Kata Guide

Pinan Yondan

Pinan Yondan is the fourth kata in the Pinan series and introduces faster changes of direction, changes in height, more demanding balance work and a wider range of open-hand and close-range techniques. It asks the student to stay composed while moving through more complex sections of the kata.

This page is designed as a practical study guide for Jewel Karate Club students. Use it to support class training, revision and home practice while always following the version taught by your instructor.

Kata

Pinan Yondan

Level

Progression kata

Focus

Balance, turning, control

Pinan Yondan embusen overview

Pattern and reference images

Use the embusen and visual references to understand the shape of the kata and how the sequence changes line, angle and level.

Pinan Yondan embusen diagram
Animated Pinan Yondan reference

The aim is not just to remember the order, but to keep each turn, kick, stance and hand position strong and controlled all the way through.

Pinan Yondan full reference chart

Video walkthrough

Watch the kata through first, then work section by section. Pay close attention to the turns, kicks, stance depth, open-hand positions and how clearly each movement finishes.

About Pinan Yondan

Kata are structured forms that help develop both physical technique and mental discipline. In Wado-Ryu, each kata teaches movement, posture, awareness, balance, timing and the ability to link defence and attack together with control.

Pinan Yondan brings in faster direction changes, changes in body height, close-range elbow work, front kicks, open-hand techniques and stronger coordination between upper and lower body movement.

Students should aim not only to remember the sequence, but also to perform it with balance, sharp direction changes, strong technique and steady focus from beginning to end.

This kata often feels like a step up because it asks for more control during transitions, more accuracy in turning, and better balance during the kicks and stance changes. Learn the order first, then work on the smoothness and quality of each section.

Key checkpoints

Balance

Stay stable when changing level, kicking, stepping together and turning sharply.

Direction changes

The larger turns must be clean and deliberate. Untidy turning makes the whole kata look rushed.

Open-hand work

Ridge-hand, knife-hand and other open-hand positions should be precise and clearly finished, not loose or vague.

Rhythm and control

Let each section breathe. Do not rush the kicks, elbow strikes or turning transitions.

Step-by-step (Student Guide)

Clear and simple

Step 1 – Ready position

Stand in attention stance, bow, then open into ready stance. Start calmly and with full attention.

Step 2 – Opening left and right open-hand work

Drop into side-facing stance and complete the opening open-hand actions with control. Stay low and keep the shape of the hands clean.

Step 3 – Change sides and keep the level steady

Move back through the centre and out to the other side without rising up too much. Keep the transitions smooth and balanced.

Step 4 – Move forward into the low X-block

Step forward into front stance and perform the low X-block cleanly. Make sure the stance is set properly and the hands finish clearly.

Step 5 – Block, shift and prepare for the kick

Move into the next side-facing stance and complete the combined hand action sharply. Then bring the feet together under control, ready for the kick section.

Step 6 – Low block, front kick and elbow strike

Perform the low block and front kick together with control. After the kick returns, step down cleanly and finish the elbow strike strongly into the supporting hand.

Step 7 – Repeat the kick and elbow on the other side

Turn back through the centre and repeat the same sequence on the other side. Try to make both sides look equally balanced and sharp.

Step 8 – Turn, block and rising open-hand section

This part needs careful control. Keep the body organised through the turn and make the open-hand blocks clear and precise.

Step 9 – Front kick, settle and downward backfist

Perform the front kick cleanly, set down with control, then complete the downward backfist strongly. Do not rush the landing.

Step 10 – Turn into the punch combinations

Make the larger turns sharply and settle into stance before the block or punch is delivered. The kick-punch-reverse-punch actions should look connected and deliberate.

Step 11 – Backfist and side-facing sequence

Work through the side-facing section with steady rhythm. Keep the backfist and blocking actions neat, and do not let the stance become shallow or untidy.

Step 12 – Closing turns and final knife-hand work

Finish the kata with the same control you started with. The final turns, knee lift, low blocks and knife-hand blocks should still look strong and composed.

Finish

Return to ready stance, pause, then bow. Do not switch off early — the kata should end with full awareness and control.

Training note

Learn the order first, then improve the quality. Focus on balance, sharp turns, controlled kicks, open-hand precision and strong finishing positions. Always follow the version taught in your own dojo.

Common faults

Rushing the transitions

Moving too fast between sections weakens the balance and makes the kata look messy.

Poor balance on kicks

If the kick is uncontrolled, the following stance and technique lose quality as well.

Untidy open-hand positions

Open-hand blocks and strikes need to be precise or the kata looks loose and unclear.

Weak turns

Large turns must be clean and controlled or the embusen starts to drift.

Shallow stance work

Stances that are too high or too short reduce the strength and clarity of the kata.

Relaxing before the end

Keep the same focus and control through the final sequence and finishing position.

Keep studying the kata syllabus

Return to the full kata list or jump back to the top of this page to review Pinan Yondan again.