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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kanazawa's Complete Kumite
This book details and organizes kumite from basic to advance practice. It includes what many karate books leave out: good photos, both in terms of the techniques themselves (as demonstrated by Kanazawa) and various poses.
Published on May 5, 2004 by Jose E Muller

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A mixed bag...
This is a great book - if you train with SKI.

I used to train with SKI (GB), and i can happily say that this book would be a great help for young, developing Karateka, working through their kyu grades.

As the previous two reviewers noted, the book it beautifully photographed, in the traditional simple, but extremely effective style used by...
Published on August 25, 2005 by Dr. L. J. Irving


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kanazawa's Complete Kumite, May 5, 2004
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This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
This book details and organizes kumite from basic to advance practice. It includes what many karate books leave out: good photos, both in terms of the techniques themselves (as demonstrated by Kanazawa) and various poses.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tradition and Kumite ! Oss!, August 26, 2004
This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
Hirokazu Kanazawa, President of Shotokan Karate-do International Federation, has complied an outstanding book that balances history and tradition with the different forms of kumite. This book is not the normal primer. If one does not know at least the basic punches and kicks, do not get this book as a novice guide to learning karate. Kanazawa's approach assumes the person has these basic techniques down. If you are one of those people, still buy the book only if you plan on learning karate in the future when the opportunity arises.

In addition, while this book is primarily a Shotokan text, he does review the major Okinawa/Japanese karate styles, goes over terminology, and a particularly nice paragraph on p. 19 on the "verbal greeting `Oss'" The photos are of high quality, which is important in a text that demonstrates many sparring steps via pictures. The explanations are thorough enough to get the point a cross, but not unnecessarily tiresome and too detailed to loose the reader or make the book overly cumbersome.

A nice companion martial texts to a martial artist's library.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Definitive reference for Shotokan stylists, January 10, 2007
By 
Mr. M. A. Bowles (Glasgow, Scotland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
This is the definitive book for Kanzawa ryu stylists, you should need no urging to buy it immediately.

If you have not trained with Kanazawa much of the detail will be invisible - this is a reference book for those who have been taught the details of the movements. But it may encourage other Shotokan stylists to find out more, and that is a good thing; this man has got something useful to offer; believe me, he really does.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A mixed bag..., August 25, 2005
By 
Dr. L. J. Irving (Palmerston North, NZ) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
This is a great book - if you train with SKI.

I used to train with SKI (GB), and i can happily say that this book would be a great help for young, developing Karateka, working through their kyu grades.

As the previous two reviewers noted, the book it beautifully photographed, in the traditional simple, but extremely effective style used by Nakayama in his 'Best Karate' series (by far the best karate series out there). Many of the scenarios are photographed from different angles so that you can see just what is happening to the obscured hand, or the position of a neck strike more easily.

Continuing in my positive vein, the book has some wonderful biographical information, and great accompanying photos. Also is a good section on the correct meaning of the word 'Oss' and the folding of a Dogi.

I now, however, train with JKA (NZ), which diminishes the books appeal. I understand the concept behind the SKI syllabus, the grading Kumite scenarios depicted have the objective of teaching the karateka both a variety of techniques and to teach them to move in ways that are hard to teach otherwise. It just seems a little inapplicable to JKA training, since this is not the focus of our gradings. Likewise, many of these scenario's are unlikely to occur in Jiyu (free) kumite. Who of us has seen someone counter with Mae-tobigeri?! Don't get me wrong, these techniques shown would (and do) make great training exercises in the dojo, but many of them aren't gonna make it beyond that. I guess I was looking for a book more similar to Keinosuke Enoeda's 'Free fighting techniques' although perhaps more advanced than Enoeda's text (which was written to teach the first wave of UK and european karateka to fight in the 1960's, but we've (hopefully) progressed since then!).

All in all, it's a good book, filling a gap that has required filling for a good wee while, but it ain't gonna help you win too many tournaments!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I recomend it, December 24, 2010
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
Excellent book, well written and there is a rich content about kumite techniques. The fighting techniques are well documented and easy to understand. It is a basic book for one that want learn karate. The author is an expert in this noble martial art and was able to demonstrate the essence of karate, not only fighting techniques, but the real soul of karate. I recommend it.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book for new and experienced karate students, June 23, 2009
This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
This is a book for new and experienced karate students. However, without a background in some karate basics, a new student will not get much out of this text. The drills and variations of different approaches to sparring will be of value for both students and instructors. This is a comprehensive book on the formal aspects of karate and the drills will help if you are entering karate contest. I question the value of many of the drills for learning how to actually defend yourself on the street. Nevertheless, it is a good text to use in combination with actual hands-on training under a competent Japanese karate style instructor.

Rating: 4 stars. Joseph J. Truncale (Shotokan Karate Self-Defense Techniques: Practical Combat Karate for the street)
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful book, great information; for training, not primarily for fighting, October 30, 2008
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This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
This is a beautiful, well-produced book with art museum quality photos.

The author, Kanazawa, is a living legend in Shotokan Karate circles, and has also produced some nifty dvds (the most cost effective kata dvd in the Shotokan Karate arena is by Sensei Kanazawa, and has all of the Shotokan katas on one dvd! It's on Amazon and it's cheap!).

This book is useful to Shotokan Karate students, and it has limitations, as all books do.

It will not teach you Shotokan Karate, and it will not teach you to fight.

This book is primarily a beautiful road map of techniques you'll pick up along the way with a traditional Shotokan Karate instructor who has survived the Japan Karate Association Instructor's Course.

This particular instructor was also the winner of the first All-Japan Karate Tournament, and his technique leaves nothing to be desired.

But this won't teach you to fight. This is not a book for a no-holds-barred environment, nor a barfighting or streetfighting book.

It's a book with the exercises that are taught to a Shotokan Karate student to prepare them for tournaments, which are not the same as real fights, although there is overlap between the skills used in tournaments and in real fights.

So if you're a current or prospective Shotokan student, buy this book. You need it for your library, to supplement the information in the "Best Karate" series by Nakayama about sparring and tournament fighting.

But this is the wrong book if you want a quick introduction into self defense or cage fighting. Those are different categories.

Shotokan Karate can provide a basis for very effective self defense techniques, but it does so over a period of years, not weeks or months. So this would be the wrong book for somebody going into a front-line environment (for that sort of thing, see the books by Fairbairn, which set out short, nasty and brutal fighting techniques).

And if you want a general overview of self defense techniques applicable to civilian environments, check out the Tegner books. They're cheap, and highly underrated by martial artists, who tend to misunderstand their target audience.

This book has a specialized audience; but frankly, it should probably be in the reference library of all Shotokan karate students, because Kanazawa is that good.

There's a concession to practicality in this book. Sensei Kanazawa devotes a section to striking a belt that's being held by a training partner. He points out that for practical (that is, self defense) uses, you need to practice focussing about four inches into your target, rather than stopping short of the target.

I thought that insight was useful, so I'm about to have a fight with my wife about exactly where in the house I'm going to hang up a spare obi (karate belt) so I can kick and punch it!
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pretty Good book, January 3, 2006
This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
I found this to be a pretty good book for a traditionalist and a person who doesn't know much about the martial arts. The technical stuff was well-presented.
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A+++++, March 12, 2006
This review is from: Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite (Hardcover)
Exactly what I was looking for. Arrived in a couple of days. New condition.
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Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite
Karate Fighting Techniques: The Complete Kumite by Hirokazu Kanazawa (Hardcover - April 9, 2004)
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