Good points Bill, and good to see you on the thread, Steve.
The "hawk chases sparrow" you mention is indeed the way to go against front kicks, and it has always been my favorite. I used it quite frequently in tournaments, and in the '68 _All American' at Madison Square Garden, run by Henry Cho…it was the move that made me survive vicious low front flying kick attacks by a giant fighter from the "Texas Blood and guts karate" of that era. The match was finally stopped when I scooped up his right leg …lifting him high off the ground causing him to crash back down on his back and unable to get back up.
Strictly survival with no intent to hurt him.
Thinking about it now…I know why it 'came to me' _ it was because I did under stress what I practiced 'mostly of' in those days…free sparring using that move.
I think that it is worthwhile pointing out that the 'canonical' katas do not teach a 'gedan' block [ulnar block] of the front kick. There is no such intended application in the 'big three' moves.
The 'gedan' we do in Sanseiryu is a blow to the knee area of the opponent's right leg you are now holding with the left hand after the take down_ with the 'gedan' at this follow up moment…we are trying to either break the knee or dislodge the patella etc. _ this should be easier on the ulnar…though no guarantee.
Then we have the argument of 'proper conditioning' of the ulna …in that…if we are properly conditioned, then the ulna should not break so easily.
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Then there is the 'encoding' argument…
Here I will post snippets from what I received from a good friend:
Quote:
As lads, many of us thought we should perform the block with just the ulnar. In fact, in conditioning, do we not use it to provide a bit of extra pain/testosterone to impress our partner in the dominance game that conditioning often becomes? Works on all of those new students! They cry in pain! Ha!
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So you perform your first punch in Dan kumite. Then he kicks you. You perform the down block like you thought it was right on a shin. You then realize why you do not block with just your ulnar in that situation. If you are especially lucky, you not only have quite the painful welt on your ulnar side of your forearm which makes practice a torture for the next week, you get the pleasure of having your partner bury his toe into your gut because you did not actually block/deflect his front kick.
Most, I think, learn this. Some do not and learn to hate Dan kumite. They then claim one should only block with the shins. Not a bad idea unless someone kicks your higher in the flanks--like that kick is designed. So you stop doing Dan kumite altogether.
Then you work with a 25ish Mastodon who learned shin conditioning from Yonamine and Shinjo and a few head injuries, and you realize that if you do not redirect the kick from you--on an opponent of that size--your are going to "eat" the kick every time unless your opponent is "merciful" and kicks away from you.
As for bad habits, nothing sends me into the stratosphere like people kicking really low in prearranged kumite such that everyone bends over to "block down" the kick. Bad habits all around.
"Spinoff" is the only way to survive some situations. You get a guy a foot taller than you, who can deliver a front kick, you will eat that if you stand in front of him.
The 'encoding' of so many years and thousands of reps. will always rear its ugly head when we least expect it.
'Decoding' is not so easy.
"Spinoff" or sabaki type moves are in Uechi hojo undo and the big three, but they are mostly ignored in application. I focus my teaching on these basics these days.
I know George and you are also teaching and practicing these concepts.