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Thread: Makiotoshi?

  1. #1
    Sushi Lover
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    Makiotoshi?

    It was mentioned as a technique in "This is Kendo" by Junzo Sasamori and Gordon Warner but I´ve never read about it anywhere else and my sensei has never said anything about it (although we´ve only been practicing waza in bogu for a few weeks so maybe I´m getting ahead of myself ) I´m just wondering if anyone else could describe it for me or tell me what kinda technique it is?
    cheers

  2. #2
    Yudansha
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    makiotoshi

    it is the technique of doing a circular "wrapping " of your opponents shinai with yours. As the opponent moves toward you wrap your shinai around theirs by a circular motion to the your left. If done properly you can rip the shinai out of there hands. Sometimes sending it 25 feet in the air and clear accross the dojo. If done not with a lot of vigor but with the right timing the opponent becomes open and you can strike the kote or men.
    I would give it a few more weeks before you try to add that one to your tool box.

  3. #3
    a 4 legged tripod! taganahan's Avatar
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    circular motion? ok, if you're doing this, where would the circular motion be at the opponents shinai. is it at the middle or near the tsuba of the opponent?
    Lloyd Taganahan
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  4. #4
    明日天気になぁ~れ。 tapioka's Avatar
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    the "maki" action should take place towards the fat part of the shinai, close to the tsuba. with the tip of your shinai guiding your opponent's shinai at the base, it causes their shinai to circulate once and then land in a position where their kote is easily open (and the men too).

    jmarsten-sensei taught me this today, as a matter of fact.
    剣道命!!!

  5. #5
    養心は& Musha's Avatar
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    I have read about this but am way too slow to do it . It's kind of like Harai waza from beneath and Gyaku opposite side of the Shinai. You must move forwards while drawing a 270 degree circle to the right.

    If done properly you can rip the shinai out of there hands. Sometimes sending it 25 feet in the air and clear across the dojo.
    I don't see why people seem intent on doing this and maybe getting a foul, because if done correctly your opponent will be completely open and full of suki. Enabling you to cut Shoumen easily .

  6. #6
    葡萄家 D'Artagnan's Avatar
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    It is increadibly useful to disarm an opponent, especially during Shiai. for two main reasons:

    1). it is one of the most demoralising things that can happen to an opponent, this is obviously useful in shiai.

    2). if you are quick enough, you can score a yukko datotsu before the call of 'yame' (as demonstrated by somebody at the Sir Frank Bowden Taikai)

    that's why some people are 'intent' of using it to disarm people (If you ever get to fence with Rutger Vermulen Sensei i am sure he will demonstrate the technique 1st hand). Personally i am not good enough yet to make it work in this way, so i use this technique to create suki, especially for men-uchi.
    Andy Fisher
    International Team Leader at (株)Tozando Co., Kyoto, Japan.
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  7. #7
    Ninja Fart Senpai Hai_hai's Avatar
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    The principle behind the disarm move in kendo is similar to the "derobement" in fencing. A simple circular movement is not enough to disarm the opponent's weapon. That would just draw a circle. You want to first make contact where your shinai's middle part meets the opponent's top third. If you don't do it this way, you cannot gain control of their shinai and your opponent can just release his shinai while you are drawing the circle. This is because you have more leverage closer to your hands and the least leverage at the tip.
    Black Belt from the Karate Institute of Karate

  8. #8

    Talking

    Quote Originally Posted by Musha
    I have read about this but am way too slow to do it . It's kind of like Harai waza from beneath and Gyaku opposite side of the Shinai. You must move forwards while drawing a 270 degree circle to the right.
    Actually, you can also do this on the way out of tsuba-zeriai.

    I tend to visualize this a little differently.

    If you ask someone to hold a shinai up and use your shinai to tap it lightly from one end to another, you will find these nodes where the tapping "feels" different (something about waves and stuff...physics was too long ago).

    I've found that in my own personal successful attempts of maki-waza (which is rare), if both nodes of the opponent's shinai are affected in the technique, it actually doesn't have to take that much uummph. So, I'm either spiraling in, or spiraling out.

    NOTE: the spiraling is the sum of the circular motion of your shinai and the physical displacement of your body. If you are standing in place trying to spiral, your own kote and men is nice and open if your opponent follows your movement.

    It would appear like circuling to your own left is the convention. Does anyone circle to the right with success?

    BTW:

    Maki-age = wrap-up
    Maki-otoshi = wrap-down

    Just distinguish between which direction the opponent's shinai end up moving toward.

    FWIW.
    Last edited by DCPan; 30th June 2004 at 03:12 AM.

  9. #9
    Member regularyojimbo's Avatar
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    Remember this post!


  10. #10
    Sushi Lover
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    Cool, I think I get the general idea. Thanks for the answers! I don´t think this is anything I´ll be trying soon though! Nice clip regularyojimbo!

  11. #11
    Member regularyojimbo's Avatar
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    Thumbs up

    credit for clip must go to Ishii though.

  12. #12
    Member Machismo111's Avatar
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    Omg, that was the sickest thing I've ever seen in my entire life! O_O

    Man...Cool! =D
    "No matter what it is, there is nothing that cannot be done. If one manifests the determination, he can move heaven and earth as he pleases. But because man is pluckless(?), he cannot set his mind to it. Moving Heaven and Earth without putting forth effort is simply a matter of concentration." Yamamoto Tsunetomo, Hagakure

  13. #13
    a 4 legged tripod! taganahan's Avatar
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    very nice clip!!! that would really demoralize his opponent real badly....sweet!!

    i've been practicing circular movement to the right but my intention was not to disarm, instead i aimed for the kote.

    was that guy a pro cause it really made me wonder....if the guy was a pro and holds the shinai tightly, then it must really work...
    Lloyd Taganahan
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  14. #14
    四十九年一睡の夢 一期の栄華一盃の酒 Masahiro's Avatar
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    Thumbs up

    Quote Originally Posted by taganahan
    if the guy was a pro and holds the shinai tightly, then it must really work...
    yes, that "guy" is a pro. .. ... and No, pros actually do not hold their shinai "tightly". .. ...and just for the record, while this "circular' waza is really cool, I know dojos who specifically practice counter techniques against this waza, so . .. ...take your chances in the tournaments. Consider this my warning. Good luck,
    剣とは心なり
    心は正しければその剣も正しい
    心は正しかざれば、その剣まだ正しからず
    剣を学ばんとする者はすべくからその心を学べ

  15. #15
    a 4 legged tripod! taganahan's Avatar
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    can you describe how this counter-makiotoshi looks like? maybe we can make a counter-counter-makiotoshi...hehe
    Lloyd Taganahan
    Steveston Kendo Club: www.stevestonkendo.ca
    http://community.webshots.com/user/taganahan
    and another one:
    http://community.webshots.com/user/taganahan1

    Can you summon your talent at will?

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