ma-ai in one go, starting from already-hit position. Analogies drawn to golf, tennis, baseball in terms of the use of tame and the hips.

Big strikes as in kihon develop tenouchi and the use of the entire body at once, but with practice this becomes smaller and second nature, just as deadly.

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January 21, 2007

Two practices in one entry.

Yet more kata on Saturday, but it was welcome, vaguely, at least–an emphasis on choking up the back foot in all situations after ayumiashi to maintain the proper stance, especially in various zanshin type situations. Also the earnestness of the strike (tsuki) in nanahonme. Other than that, the main problem I have is the main problem of the kata-failees: after being in jodan-no-kamae, my sword dips back before the strike.

Practice itself was fine, if somewhat disconnected and not as aggressive as I usually am: I need to stay loose and Sensei chided me on not striking deeply enough, while Saturday sensei said I should continue to observe the opponent closely.

Today’s practice focused a lot on footwork. That abdomen-based feeling of pushing the opponent with the tip of the shinai–not sticking the hands out. SAR drills I did horribly on (not enough spring forward). Other than that, not so much to note: the usual sequence of kihon strike drills, the most interesting being kote-men, men, hiki-men.

Mawari-geiko was somewhat unremarkable: just need to keep working on the basics. Felt good, though, to be back, especially since I’ll miss two practices in the coming week.