Patada Alta De Buchikome Direct
Style Context:
The move appears in Kyokushin-based knockdown karate and Seidokaikan, later adopted by kickboxers such as those in K-1 or shootboxing. It is not a traditional mawashi geri (roundhouse kick) but a specific application emphasizing:
In Japanese martial arts culture, there is a concept called Ura Waza (hidden reverse techniques). The biggest danger of the Patada Alta de Buchikome is the Takedown. Patada alta de Buchikome
Because you are committing your entire body weight into a spin, a savvy opponent (especially a wrestler or Judoka) will simply catch your leg. If they catch a Buchikome, they don't just sweep you; they will "tree-top" your leg, lift it to their shoulder, and drive you into the mat. Style Context: The move appears in Kyokushin-based knockdown
The Fix: Never throw a naked Buchikome. Always follow the "Rule of the Breaker Sister." Throw it immediately after a hand combination, or use a "hidden hand" (pull the back of their head down as you kick—illegal in some sports, effective in self-defense). In Japanese martial arts culture, there is a
This is the critical difference. Do not flick your lower leg. Instead, keep the leg rigid from knee to foot. Swing the entire leg like a baseball bat or an axe using the torque of your hips. The shin—not the instep—is the impact weapon (standard in Muay Thai and Kyokushin).
