Register for the next event here! Chuck and Judo United are putting on a judo training camp April 27-28 at this same location in the video! All ages are invited. judo-united.smoothcomp.com/en/event/16555
The bit about the good fall is very true. I left Judo as a young green belt more than 20 years ago YET due to my instinctual falling technique I learned for so long as a kid, the Judo fall actually saved my life quite a few times in normal life! just last week I was doing my apartment scheduled cleaning and I slipped on my back over a wet floor I forgot drying. And I swear if I did not land properly on my back Judo style -as instinct kicked in- I might have suffered a serious back injury... or even worse!
the worst fall I have ever had in Jui jitsu was when i made the mistake of trying to hold onto the person throwing me when i was a green belt. Its why you spend so much time practicing your rolls and turning yourself ahead of the throw to take the impact out along with your break fall. I was sick for about a day after that mistake. Felt like my kidneys had bounced up into my shoulder blades lol
At my judo school we have a lot of cross trainers, tbh it’s nice if you change your belt etc. but we don’t require it, our sensei honors the fact that if you cross train you have experience and understanding. Ntm we all know Gis are expensive hahah. I myself though have worn a blue double weave for the last 10+ yrs in BJJ and judo.
White GI. Always white as a visitor. Traditionally it’s always white period. Some schools will allow a blue GI, but unless you know for certain, just wear white.
@@KARATEbyJesse It's about time you try judo, Jesse. I began judo after years of karate at the age of 63. Now a yellow belt! Seth tried judo and even entered a competition. You've done BJJ - now for judo!!
8:27 just FYI what you were doing with Joshua is called Nagekomi. It's when you throw each other back and forth cooperatively but while moving around like in randori.
this is good to know, thanks! i thought nagekomi was only when we were standing in front of each other practicing throws, but it's good to know too that it can also encompass moving around, etc. I'm learning 😂
@joshbeambjj I would say you were doing French randori or cooperative randori. Throw for throw without trying to block aggressively. Nagekomi is indeed usually just a line up of throws either static or on the move.
@@joshbeambjj yes, you can do it when you are just both standing there. It's just semantics but if you don't throw each other while doing this it is called uchikomi. If you throw then it is nagekomi. I've always done nagekomi while moving around, simulating randori or competition. IMO this is absolutely the best way to get good. It's just like flow rolling in BJJ. There is "aliveness" to the training where you are setting your opponent up for your attacks by manipulating him in a sparring like situation. That's how you develop your game -- either for ne waza (BJJ) or tachi waza (judo).
@@joshbeambjj just a followup on this, I got to train with Toni last night (just noticed I spelled his name wrong earlier) and he's stopping by our dojo in the next few weeks sometime. Very nice guy, so don't hesitate to train with him if you get the opportunity.
Good work, man. I think you pretty adequately captured some of the more subtle technical things that Judo emphasizes. As a Judo guy myself, I’ve never really understood the BJJ need to death grip-just feels bad for economy of energy. Likewise, the notion of working together to build things up is a big deal in Judo as well. I can appreciate full resistance sparring, but I do think too much of the conversation online is dedicated to that idea; it’s very difficult to grow when people are constantly shutting you down.
thank you! I'm glad I was at least somewhat in the right ballpark. Yeah I think the death grip stuff comes from just really not knowing takedowns, lol, at least for beginners like myself! Yeah, to your point, the more I talk to people from other grappling sports (judokas, wrestlers), the more I realize that full resistance sparring is less common than we find in BJJ... Got to interview a young up and comer wrestler on our podcast Thanks for the Roll, his name is Aden Valencia, and he was describing wrestling practice to me and where full resistance sparring actually fits in, and it's a very specific thing, as opposed to how BJJ people spar, which is basically always with full resistance, lol. It's making me think about this all very differently!
Good video man, Really captures the spirit of Judo in alot of ways with how helpful some people will be and how intense it can get at times as well. Hope you keep up the journey. You should probably wear a Judo gi and your Judo ranked belt next time tho :P
Good job man. It’s good to see BJJ guys training judo and learning instead of being arrogant and saying that BJJ is the best martial art when it actually came from judo.
100% agree with the guy near the end about falling properly. So many bjj guys don’t understand the importance of breakfalls and if you land wrong you’re gonna get seriously injured.
I'm a judo player transitioning to bjj at the moment. Love the attitude of the bjj guys to my judo, they're always asking questions and it helps to skill swap a little so my jits is coming on so quick
@nassimbelallam8830 I would say it would depend on your age. If you're under 35 learn judo cos you get all the takedown stuff and a rudimentary understanding of the ground game and then transition over to bjj and youll have a real advantage over the other white belts but you wont necessarily be blue belt standard but youll be very close. If you're over 35 then judo is just going to be too hard on your body unless you're an above average athlete. Neither is better than the other but they complement each other so well
I really love all the judo videos. Love your humility and desire to explore and branch off into other areas of grappling. I want to learn it too, but there’s nowhere within 1.5 hours of me to train, so I’m actually about to travel to another city to train intensively for like a week (and do other vacation-y stuff), and I’m so excited!
As an old judo brown belt (1982) you did better than I did in my first 20 times on the mat. Congrats on your success. Looking forward to watching your progress.
As an Old (really old) Judoka - Judo was my PE class in Japan - I think that it is awesome that as an accomplished BJJ you're trying something new. I tried BJJ once and was so intimidated by it - I'm over 60, with ingrained Judo habits, and don't have the tons of muscle everyone in the studio has. Maybe I'll follow your example and give it a shot again. Great video.
I fight with a left handed grip and left handed stance on purpose because it's less common in Judo but most of my throws are still right handed. You can do seio nage off a left handed lapel grip with your left foot forward while turning in right handed. 2nd Dan Judo and purple BJJ here
Same here.. I like a good left handed uchi Mata and osoto but my biggest throws, Seonage and makikomi come right handed from a strong lapel grip. Right V Left opens up completely different angles. Must admit though, I hate fighting those awkward lefties 😅 Lowly 1st Dan Judo
from white belt to black belt, I've trained BJJ in POLAND: Gold Team/Gold Crew, Złomiarz Team GERMANY: Ringside Gym in Berlin, some club in Munich (can't remember the name) ITALY: De La Riva Pesaro UK: Brazilian Top Team, London Fight Factory and i were to count all the places where i only popped in like 2 or 3 times, this list would be several times as long, if i remembered them to begin with, which i don't (a couple of such places would be Copacabana Warsaw, some BJJ club in Streatham/London etc), in NONE of them have i encountered unnice culture, or bad character (other than a few individuals perhaps, which is inevitable on such scale, but that's not part of the club's culture) what do you perceive as not nice about BJJ culture? what's your range of exposure to BJJ/Judo clubs? honest question. it's possible i have just been extremely lucky since 2007. OTOH i admit i don't know much about Judo culture (not in the form of first-hand experience), but in this comment section there's already like 10 comments scolding him for coming in wearing a black gi (who cares??), or: "I like getting BJJ players getting humbled, they tend to be full of themselves." "I just hope BJJ people stop copy technique from another Martial art style and calling their own." "always love when judokas show BJJ butt scooters real martial arts" etc.: ) surprisingly vitriolic, which is hard for me to understand
@@austinbrabec5692 I have no idea how exactly this is supposed to address my comment, but it's probably yet another manifestation of this "nicer culture"
Glad you like them! That's awesome, going down the same road, lol. I've only been at judo now for a couple months too. How long have you been doing BJJ?
breakfall is indeed very important to grow, you are doing it the right way by being relax and go with the flow, that's how u grow and learn quickest, and that's also why u need to have good breakfall!
Wow, great feedback, thanks so much! This is especially great to hear since I've spent so much time trying to figure out each of those aspects, so I'm glad you noticed and then cared enough to leave a comment to point it out! Thanks for watching the video, I'll be making many more!
I’ve subscribed because you’re a cool guy with no ego and you put yourself out there and out of your comfort zone. Well done bro. Keep posting the great content!
There are many factors to consider.Judo is a lot more affordable compared to BJJ. Judo has a high impact on the body and has more injuries.it would depend on your goals. Judo gives a better base because it focus on ukemi(falling). @@nassimbelallam8830
Judo. Because bjj is kosen Judo. Its just Judo nezwaza. There is a reason why bjj guys train Judo. Because bjj is the half art. A Marketing copy. When you learn Judo you learn bjj. No difference. Except the Regulation System in competitions.
That was DOPE, I'm a BJJ blue belt, been doing martial arts most of my life. but since BJJ I love "to watch" good judo. I've tried a couple of classes but I'm not yet good enough at falling and am scared (I'm 56) of getting hurt. Good to see you not get trashed and leave more or less unscathed. Very inspiring 👊🏾
I'm really impressed with your souplesse and weight distribution while doing these throws!! As a brown belt with around 10 years on the mat I still often struggle with some of these throws you are pulling off. Also i'm really impressed by the overall skill level of these judokas, keep training with them and appreciate having such good teachers around! Keep it up 👍
@@Supermomo2007 less than in France, but not absent ! More life choice, work and also I climb a bunch. Didn't feel I would have enough time/money for both hobbies. I decided to focus on one. I'm sure I could have found it if I really wanted to.
I really commend you for doing this as a Jiujitsu guy and I'm glad that you liked Judo and are continuing to train it. As someone who does both for more than 10 yrs, I wish more people crosstrained.
Love the video! I felt very similar when I went to try bjj after having trained judo and traditional jujutsu from a young age. Has definitely helped me grow a lot!
Awesome vid!I was at this open mat! Youre doing much better than i am. Open mind, welcoming throws and being a great partner. The first black belt that suggested switching your stance is so good. Super nice guy too.
Thank you very much for sharing your experience with us ! You have a open mind to trying a new in a new martial art with new training partners, like you said, flow roll and flow fall ;) It was very interesting to watch !
great video! i’ve always felt like judo and jiu-jitsu are two sides of the same coin, or siblings. each had their area of expertise but are amazing at what they do, and have a lot to teach each other. to be well rounded is to be proficient in both!
You just single-handedly explained why its easier for me to do Judo on my left side. Because of my striking background thank you so much. THough now I have to train grip and movement on that side wish me luck.
Awesome video. Great story, experience, inspiring. Makes me want to take up judo more. But, yea. You’re a great filmmaker on top of the martial arts. Awesome to see. Thank you.
Great attitude and you obviously enjoy the challenge and the learning. I can empathise with the stance thing as I did boxing for a few years and then went back to judo recently. My opinion would be to change your feet and not your grip. You showed a natural ability as a right handed person to throw with a right side lapel grip and the off-balancing and pulling through your judo throws is more important in my opinion than standing with your left foot forward. I think given time you will easily adapt to having your right foot forward and you will progress quicker once you do. All the best in your judo journey!
Great video and great attitude! "Instead, it felt like we were dancing." That's the exact same description I gave of one of my most memorable randori sessions. I was in a new dojo for first time and up against a guy from France who was also the first time at the dojo (it's the dojo of an American gold medal winner so lots of people visit). It was unfamiliar territory and everyone seemed scary. The French guy and I were the same belt, so I thought "Maybe this will be OK?" I knew the French took their Judo _very_ seriously.... We proceeded to float across the mat. We were in total sync and moved like we were in a waltz. Except every few seconds, that waltz ended up with him throwing me through the air and onto the mat. I was hopeless, but he was careful. I never knew what hit me, but his moves were effortless and I hit the mat softly. To this day, it's one of the most memorable times I've had in Judo. It was incredibly humbling, but, as was said. "it felt like we were dancing." This video is also a reminder to me as to why I bounced off of BJJ after a few months. Almost everyone wanted to fucking destroy me and everyone else in the class. The handful of higher belts were great to roll with, but every lower level belt didn't seem to care if they might permanently injure you. I thought doing BJJ would be safer since most people don't do throws, but it was a bigger health risk than Judo in my experience.
I'm pushing 70 and my judo days are well in my review. But I remember the judokas I was privileged to train with to be the hardest and nicest people I ever met in martial arts.
I had a similar issue with grips when I took up judo after years of wrestling. I always wrestled with my left foot forward, so I keep my left hand down to defend my leg; which for judo left me with a wrong sided lapel grip all the time. It's interesting how different things are based solely on being able to grab the legs.
The stance is more related to the grips on the judogi, that are non existent in wrestling: when it was allowed taking the legs in judo, it wasn't so different putting a foot forward (right for right grips and left for left handed), it was necessary to put attention on not being too close to the partner with the leg
@@joshbeambjj I had the same problem coming from a muay thai, wrestling, and BJJ background. I ended up playing Judo right-handed and eventually got used to having my right foot forward. I couldn't imagine playing left-handed and turning the opposite direction. You seem much more comfortable right handed as well, even though your stance is backwards because you naturally turn the way a right-handed player would.
@@joshbeambjj I can't say that I really "fixed" it, I'm still working on constantly reminding myself how to grip after a year and a half. It's gotten easier to remember during drills when I have time to think, but during randori the muscle memory sometimes takes over and I end up doing throws from unorthodox positions or get thrown because I take up a more wrestling style stance.
Thanks a lot! Glad you enjoyed it. Ah that's awesome, I actually don't think I've met anyone who does catch wrestling (tho of course I've seen it online), but that sounds fun to train
Register for the next event here! Chuck and Judo United are putting on a judo training camp April 27-28 at this same location in the video! All ages are invited. judo-united.smoothcomp.com/en/event/16555
The bit about the good fall is very true. I left Judo as a young green belt more than 20 years ago YET due to my instinctual falling technique I learned for so long as a kid, the Judo fall actually saved my life quite a few times in normal life! just last week I was doing my apartment scheduled cleaning and I slipped on my back over a wet floor I forgot drying. And I swear if I did not land properly on my back Judo style -as instinct kicked in- I might have suffered a serious back injury... or even worse!
The philosophy of “accept the falls, if you resist you’ll get injured” is so basic but true in life 👍🏽 great content
Just not in aikido..😅
I'm glad someone taught me that, spared me and my ego alot of injuries
Yeah I started off in Judo, everybody learns to go with the throws, BJJ guys by contrast really fight being taken down, even in training.
the worst fall I have ever had in Jui jitsu was when i made the mistake of trying to hold onto the person throwing me when i was a green belt. Its why you spend so much time practicing your rolls and turning yourself ahead of the throw to take the impact out along with your break fall. I was sick for about a day after that mistake. Felt like my kidneys had bounced up into my shoulder blades lol
The only times in Judo I've ever been injured, is when I've resisted to long while getting thrown.
really brave of you to put yourself out of your comfort zone. Great content
I appreciate that! Thanks for watching
i think hes at least a yellow belt nowwith those SOLID breakfalls
For sure wear a white belt and wear a blue or white gi if you are visiting a judo school.
yeah I've since joined CJ Judo and of course bought a proper uniform ;)
@@joshbeambjj awesome! Your video was really good. I enjoyed your breakdown of how Judo randori can be likened to bjj flow rolling.
At my judo school we have a lot of cross trainers, tbh it’s nice if you change your belt etc. but we don’t require it, our sensei honors the fact that if you cross train you have experience and understanding. Ntm we all know Gis are expensive hahah. I myself though have worn a blue double weave for the last 10+ yrs in BJJ and judo.
White GI. Always white as a visitor. Traditionally it’s always white period. Some schools will allow a blue GI, but unless you know for certain, just wear white.
@joshbeambjj so if someone can do one....bjj or judo?
Looking how sweaty you end up, they certainly put you through a good judo session.
Absolutely! Thanks for watching
You've definitely earned my subscription! Keep up the great work Josh
Thanks Jesse, love your videos! But you know what this means now… we must fight!
@@joshbeambjj Of course! Eagerly awaiting your dojo storm 🙏🔥🥋
@@KARATEbyJesse It's about time you try judo, Jesse. I began judo after years of karate at the age of 63. Now a yellow belt! Seth tried judo and even entered a competition. You've done BJJ - now for judo!!
The power of training both is priceless....i love training both at the same time
100%! thanks for watching
Same here. I started training Judo, a year after BJJ. You really do get the best of both worlds when cross training.
Just remember to listen to your body and take breaks when needed
@@Mimir3710 100% self care is priceless
Or just train SAMBO
8:27 just FYI what you were doing with Joshua is called Nagekomi. It's when you throw each other back and forth cooperatively but while moving around like in randori.
this is good to know, thanks! i thought nagekomi was only when we were standing in front of each other practicing throws, but it's good to know too that it can also encompass moving around, etc. I'm learning 😂
@joshbeambjj I would say you were doing French randori or cooperative randori. Throw for throw without trying to block aggressively. Nagekomi is indeed usually just a line up of throws either static or on the move.
@@joshbeambjj yes, you can do it when you are just both standing there. It's just semantics but if you don't throw each other while doing this it is called uchikomi. If you throw then it is nagekomi. I've always done nagekomi while moving around, simulating randori or competition. IMO this is absolutely the best way to get good. It's just like flow rolling in BJJ. There is "aliveness" to the training where you are setting your opponent up for your attacks by manipulating him in a sparring like situation. That's how you develop your game -- either for ne waza (BJJ) or tachi waza (judo).
@@joshbeambjjThat is Uchikomi.
@@LoudokaBJJ Uchikomi is repetitive entry in for a throw without executing the throw itself. If there's a throw executed then it's nage komi.
Pretty sure Tony was my coach's son's coach when he was an international competitor playing for the German team. He is absolutely legit.
oh that's dope! I've heard some great things about him.
@@joshbeambjj tony is a very good judoka and good guy!
@@joshbeambjj just a followup on this, I got to train with Toni last night (just noticed I spelled his name wrong earlier) and he's stopping by our dojo in the next few weeks sometime. Very nice guy, so don't hesitate to train with him if you get the opportunity.
Good work, man. I think you pretty adequately captured some of the more subtle technical things that Judo emphasizes.
As a Judo guy myself, I’ve never really understood the BJJ need to death grip-just feels bad for economy of energy. Likewise, the notion of working together to build things up is a big deal in Judo as well. I can appreciate full resistance sparring, but I do think too much of the conversation online is dedicated to that idea; it’s very difficult to grow when people are constantly shutting you down.
thank you! I'm glad I was at least somewhat in the right ballpark.
Yeah I think the death grip stuff comes from just really not knowing takedowns, lol, at least for beginners like myself!
Yeah, to your point, the more I talk to people from other grappling sports (judokas, wrestlers), the more I realize that full resistance sparring is less common than we find in BJJ... Got to interview a young up and comer wrestler on our podcast Thanks for the Roll, his name is Aden Valencia, and he was describing wrestling practice to me and where full resistance sparring actually fits in, and it's a very specific thing, as opposed to how BJJ people spar, which is basically always with full resistance, lol. It's making me think about this all very differently!
Good video man, Really captures the spirit of Judo in alot of ways with how helpful some people will be and how intense it can get at times as well. Hope you keep up the journey. You should probably wear a Judo gi and your Judo ranked belt next time tho :P
Glad you enjoyed it, appreciate the feedback there! Thanks for watching.
Hahaha and yes I've since joined CJ Judo and bought a proper uniform 😂
Loving the judo content!!!
wooo, thanks for watching!
Good job man. It’s good to see BJJ guys training judo and learning instead of being arrogant and saying that BJJ is the best martial art when it actually came from judo.
100% agree with the guy near the end about falling properly. So many bjj guys don’t understand the importance of breakfalls and if you land wrong you’re gonna get seriously injured.
For sure! Thanks for watching
Love your learning mindset. It made me remember how motivated I was to learn Judo when I started and how I let myself go recently. Keep cooking.
I'm a judo player transitioning to bjj at the moment. Love the attitude of the bjj guys to my judo, they're always asking questions and it helps to skill swap a little so my jits is coming on so quick
In your opinion, it is better to learn judo or Brazilian jiu-jitsu
@nassimbelallam8830 I would say it would depend on your age. If you're under 35 learn judo cos you get all the takedown stuff and a rudimentary understanding of the ground game and then transition over to bjj and youll have a real advantage over the other white belts but you wont necessarily be blue belt standard but youll be very close.
If you're over 35 then judo is just going to be too hard on your body unless you're an above average athlete. Neither is better than the other but they complement each other so well
I'm 34, so Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is best for me😉
@nassimbelallam8830 give judo a go. It's definitely worth going just learn how to breakfall and that skill will stay with you forever
Awesome! Love the bjj x judo stuff
glad you're lovin' it, thanks for watching! i'll be making plenty more
one of your best videos yet! so fun and i love the judo culture. they all go after it
I really love all the judo videos. Love your humility and desire to explore and branch off into other areas of grappling. I want to learn it too, but there’s nowhere within 1.5 hours of me to train, so I’m actually about to travel to another city to train intensively for like a week (and do other vacation-y stuff), and I’m so excited!
That round with Joshua was great. That one round was worth 100 average rounds. That's how we should spar more often. Beautiful
Yeah that was fun, Joshua rocks.
As an old judo brown belt (1982) you did better than I did in my first 20 times on the mat. Congrats on your success. Looking forward to watching your progress.
As an Old (really old) Judoka - Judo was my PE class in Japan - I think that it is awesome that as an accomplished BJJ you're trying something new. I tried BJJ once and was so intimidated by it - I'm over 60, with ingrained Judo habits, and don't have the tons of muscle everyone in the studio has. Maybe I'll follow your example and give it a shot again. Great video.
I fight with a left handed grip and left handed stance on purpose because it's less common in Judo but most of my throws are still right handed.
You can do seio nage off a left handed lapel grip with your left foot forward while turning in right handed.
2nd Dan Judo and purple BJJ here
I tried southpaw, but it was harder to teach.
Same here.. I like a good left handed uchi Mata and osoto but my biggest throws, Seonage and makikomi come right handed from a strong lapel grip.
Right V Left opens up completely different angles. Must admit though, I hate fighting those awkward lefties 😅
Lowly 1st Dan Judo
Real good , very openminded , you are awsome .
thanks a lot, appreciate you watching!
I'm enjoying a lot this judo series! oss
Glad to hear it, thanks for watching! I'm gonna try to make more like this.
Judoka and the sport in general has such a nicer culture in than BJJ I think. There's a refinement and good character about it.
from white belt to black belt, I've trained BJJ in
POLAND: Gold Team/Gold Crew, Złomiarz Team
GERMANY: Ringside Gym in Berlin, some club in Munich (can't remember the name)
ITALY: De La Riva Pesaro
UK: Brazilian Top Team, London Fight Factory
and i were to count all the places where i only popped in like 2 or 3 times, this list would be several times as long, if i remembered them to begin with, which i don't (a couple of such places would be Copacabana Warsaw, some BJJ club in Streatham/London etc),
in NONE of them have i encountered unnice culture, or bad character (other than a few individuals perhaps, which is inevitable on such scale, but that's not part of the club's culture)
what do you perceive as not nice about BJJ culture? what's your range of exposure to BJJ/Judo clubs? honest question. it's possible i have just been extremely lucky since 2007.
OTOH i admit i don't know much about Judo culture (not in the form of first-hand experience), but in this comment section there's already like 10 comments scolding him for coming in wearing a black gi (who cares??), or:
"I like getting BJJ players getting humbled, they tend to be full of themselves."
"I just hope BJJ people stop copy technique from another Martial art style and calling their own."
"always love when judokas show BJJ butt scooters real martial arts"
etc.: ) surprisingly vitriolic, which is hard for me to understand
@@vibovitoldthis has nothing to do with Judo beyond you enjoy laying on your back & being topped by large men
@@austinbrabec5692 I have no idea how exactly this is supposed to address my comment, but it's probably yet another manifestation of this "nicer culture"
That kid doing judo and wrestling is going to be a beast
13:57 Lmao... Girl saw the camera and turned on Super Saiyan mode. 😂
yeah i got murked 😂
@@joshbeambjj 14:02 That's when she realized it's too late to say no now. 🥲
She’s an international medalist so she’s pretty dang good
Anne is legit!
She scary
Both such beautiful arts. It's great to see such cooperation.
Love your content, keep up the good work ! Hope you’re gonna continue your judo videos ! Oss, from a french judoka ;)
man... i love these videos. im in the same boat you're in, blue belt bjj and white belt judo (couple of months)
Glad you like them! That's awesome, going down the same road, lol. I've only been at judo now for a couple months too. How long have you been doing BJJ?
@@joshbeambjj bjj since 2018/2019
In your opinion, it is better to learn judo or Brazilian jiu-jitsu
breakfall is indeed very important to grow, you are doing it the right way by being relax and go with the flow, that's how u grow and learn quickest, and that's also why u need to have good breakfall!
thanks for the feedback!
Sick and underrated bro!!
Subbed.
Love the video! Also great production quality, felt like someone knows what he’s doing. Keep up the great work!
Much appreciated! Thanks for the feedback on that, I've really been trying to up the quality of these videos!
This video is amazing, really enjoyed your cadence and storytelling. Also audio and camera work are incredible, hope your channel keeps growing.
Wow, great feedback, thanks so much! This is especially great to hear since I've spent so much time trying to figure out each of those aspects, so I'm glad you noticed and then cared enough to leave a comment to point it out! Thanks for watching the video, I'll be making many more!
Also, I gotta give credit for the camera work here to my guy Matt Guffey!
8:41 This guy deserves so much respect, he's such a good training partner.
Definitely!
Started taking judo to help my Bjj.
The foot sweep is so powerful.
Love the video, not enough Judo content like this!
Glad you liked it! Thanks for watching
I have to say the guy you did the drills with in the blue at 8:35 was smooth and fluid.
Yeah, bro made them both look like prime Kosei Inoue. Thats great Judoka there
Watching you get thrown makes me want to work on my break falls 🤣Great video JOSH!
Hahaha break falls are so satisfying, idk what it is about them 😂 thanks Travis
I’ve subscribed because you’re a cool guy with no ego and you put yourself out there and out of your comfort zone. Well done bro. Keep posting the great content!
Amazing video!!! I love judo and bjj. These arts compliment each other.
In your opinion, it is better to learn judo or Brazilian jiu-jitsu
There are many factors to consider.Judo is a lot more affordable compared to BJJ. Judo has a high impact on the body and has more injuries.it would depend on your goals. Judo gives a better base because it focus on ukemi(falling). @@nassimbelallam8830
Judo.
Because bjj is kosen Judo.
Its just Judo nezwaza.
There is a reason why bjj guys train Judo.
Because bjj is the half art. A Marketing copy.
When you learn Judo you learn bjj.
No difference.
Except the Regulation System in competitions.
thank you very much for this humble display.
Appreciate you watching!
Brilliant video, informative, unpretentious, entertaining, all killer and no filler, instant subscribe!
Siiiick glad you enjoyed it! Thanks so much
Great job on this video. Thank you for approaching Judo with a mature attitude and learning mindset.
That was DOPE, I'm a BJJ blue belt, been doing martial arts most of my life. but since BJJ I love "to watch" good judo. I've tried a couple of classes but I'm not yet good enough at falling and am scared (I'm 56) of getting hurt. Good to see you not get trashed and leave more or less unscathed. Very inspiring 👊🏾
Loving your content. More of this!
You should try competing in judo too!
Thanks a lot, glad you're loving it! I'll be making more. Competing is absolutely on my radar! And if/when I do, I'll make a video about it for sure.
Words of wisdom thanks for sharing
Absolutely PERFECT attitude Dude! Work hard, be generous, and keep smiling.
Appreciate that!
Thanks for this video mate... I didn't know it needed it but it made a huge difference
Love seeing all the SJS judokas!
I'm really impressed with your souplesse and weight distribution while doing these throws!! As a brown belt with around 10 years on the mat I still often struggle with some of these throws you are pulling off. Also i'm really impressed by the overall skill level of these judokas, keep training with them and appreciate having such good teachers around! Keep it up 👍
this video is so engaging. your editing and storytelling skills keep getting better!!
Thanks Antonela 😁🙏🏻
Welcome to judo Josh, I hope you continue practicing! We are a bit wild but always respectful and trying to help everyone grow
Good for you. Judo is no joke. Good luck with your journey
14min mark absolutely getting yeeted around. haha love it
Yeah that was fun 😂
An excellent, honest and humble recording and assessment of a BJJ fighter trying judo.
Loved it. Much respect from a fellows judoka
Awesome! Brought back old judo memories from before I moved to the States. Judo is legit and beautiful to watch.
No Judo in USA?
@@Supermomo2007 less than in France, but not absent ! More life choice, work and also I climb a bunch. Didn't feel I would have enough time/money for both hobbies. I decided to focus on one.
I'm sure I could have found it if I really wanted to.
@@williamnicolas122 come to germany to train with me. I train 5 times in week. With have also kata sessions and self defense with nasty techniques
I really commend you for doing this as a Jiujitsu guy and I'm glad that you liked Judo and are continuing to train it. As someone who does both for more than 10 yrs, I wish more people crosstrained.
13:14 Matthew Bata visited Singapore and I got to spar him a couple of times. Chill guy
Being there at the plex was great. Cracking my knuckles was the best part tbh.
That was fun to watch, great narration and video
Great video, top notch editing, top notch content, i totally see you becoming a big grappling youtuber in time!
good job. stepping outside of our comfort zone is challenging. Stay on the path.
Love seeing this. Well done.
I bet this was fun and you learned a lot. Judo is awesome.
Love the video!
I felt very similar when I went to try bjj after having trained judo and traditional jujutsu from a young age. Has definitely helped me grow a lot!
Thanks for watching!
Great show, and love open minded approach - I do both sports and I love the crossover
14:14 literally made me go "DAMN!" out loud, because that throw looked so cool
Awesome vid!I was at this open mat! Youre doing much better than i am. Open mind, welcoming throws and being a great partner. The first black belt that suggested switching your stance is so good. Super nice guy too.
I really like Your judo videos. Cross-training is an amazing way to get better.
Terrific mindset
Judo is a great sport
Well done video
Only 5.8k subs? This is an amazing channel. Ive been binge watching all the videos.
Wow thank you! Glad you're enjoying the videos.
Really well put together video, really cool!
Great content, wonderful judo community 👍🙏
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the words at the end. Just started doing BJJ and i am kinda nervous but your words gave me some reassurance.
Awesome, great to hear! Keep at it.
;that drop tai otoshi at 14:15 was sweeeet
Loved this, great thing
Thank you for watching!
Thank you very much for sharing your experience with us ! You have a open mind to trying a new in a new martial art with new training partners, like you said, flow roll and flow fall ;) It was very interesting to watch !
Great video Bro!
Cheers from your new follower from London.
Oss 👊🏼
Ossss thanks bro!
great video! i’ve always felt like judo and jiu-jitsu are two sides of the same coin, or siblings. each had their area of expertise but are amazing at what they do, and have a lot to teach each other. to be well rounded is to be proficient in both!
You just single-handedly explained why its easier for me to do Judo on my left side. Because of my striking background thank you so much. THough now I have to train grip and movement on that side wish me luck.
Great video man, I don’t typically watch entire vids but didn’t even think about it on this one, locked in, awesome editing 🙌
Sick thanks! Glad you enjoyed it
very well done video, super entertaining to watch
Thank you very much!
Well done great content as a judo black belt myself hats of to you
Appreciate that, thanks for watching!
Awesome video. Great story, experience, inspiring. Makes me want to take up judo more. But, yea. You’re a great filmmaker on top of the martial arts. Awesome to see. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks so much 🙏🏻
Awesome video, very inspiring and heartwarming, thanks:)
Thanks for watching!
Great attitude and you obviously enjoy the challenge and the learning. I can empathise with the stance thing as I did boxing for a few years and then went back to judo recently. My opinion would be to change your feet and not your grip. You showed a natural ability as a right handed person to throw with a right side lapel grip and the off-balancing and pulling through your judo throws is more important in my opinion than standing with your left foot forward. I think given time you will easily adapt to having your right foot forward and you will progress quicker once you do. All the best in your judo journey!
Really enjoyed that. Thanks.
As a BJJ white belt that trains very hard this was amazing to see and you did great
Great vid, very nice perspective to view the sports of judo and bjj
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video and great attitude!
"Instead, it felt like we were dancing." That's the exact same description I gave of one of my most memorable randori sessions. I was in a new dojo for first time and up against a guy from France who was also the first time at the dojo (it's the dojo of an American gold medal winner so lots of people visit). It was unfamiliar territory and everyone seemed scary. The French guy and I were the same belt, so I thought "Maybe this will be OK?" I knew the French took their Judo _very_ seriously....
We proceeded to float across the mat. We were in total sync and moved like we were in a waltz. Except every few seconds, that waltz ended up with him throwing me through the air and onto the mat. I was hopeless, but he was careful. I never knew what hit me, but his moves were effortless and I hit the mat softly.
To this day, it's one of the most memorable times I've had in Judo. It was incredibly humbling, but, as was said. "it felt like we were dancing."
This video is also a reminder to me as to why I bounced off of BJJ after a few months. Almost everyone wanted to fucking destroy me and everyone else in the class. The handful of higher belts were great to roll with, but every lower level belt didn't seem to care if they might permanently injure you. I thought doing BJJ would be safer since most people don't do throws, but it was a bigger health risk than Judo in my experience.
I'm pushing 70 and my judo days are well in my review. But I remember the judokas I was privileged to train with to be the hardest and nicest people I ever met in martial arts.
Good video man, I look forward to more videos on your journey in Judo. Maybe I'll even bump into you at a local tournament someday
I had a similar issue with grips when I took up judo after years of wrestling. I always wrestled with my left foot forward, so I keep my left hand down to defend my leg; which for judo left me with a wrong sided lapel grip all the time. It's interesting how different things are based solely on being able to grab the legs.
yeah super interesting... what was your fix? did you keep a left leg forward stance for judo or nah?
The stance is more related to the grips on the judogi, that are non existent in wrestling: when it was allowed taking the legs in judo, it wasn't so different putting a foot forward (right for right grips and left for left handed), it was necessary to put attention on not being too close to the partner with the leg
@@joshbeambjj I had the same problem coming from a muay thai, wrestling, and BJJ background. I ended up playing Judo right-handed and eventually got used to having my right foot forward. I couldn't imagine playing left-handed and turning the opposite direction. You seem much more comfortable right handed as well, even though your stance is backwards because you naturally turn the way a right-handed player would.
@@joshbeambjj I can't say that I really "fixed" it, I'm still working on constantly reminding myself how to grip after a year and a half. It's gotten easier to remember during drills when I have time to think, but during randori the muscle memory sometimes takes over and I end up doing throws from unorthodox positions or get thrown because I take up a more wrestling style stance.
Bro that’s crazy there’s chuck Jefferson!!
I love your channel oss!
osssss thank you for watching!
Great (& fun) video 🥋🙏🏼
this was very good, well done production too.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it
Really good video. Can see this blowing up. I love judo, train catch wrestling and BJJ but would love to get to a judo club in the near future.
Thanks a lot! Glad you enjoyed it. Ah that's awesome, I actually don't think I've met anyone who does catch wrestling (tho of course I've seen it online), but that sounds fun to train
@@joshbeambjj if you're ever in sunny England then feel free to drop into my academy at Snakepitusa/uk Halifax :) all the best
awesome, thanks for the invite! I've been out to the UK a couple times now, I would love to go back!