by HanshiClayton » Fri Aug 19, 2011 6:28 am
Probably the most "authentic" naihanchi we have access to is the one taught by Choki Motobu. Upright, tense stance, with internal tension between the knees. Arm motions more or less like Tekki Shodan. According to Motobu, it was a one-kata fighting system, complete within itself.
It is important to understand that Motobu was kicked out of Itosu's class for being a thug. This might be the only kata he learned there. The comment about it being "complete within itself" could be a face-saving tatamae to explain why he didn't know any other kata. I'm just speculating there, but it is important to keep the personalities in mind. Some of these masters never told the truth when a lie would do.
Tekki as practiced in hard-style karate (with the deep stance) is certainly about conditioning. Fighting with your groin exposed like that is suicidal, period, so the deep stance is for building strength in the legs. Shuri-te dumped the weight-lifting of Naha-te and substituted deep stances when Matsumura moved the center of power from the chest and arms to the legs. Making a new student spend three years in a horse stance is entirely in keeping with that shift in emphasis.
The comment about Tekki being without any combat application is typical, and is yet another proof that traditional hardstyle teachers have no idea what is in their katas, if any more proof was needed.
Matsumura went to China for a year, studied as a beginner in some southern Chinese style, and came back with Tekki Shodan. I have been examining Wing Chun this year, following in Matsumura's footsteps, and there is no doubt that WC is a Tekki toolkit. The combat applications are very clear when you go to visit people who fight the way Tekki does.