The rival's jerk is a technique applied in
- martial arts : to push an opponent out of the competition area or push it to a convenient attack distance.
- team sports and ball games (for example, the Russian folk game - Kila ): to ensure one or another technical action (taking possession of the ball, unhindered passage of the athlete to the point zone, etc.).
Content
Martial Arts
Developed jogging techniques with appropriate sets of exercises for their development are typical for such varieties of struggle, in which pushing an opponent out of the competition area ( ringout ) is the main or one of the main ways to achieve victory in a fight, for example, Japanese sumo wrestling and some national wrestling styles. In the martial arts with the prevailing percussion technique, the push is one of the ways to bring a closest opponent out of the clinch to a convenient distance for striking a combination, for example, in Korean martial art, taekwondo thrusts (referred to as milgs ) and jolts ( miro ) are permitted actions, in some martial arts (for example, boxing ) shocks may be prohibited by the rules. Nevertheless, even if the rules of a particular sport or regulations of the sports association regard a push as a forbidden technique, this does not prevent the athletes from including it in their arsenal (among prominent professional boxers, you can use the example of George Foreman , whose manager Dick Sadler has previously negotiated the organizers of the fights that such actions of his fighter in the ring will not be considered a referee biased).
Varieties
In sumo wrestling, where the jogging technique (called oshi-zumo , 押 し 相撲) is especially developed, there are two basic variants of thrust depending on the pushing organ:
- push torso ( gaburi-yori , が ぶ り 寄 り) also referred to as “ bulldozer ” embossing
- hand push
- with an emphasis on the opponent's armpits ( Hazuoshi , 筈 押 し)
Push in the chest ( classic wrestling )
Push head ( freestyle wrestling )
Push hands into the body ( American football )
Hand Shoulder ( Australian Football )
Hand Shoulder ( Rugby-7 )
Hand Shoulder ( Beach Rugby )
Hand push to face ( rugby-7 )
See also
- Throw