Had to join. Such important facts. Wish to didn't forget all oh the army infantry! 05 hoah!
@stephenbramel93956 күн бұрын
Did Tirsia online ever come out with a Hubud program?
@jjenner24528 күн бұрын
Thanks to both of you for the interview... lots of great info. I got to know Prof.Remy P. at his training camps in the early 90's. I really like the confetti description of how he taught ... so many levels of info coming at you... you just absorbed what you could until your brain was just saturated at the end of the day... get some sleep and do it again the next day. Slowly it just seeped into your bones. And beyond that, so many accomplished students attended from so may disciplines... I remember white belts to 7th dan folks attending and just mixing it up on the floor. So much to learn from EVERYBODY you partnered up with. Those were great days.
@ramonlijauco756311 күн бұрын
It is quite possibly the influence of Spanish friars & their fencing with its' geometric patterns.
@takezodxr11 күн бұрын
RODA FROM BATANG QUIAPO IS THE BEST 🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️
@ilqarkarimli794311 күн бұрын
No real !
@wehrwolf800612 күн бұрын
Excellent 👍
@Train4Combat13 күн бұрын
Wow. In a roundabout way you slammed the value of training with these Tremendous masters.
@417hemaspringfieldmo13 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@ronanscreed18 күн бұрын
People will see a few drills and assume that is the entirety of how the art is taught. They believe there is no sparring, no competitive sports, no "pressure testing" even though they have no reason to think they would know either way. The irony is every art these commenters tend to believe in (boxing, Muy Thai, wresting, jujitsu) art has drills as well. They have training where you and a partner perform certain moves repeatedly to improve them. Because they know those arts have sparring and competition, they don't get confused just from seeing a drill. In order to make FMA more understood, I think we need to shine more light on the sparring and competitive aspects.
@3gsummit19 күн бұрын
Title should be Pekiti-Tirsia vs. Pekiti-Tirsia.
@adolfoescobar393521 күн бұрын
Tamsak bell all good knowledge in martial arts myfriend
@pcsprajapaticombatsystemdd811626 күн бұрын
Great technology and transition Pugoy from india
@joachimcoonan6255Ай бұрын
🙏 Thankyou for sharing 🙏 For me, the Filipino Martial Arts ( and Pencak Silat also), are like the University of martial arts training. I have found that these arts have pieced together all that I learnt before ( over 30 years in the martial arts, training almost every day...) Max respect to all of the Eskrimador out there tuning in. Walk in peace, my brothers and sisters.🤙☮️
@stephenbramel9395Ай бұрын
Thank You for breaking it down like this
@BigConan247Ай бұрын
No, he's smiling because he's wooping your ass.... Just let it happen, he's teaching you.
@Happyhippo638Ай бұрын
It would be interesting to see your training routine 🤺?
@Happyhippo638Ай бұрын
Please can you post more sparring videos with detailed analysis ( such as Phillip Gélinas fighting Tim Waid ) as I find these videos really interesting as a fencer .🤺
@Happyhippo638Ай бұрын
Please could you ask tuhon Phillip Gélinas to show us some of the gear he uses :)
@Happyhippo638Ай бұрын
I’d love to see more sparring videos with tuhon Phillip Gélinas .
@Train4CombatАй бұрын
Attribute development. Disappointed
@Train4CombatАй бұрын
Lol really..why watch based on title....ha ha ha..funniest thing I seen as a thumb nail..wow
@r_k4095Ай бұрын
Kinfe can beat this?
@billybob1620Ай бұрын
Both of these guys are accomplished instructors and to make this into a pissing contest is retarded. None of you guys were there that day. Tuhon Phil is a monster. And Tuhon as a whirlwind of motion. Either one of them in a real blade fight would destroy anyone commenting on this video in seconds. Both are excellent instructors who have forgotten more about PTK than any of you guys will ever learn.
@sifumikezielinski2238Ай бұрын
I have two of Dan Anderson's books. They are excellent. Really great material and I refer back to them quite often.
@Train4CombatАй бұрын
Maybe first understand the roots and fundamentals inherent to balintawak
@eddiem8362 ай бұрын
There is no way on earth that these techniques will save you. Most attacks happen without the victim knowing. What does save people is situational awareness and a firearm.
@LyricalInjectionRec2 ай бұрын
There aren’t many options to defend yourself from being stabbed I guess…
@MaharlikaAWA2 ай бұрын
So why is it called doce methedos? Doesn't that mean 12 methods? What does it mean with the basic strikes, that each strike is it's own individual method? That makes no sense. Why is the other called tri-v? Because it makes three V letter shapes?
@rankumr1.12 ай бұрын
Kalah System= Abusive and Reckless Krav Maga perceived as realistic.
@MichaelRendon-m1x2 ай бұрын
Ive never degraded you master gn 😎🙅🇺🇲 trump 2024 maga✌️
@MichaelRendon-m1x2 ай бұрын
Im a ihop man myself hot cakes two scamble two slices of bacon pot of coffe can you smell it triple og master
@jojodoctoria2 ай бұрын
I have been giving flow vs zone some thought and have the same views you have mentioned here. Excellent video. This video was a great confirmation, flow and zone are not the same.
@timothygourley56902 ай бұрын
Could you do a break down of the techniques of kalah system compare them to other techniques like the ones taught by Eli Knight, Ryan Hoover and Greg Douglas??? Because you said that the techniques might be legitimate, I'm not interested in the scenario training i find it very dramatically, I'm just interested in the techniques
@timothygourley56902 ай бұрын
The theatrics is the bit that loses me a little bit but I understand this is meant to be scenario training. Could you do a break down of the techniques of kalah and compare them to other techniques like the ones taught by Eli Knight, Ryan Hoover and Greg Douglas???
@Melchor-gb5rd2 ай бұрын
Macapagal learn it from paete laguna and not from tatang
@WJWTAC2 ай бұрын
That's how you do that 😊
@MMZS5282 ай бұрын
i met mr Espera. He gave me one lesson almost ten years ago
@joco7622 ай бұрын
Cool.
@ashsnape19372 ай бұрын
Thank you dude. Is alot to remember 😂 breakdowns are always great 👍
@ashsnape19372 ай бұрын
Tried memorising this soooo many times.....but have a crap memory 😂😂😂 great vid
@mortgagefinancing55582 ай бұрын
Now hes a grandmaster lol
@YOURMATD2 ай бұрын
I know Rodel. We were at the beginning of China Pekiti Tirsia Kali in Shanghai together. Great guy with great skills
@josefarrington2 ай бұрын
The idea of the theatrics is to put the student as close as possible to the emotional experience that he will have in a real self defense situation. The theatrics can help the student associate the emotion with the self defense moves.
@mushintao94862 ай бұрын
100%!
@JoseBernardMapulaArt2 ай бұрын
For me, the techniques demonstration that I have seen is for the beginner students of Arnis only from Balintawak. but still good than nothing... congratulations! just looking forward God bless.
@MichaelCribbs-cy4xn2 ай бұрын
Taking a line from Jim Power. Just shut up and train in time everyone will know who the Masters are.
@stephenhanley14352 ай бұрын
Who is passing on the knowledge & to who? Great show!