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Practitioners of jeet kune do frequently use the term heel hook kick or sweep kick. [15] [16] [17] It is known as "gancho" in capoeira. There are many variations of the hook kick, generally based on different foot work: rear- or front-leg, oblique or half-pivot, dropping, spin-back and more.
Tobi hiza geri: Jumping knee kick; Oi Mae Geri: Lunging rear-leg front kick; Mawashi geri: Round kick; Mawashi hiza geri: Circular knee kick; Mikazuki geri: Crescent kick; Gyaku mikazuki geri: Reverse Crescent kick; Nidan tobi geri: Jumping Double front kick; Ura mawashi geri or Kagi geri: Upper inside round kick, a.k.a. hook kick; Ushiro geri ...
Round Kick Hook Kick Front Sweep Mostly uses as a transitional move Back Sweep Mostly uses as a transitional move Round Kick Crescent Kick Hook Kick Compasso Butterfly Kick (B-Kick) Also known as B-Kick > 180° Pop + Crescent Kick 360 Kick Also known as Tornado Kick Cheat 360, Pop 360 360 Kick + Hook kick 540 Kick (pop 10) 1.5 Twisting Hook Kick
Fast Kicks: Also, many kicks can be employed using a fast kick style. The practitioner shuffles the back leg forward to the front leg, and the front leg comes up and kicks closer to the enemy than the practitioner had been before execution. This can be used with side kick, roundhouse kick, front kick, hook kick, and axe kick.
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Hook kick (heel kick) – Extending the leg out to the side of the body, and hooking the leg back to strike the head with either the heel or sole; Crescent kick and forward crescent kick; Axe kick – is a stomp out kick or axe kick. The stomp kick normally travels downward, striking with the side or base heel (typically the base heel)
Won, the circle principle, is a way to gain momentum for executing the techniques in a natural and free-flowing manner (much like being swept up in a vortex). If an opponent attacks in a linear motion, as in a punch or knife thrust, the hapkido practitioner would redirect the opponent's force by leading the attack in a circular pattern, thereby ...
A kick that begins as a meia-lua de compasso but ends like a front walkover. The capoeirista releases the kick, but instead of bringing the kicking leg around to complete the motion, he follows the kick with his entire body. He will usually land on the kicking leg and rotate 180 degrees to face the other player again.