Difference between revisions of "Koko uchi"

From Self-Defense Karate
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Koko uchi''' (literally: “tiger’s mouth strike”) earns it name because the hand resembles a hungry jaw. Cats, such as tigers, suffocate their prey by crushing their breathing passages, resulting in suffocation.  
+
'''Koko-uchi''' (literally: “tiger’s mouth strike”) earns it name because the hand resembles a hungry jaw. All cats suffocate their prey by crushing their breathing passages, resulting in suffocation.  
  
 
[photo of a koko from the front and side and top]
 
[photo of a koko from the front and side and top]
  
Koko uchi is thrown just like a [[Reverse punch|reverse punch]], and is used to crush [[Kyūsho#Windpipe|throats]]. Because of the extreme consequences of this technique, it is reserved for [[Advanced_students|advanced students]].
+
Koko-uchi is thrown just like a [[Reverse punch|reverse punch]], and is used to crush [[Kyūsho#Windpipe|throats]] using the web between the thumb and index finger. Because of the extreme consequences of this technique, it is reserved for [[Advanced_students|advanced students]], and it is forbidden in [[Kumite|kumite]].
  
The setup to [[Wristlock|wristlocks]] can also be imagined as a koko uchi to the wrist.
+
The setup to [[Wristlock|wristlocks]] can also be imagined as a koko-uchi to the wrist.
  
 
[Koko uchi fast and slow, from the front ans side several times.]
 
[Koko uchi fast and slow, from the front ans side several times.]

Revision as of 07:26, 9 July 2018

Koko-uchi (literally: “tiger’s mouth strike”) earns it name because the hand resembles a hungry jaw. All cats suffocate their prey by crushing their breathing passages, resulting in suffocation.

[photo of a koko from the front and side and top]

Koko-uchi is thrown just like a reverse punch, and is used to crush throats using the web between the thumb and index finger. Because of the extreme consequences of this technique, it is reserved for advanced students, and it is forbidden in kumite.

The setup to wristlocks can also be imagined as a koko-uchi to the wrist.

[Koko uchi fast and slow, from the front ans side several times.]