Minus tempo does exist technically but it's quite rare and normally only for the zone near the setter, unlike kageyama who can zip it from anywhere on or off the court
@adinganАй бұрын
truee, i saw a japanese highschooler do the minus tempo and yea the spiker jump near the setter
@tesshh1Ай бұрын
7:11 it's actually very common for players to do that,even top players, since their serves are so strong it's important to protect yourself, but the only one Tsukki doesn't do it to is Yamaguchi XD 12:06 I mean, it's a pretty common move, especially for old coach Ukai since we know the little giant was known for doing that, Tanaka used it a lot in season one, it's just new for Hinata, same as a feint (one that Tsukki used a lot, also called a tip) because before he only focused on spiking and making it flashy, so much so that he didn't see other positions as cool, like he told Kageyama about being a setter in ep 2 15:17 Shiratorizawa won last tournament... this guys just said they placed fourth 16:37 just like Karasuno didn't need to play the first matches because they won some in the previous tournament, this guys didn't play this part of the tournament because they where so high before 16:57 Daichi AND Noya saw it, which makes sence since they are the best of Karasuno at knowing where the ball will land 18:22 a feint and the "ubrella move" are completely different. A feint is what Tsukki did against Seijoh, a light tap that seems like a powerful spike until the very end so that when the ball falls close to the blockers the ground defence are to slow to get to it, while the "umbrella" is called a wipe, which is making sure that the blockers touch the ball, doesn't have to be fingers if you are good you can hit it in angles that makes the ball touch the palm (they say someone is tooling the blocks, by doing a wipe), send it flying out of bounds so that it's still your point because the blockers touched it last. One is just a light tap and the other is very powerful 20:01 there is a lot of ways to get a point but there are also a lot of rules, only front row attackers can make a point from anywhere of the court, because of rotation setters are sometimes at the back which means they have three possible comfortable attackers but in those instances a setter dump would be illigal because for it to work he would have to be close to the net. For players who are in bach row at the time they can do a back row attack (which we have seen karasuno play, in the manga they make sure that rotation is consistant so the plays are legal) a back row is jumping before the line that is after the players near the net in order to spike, kind of like the libero set we see noya do except other players don't have to do it for setting, just sspiking but liberos have their own rules (that's why the colour jersey) and aren't allowed to spike 20:25 although setter dumps are cool the reason why they are not done more often, besides what I said before, is because if you are obvious they are waaay easier to counter than a spike, you have to be veeery selective as a setter to do it, and it's still very risky 21:05 remember, not everything is about height, that's what Hinata wants to proove, Date Tech is actually very good, not just because of height but their strategy and power, their ability not to get tunel vision, Karasuno didn't beat them like it was nothing, they also had the missfortune of being the first to witness the freack quick (something never done before) for the first time during an official match, still held their own regardless and just like you said Karasuno wasn't the only one training all this time
@elijahagapito6284Ай бұрын
Hitting it off the hands/fingertips so it ricochets out is called a "wipe" :)
@arunapache91Ай бұрын
Tsukki never covers his head for yamaguchi
@ThiagoMarquesLeaoАй бұрын
The umbrella move, grandpa Ukai called it a "wipe".
@jakeDgirlАй бұрын
10:02 This might sound cringe and nerdy as hell, but I have a circle of friends who are obsessed with Haikyuu. We're all introverts who previously had no interest in vball or any sport, but now watch real vball because of Haikyuu. We also all read the manga. We have fantasy teams in Haikyuu and argue how our teams can strategize and win against each other. Haikyuu is well-written enough that you can understand the strengths and weaknesses of known players (in their final form aka their level in the finale), how they think and strategize, their overall game IQ, and how their personalities might gel or clash.
@kirasaaan3648Ай бұрын
aww Manzawa-kun is here 😊 Let's all 1.50s become one with the fujikujira to be tall 🙏 🤣🤣