The name itself is a hybrid. Patada Alta —Spanish for "high kick." Buchikome —a rough, masculine Japanese verb meaning "to smash into" or "to ram violently." The move was born not in a gym, but in a back alley in Mexico City’s Doce de Diciembre district, where a washed-up Japanese shootfighter named Kenji "The Hammer" Ishida met a bare-knuckle boxer named El Perro .
La patada alta de Buchikome, en particular, se ha convertido en una de las técnicas más emblemáticas del Kyokushin y ha sido popularizada por destacados practicantes y maestros del estilo. Esta técnica se enfoca en la ejecución de una patada alta y poderosa, dirigida hacia la cabeza o el torso del oponente, con el objetivo de neutralizarlo o desequilibrarlo.
Legend has it that Ishida, unable to secure a visa for a major promotion, spent five years wrestling in the toreo circuits. Frustrated by the theatricality of lucha libre, he yearned for the real —the kick that ends a fight. He married the roundhouse kick of Muay Thai with the straight snap of a Kyokushin karate jodan mawashi geri , then added a distinctly pro-wrestling flourish: the hikiashi (the pulling step). The result was a kick that didn’t just hit the head—it rearranged it.
: Unlike a snapping kick, this move focuses on "driving through" the target rather than just making contact.
"Patada alta de Buchikome" typically refers to a associated with the anime/manga series Hajime no Ippo , or specifically its ending theme song titled " Buchikome!! " by the band Shikuramen . The Japanese word
Antes de extender la pierna, se debe elevar la rodilla de forma compacta y oblicua hacia el pecho del rival. Esto oculta la trayectoria final del golpe, haciendo que el adversario no logre distinguir si se trata de una patada baja ( low kick ) o media ( middle kick ) hasta el último milisegundo. 3. La Rotación Definitiva de la Cadera
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The name itself is a hybrid. Patada Alta —Spanish for "high kick." Buchikome —a rough, masculine Japanese verb meaning "to smash into" or "to ram violently." The move was born not in a gym, but in a back alley in Mexico City’s Doce de Diciembre district, where a washed-up Japanese shootfighter named Kenji "The Hammer" Ishida met a bare-knuckle boxer named El Perro .
La patada alta de Buchikome, en particular, se ha convertido en una de las técnicas más emblemáticas del Kyokushin y ha sido popularizada por destacados practicantes y maestros del estilo. Esta técnica se enfoca en la ejecución de una patada alta y poderosa, dirigida hacia la cabeza o el torso del oponente, con el objetivo de neutralizarlo o desequilibrarlo. Patada alta de Buchikome
Legend has it that Ishida, unable to secure a visa for a major promotion, spent five years wrestling in the toreo circuits. Frustrated by the theatricality of lucha libre, he yearned for the real —the kick that ends a fight. He married the roundhouse kick of Muay Thai with the straight snap of a Kyokushin karate jodan mawashi geri , then added a distinctly pro-wrestling flourish: the hikiashi (the pulling step). The result was a kick that didn’t just hit the head—it rearranged it. The name itself is a hybrid
: Unlike a snapping kick, this move focuses on "driving through" the target rather than just making contact. Esta técnica se enfoca en la ejecución de
"Patada alta de Buchikome" typically refers to a associated with the anime/manga series Hajime no Ippo , or specifically its ending theme song titled " Buchikome!! " by the band Shikuramen . The Japanese word
Antes de extender la pierna, se debe elevar la rodilla de forma compacta y oblicua hacia el pecho del rival. Esto oculta la trayectoria final del golpe, haciendo que el adversario no logre distinguir si se trata de una patada baja ( low kick ) o media ( middle kick ) hasta el último milisegundo. 3. La Rotación Definitiva de la Cadera