Description

Learn weapon techniques in Ninjutsu in this free self defense video.

Expert: Anthony Lucas
Contact: www.kotekidojo.com
Bio: Anthony Lucas has been involved in Budo since the mid 1980s. Mr. Lucas was recently promoted to 7th Dan in April of 2007. He is currently the head instructor(Shidoshi) and founder of the Bujinkan Kot
Filmmaker: Paul Muller

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Comments

25 Responses to Advanced Ninjutsu Techniques : Sword Techniques in Ninjutsu

  1. Anonymous says:

    And if your opponent resists?

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  2. Anonymous says:

    Man …ur sucksss…..

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  3. Anonymous says:

    did anyone else see an icecube at the beginning?

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  4. Anonymous says:

    Modern day ninjas use firearms,
    Knives are for.
    C-u-t-t-i-n-g
    B-u-t-t-e-r,

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  5. Anonymous says:

    @KissakiSan may the blade be with you…

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  6. Anonymous says:

    @BlackShinobiShozoku
    That’s what I’m saying. I’m just trying to emphasize the fact that it is truly a last resort, and is not just a “Oh, it’ll cost me next week’s paycheck, but at least I won’t be injured” kind of thing. (Since it is an option that may leave you weaponless.)

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  7. Anonymous says:

    Btw when they block with the edge they arent going for edge to edge.

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  8. Anonymous says:

    @KissakiSan But if you need to block because its going to save your life, then I think that is the most rational thing to do. Regardless if it causes a chip. If one block edge-to-edge damages your sword. Then you probably
    1)Suck
    2)Need to use better made sword
    3)Shit out of luck

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  9. Anonymous says:

    @KissakiSan
    Obviously you don’t understand. Banging your sword against another sword regardless of where you hit it is damaging it. In fact the mune is the weakest part of the blade(for common Uchigatana structure) and the part of the blade that would most likely cause your sword to break if struck too hard. So most Kenjutsu schools block with not only the edge but also other parts of the blade as well(ex. shinogi) but the DESIRED result is dodging it, not blocking it. -cont

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  10. Anonymous says:

    @nmssis
    “Not totally untrue….”
    That sure sounds like you were essentially disagreeing to what I was saying. What other option IS there? But okay, whatever. Go ahead and change your opinion while desperately trying to redirect the conversation to something that places you at less risk. :P

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  11. Anonymous says:

    @BlackShinobiShozoku
    What if it renders your sword utterly useless, and you still have several hostiles surrounding you? All you have done is simply delay the inevitable. Any soldier, past and present, is taught that his weapon is his life. “Take care of your weapon, and it will be there when you need it most.”
    You don’t think that G.I.s simply pry open doors with their rifle’s barrel because “a bent and useless gun isn’t as big a problem as getting into cover and not getting shot”, right?

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  12. Anonymous says:

    @Shadowmov3r Ken/tsurugi, moroha-zukuri katana (aka Kogarasumaru), and yari; perhaps some naginata. Other than that, Japanese weapons were exclusively single-edged and the first two are exceedingly rare. You have a point that he said “sword”, specifically, which I think proves just how dumb he is; it was originally intended as a replacement for bokuto, itself a replacement for a katana. I think we can agree the guy in the video’s an idiot who doesn’t know what he’s talking about.

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  13. Anonymous says:

    @ChishioAme Ok, I was wrong at the wakazashi thing, but I realized it after posting it. Apart from that, the rest made sense, it’s just what people make of it when they read something, and thus can make sense more to someone than someone else.

    He still said replacement of the SWORD, wether you know the difference between a wakazashi, a tongkat or a kukri, it doesn’t change the fact that he said sword.

    Finally, you will be suprised how many double-edged weapon were used in japan.

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  14. Anonymous says:

    @KissakiSan now, don’t go n jumping to conclusion or think you got my angle all figured out. I’m not one of those that spews ill conceived beliefs of ‘mine is better than yours’ bull shit.

    like archery, each culture have their own take and apply their own philosophy into the design and use of that weapon…if you have an organized military, then you have “Martial Art”

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  15. Anonymous says:

    @nmssis [Pt2]
    If European melee fighting arts were so crude, then how were they so successful in their countless wars with outsiders?
    The whole “Lumbering knight who could barely lift his sword” came from the half-assed knowledge and ego of the Victorians.(“See how far we’ve come from those lumbering barbarians?”)
    Nevertheless,the myth is still being perpetuated by most Modern Fencers. I can assure you they do love to think if themselves as “superior, graceful and gentlemanly ‘martial artists’.”

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  16. Anonymous says:

    @nmssis
    Sounds like you’ve had literally no exposure to true Renaissance martial arts. :)
    I primarily practice German longsword in the Liechtenauer tradition. When I started to practice Japanese swordsmanship, I’ve noticed that aside from back edge cuts, hilt strikes and plentiful usage of “half-swording”, the two arts are eerily similar. It’s no real stretch to say that the only things I had to learn was the Japanese names for techniques I already knew. [cont.]

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  17. Anonymous says:

    @KissakiSan not totaly untrue…

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  18. Anonymous says:

    @maxgunn555 With bokuto and found that to get my own edge against my throat like this, I had to twist the bokuto in my grip or bend my wrists and elbows quite painfully while my partner tried the move on me. And that was with a willing opponent. With a resisting opponent, their arms would break before you could pull this off and then it doesn’t matter because they’d be almost helpless. Long story short: “Expert”village is a joke and mcdojos are an insult.

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  19. Anonymous says:

    @maxgunn555 No, they weren’t. They’re the Japanese equivalent of a Fencing Foil: sword like in overall shape, but that’s where it ends. Shinai were developed mainly for the sport of kendo, emphasis on “sport”, i.e., things like edge alignment, blocking with the flat, etc., all go out the window in favor of getting the first hit. That the string is there at all is so that players don’t hit each other with any side of the shinai they can get and score. I tested this so-called technique…

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  20. Anonymous says:

    @KissakiSan
    Like I said getting possible chips in your sword isn’t as big as a problem as when it comes to losing your life.

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  21. Anonymous says:

    @ChishioAme i thought these were merely to represent real blades like a samurai sword. or any one sided edged blade.

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  22. Anonymous says:

    @BlackShinobiShozoku
    It’s not just “small chips”, but it would completely fuck the sword/s up. You may as well just chuck your sword at him and hope he dies. :P
    (It would be acceptable if the initial contact was with the bottom 3rd/4th of their swords, but they made contact with the middle and weak ends of their swords. :P )

    Watch the video below. It’s in German, but the results of the test @5:30 speak volumes in regards to edge-on-edge contact:
    /watch?v=5Hy_A9vjp_s

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  23. Anonymous says:

    @nmssis
    A common, yet highly untrue myth. European swords were never at any point in time “hack swords.”

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  24. Anonymous says:

    @KissakiSan You don’t even have to do that much. Just let him start to push your blade to the inside, disengage and cut him down with a full turning. Or just use the longsword’s superior reach over the tiny ninja-to (even over a full katana) they like to use to strike him without fear. Hell, since what they did is essentially a pair of zornhauen, a zornhau-ort would suffice.

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  25. Anonymous says:

    @Shadowmov3r Omae aho ka? Katana refers explicitly to the two-handed sword approximately 40″ in length with a 12″ tsuka, 28″ blade and nothing else. Wakizashi (not “wakazashi”) is the short sword. The two do not mix. No exceptions. Furthermore, Ninjutsu is FROM JAPAN, the land that invented the katana, so it would be rather strange to expect them to wield a German longsword or a Chinese dao. Lastly, your post made no goddamn sense.

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