The book “The Origins & History of Judo” is now available on Amazon worldwide in English, French, and Japanese, not just the links below. You can search for it in the Amazon of your own country. Amazon EU: amzn.eu/d/bfEkJmQ Amazon US: a.co/d/dNyMInt Amazon Asia: amzn.asia/d/aRU8ZXn French version: amzn.eu/d/8SN3DNs Thank you all.
Preuve que le jeu de garde au sol existe aussi en judo (Ju-jutsu traditionnel japonais aussi) et pas juste au BJJ. Bonne remise à plat. Merci Chadi : petit like 😊
Since I am a pre-2009 judoka, I get confused by the rules today. Are you allowed to even grab a leg like that from the ground? I know leg grabs and ankle picks from a standing position are a big no-no, but when you are doing it on your back?
At least in our gym many of the technique drills are done in a way, that emulates strikes - like right now when playing open guard and guard retention the other player "wins" if he can pass the guard OR touch the other guy in the head. If you can touch someones head, you could also hit them in the head.
I wonder how training sessions are different back then and now, when judo became more innovated yet sport-oriented It seems that as the IJF tries to create a niche from other wrestling arts, the ‘do’ element is much reduced, and practice sessions resemble boxing and western wrestling more and more. It also feels like tradition, philosophy and nuances are more preserved in traditional Karate or Aikido classes but they are also stereotyped as ‘less practical’
Many judokas are prejudiced against BJJ, but without it these techniques would not be maintained. You can say "but in that school they train a lot of ground fighting, there is that other one", but these are isolated cases, and not everyone has the chance to be in these specific academies with strong newaza. In the end, BJJ maintains the culture of ground fighting, and has evolved to a very high level.
Judo’s Ne-Waza is super underrated especially for street fighting and MMA. Unlike BJJ’s reliance on the guard or playing bottom, Judo’s Ne-Waza is aggressive from Top (Osaekomi) and aggressive from the bottom (guard). Typically you see BJJ guys playing guard and working from bottom. In Judo that means you are losing. In MMA it means you’re getting punched. In the street you might be getting mobbed. Ne-waza is aggressive and to the point. While BJJ does have a versatile guard and lots of options from it. It’s unwise to be on bottom in the street. Even the old school BJJ and Vale Tudo guy’s prioritized top position. Guard is good for one on one fights and a great position to finish a dude. However going there by choice as BJJ guys do, is not necessarily practical for the street or MMA. Is it fun to learn from guard? Absolutely yes. Do I need to know everything from guard to win or defend myself? No. There’s a reason why the basics (straight/bent arm locks, triangles, guillotine, etc) continue to win. Old school saying about the guard: sweep, stand, submit. Context: I’m a judo brown belt, BJJ blue belt, and amateur MMA fighter.
@@dylan_krishna_777traditional Japanese Jujutsu newaza is nothing like today's grappling, don't believe me? Try search around RUclips and you will not find any, modern day grappling is developed from the Rivalry of Fusen Ryu Jujutsu and Kodokan, even Fusen Ryu has no modern day grappling, it was developed by their headmaster mataemon tanabe that Kodokan has to respond with their own variation.
@@dylan_krishna_777 hard to find. Also the talent pool won’t be a good as the popular martial arts like Judo, BJJ etc. you might get the fullness of the art but will mostly likely either won’t spar so much or will be sparring against scrubs.
BJJ did not, i have to admit after 20 years of bjj training, contribute anything aside from taking off the gi and a few wrestling takedowns. At was all Kodokan Judo. I wish Jud were still taught as an art, not a sport. It's brilliant as a complete fighting system.
There’s no doubt that there’s expert BJJ-style (as in back and forth offensive, defensive and counterattacking) grappling in judo. And it’s hyper hyper minority.
Nope that is completely wrong, the United Kingdom is the stronghold of Japanese jujutsu since the late 19th century, and it never went into obscurity. The budokwai is the oldest martial arts academy in Europe where jujutsu judo aikido karate flourished right to this very day. All the gracies did was bring Brazilian jiujitsu to wider audiences they didn't do anything that traditional jujutsu and judo already taught they just used kosen judo techniques which judo took from fusen ryu jujutsu. The gracies haven't done anything to bjj in a long time, it's guys like Jean Jacques machado eddie bravo marcelo Garcia Dave Camrillo and others etchere guys are responsible for the evolution the bjj has gone through over the last 2 decades
@@niledunn4641 i agree with you but not only those you mentioned helped improve bjj there are a lot of brazilian competitors responsible for the growth of bjj. Also the Gracies stand for jiu-jitsu just the same Jigoro Kano for Judo, none of them invented anything they only organized the already existing techniques to a designed martial arts.
The book “The Origins & History of Judo” is now available on Amazon worldwide in English, French, and Japanese, not just the links below. You can search for it in the Amazon of your own country.
Amazon EU:
amzn.eu/d/bfEkJmQ
Amazon US:
a.co/d/dNyMInt
Amazon Asia:
amzn.asia/d/aRU8ZXn
French version:
amzn.eu/d/8SN3DNs
Thank you all.
I wish Judo would still be taught this way. It's such a complete martial art.
It is. Just not where your at.
@@KingOfSwords720Or where most people are at.
Stuff like this really makes you take notice of the shared lineages of Judo and BJJ.
BJJ is in a way a preservation of this stuff. Judo culture by and large has abandoned it. At least someone picked it up!
@@yakovdavidovich7943great point
Silky smooth sweeps, thanks Chadi
I did Judo as a martial art in 1985 and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in 1995... it was exactly the same🔥
This is excellent. I practice Jiu Jutsu and I love seeing the Judo roots of techniques we do. OSS
You do realise judo and even BJJ come from Japanese jiu jutsu but they’ve just focused on one aspect
@@toomey2uactually modern bjj comes directly from judo(specifically the Gracie’s style) they later on adapted other jujutsu techniques
@@toomey2u Hai, wakarimasu.
@@david-468 🤙🏾
Preuve que le jeu de garde au sol existe aussi en judo (Ju-jutsu traditionnel japonais aussi) et pas juste au BJJ.
Bonne remise à plat.
Merci Chadi : petit like 😊
Has someone ever doubted that for real?
Such beautiful sweeps! I use them all, with the exception of the one before the final sweep.
That's awesome Chadi, could you please share the whole video? Thank you
Love this, thanks.
Merci sensei
Since I am a pre-2009 judoka, I get confused by the rules today. Are you allowed to even grab a leg like that from the ground? I know leg grabs and ankle picks from a standing position are a big no-no, but when you are doing it on your back?
From the ground, leg grabs are fine.
Its allowed when not a takedown
I hate it when a martial art becomes watered down… gives you the wrong instincts in a self defence scenario
@@Leopar525 I think you would be fine in a real life situation. Or do you think you would also stop if the assailant yelled "maitta!". 😂
1:30 is the tripod sweep in bjj.
Great sweeps and also sponsor of Nike Pro.
@chadi plwase share the original video
I need to learn some frickin judo
Chadi, could you please share the whole video? Thank you man
Where can we find the original vid?
Does BJJ have a stomp defense, or a defense against weapons?
At least in our gym many of the technique drills are done in a way, that emulates strikes - like right now when playing open guard and guard retention the other player "wins" if he can pass the guard OR touch the other guy in the head. If you can touch someones head, you could also hit them in the head.
The garcie clan are the only ones I've seen. That includes Machado and Gracie-Barra.
Could you show the review video?
I wonder how training sessions are different back then and now, when judo became more innovated yet sport-oriented
It seems that as the IJF tries to create a niche from other wrestling arts, the ‘do’ element is much reduced, and practice sessions resemble boxing and western wrestling more and more. It also feels like tradition, philosophy and nuances are more preserved in traditional Karate or Aikido classes but they are also stereotyped as ‘less practical’
Many judokas are prejudiced against BJJ, but without it these techniques would not be maintained. You can say "but in that school they train a lot of ground fighting, there is that other one", but these are isolated cases, and not everyone has the chance to be in these specific academies with strong newaza. In the end, BJJ maintains the culture of ground fighting, and has evolved to a very high level.
Amazing video!!!
About your book, now I live in South America, there is any way of buying your book?
Judo’s Ne-Waza is super underrated especially for street fighting and MMA. Unlike BJJ’s reliance on the guard or playing bottom, Judo’s Ne-Waza is aggressive from Top (Osaekomi) and aggressive from the bottom (guard). Typically you see BJJ guys playing guard and working from bottom. In Judo that means you are losing. In MMA it means you’re getting punched. In the street you might be getting mobbed. Ne-waza is aggressive and to the point. While BJJ does have a versatile guard and lots of options from it. It’s unwise to be on bottom in the street. Even the old school BJJ and Vale Tudo guy’s prioritized top position. Guard is good for one on one fights and a great position to finish a dude. However going there by choice as BJJ guys do, is not necessarily practical for the street or MMA. Is it fun to learn from guard? Absolutely yes. Do I need to know everything from guard to win or defend myself? No. There’s a reason why the basics (straight/bent arm locks, triangles, guillotine, etc) continue to win. Old school saying about the guard: sweep, stand, submit.
Context: I’m a judo brown belt, BJJ blue belt, and amateur MMA fighter.
What do you think about Japanse Jiu Jitsu as a martial art? They have ground work there too but also trows, striking and standing submissions?
@@dylan_krishna_777traditional Japanese Jujutsu newaza is nothing like today's grappling, don't believe me? Try search around RUclips and you will not find any, modern day grappling is developed from the Rivalry of Fusen Ryu Jujutsu and Kodokan, even Fusen Ryu has no modern day grappling, it was developed by their headmaster mataemon tanabe that Kodokan has to respond with their own variation.
@@dylan_krishna_777 hard to find. Also the talent pool won’t be a good as the popular martial arts like Judo, BJJ etc. you might get the fullness of the art but will mostly likely either won’t spar so much or will be sparring against scrubs.
BJJ did not, i have to admit after 20 years of bjj training, contribute anything aside from taking off the gi and a few wrestling takedowns. At was all Kodokan Judo. I wish Jud were still taught as an art, not a sport. It's brilliant as a complete fighting system.
man that looks a lot like De la Riva guard at 2:20
There’s no doubt that there’s expert BJJ-style (as in back and forth offensive, defensive and counterattacking) grappling in judo. And it’s hyper hyper minority.
Can someone stream without chadi comments
If it weren't for the gracies and the creation of bjj these traditional jujutsu techniques would've been forgotten by now.
People still learn these techniques in kosen judo
I agree entirely. The Brazilians and particularly the Gracies preserved and evolved newaza
Nope that is completely wrong, the United Kingdom is the stronghold of Japanese jujutsu since the late 19th century, and it never went into obscurity. The budokwai is the oldest martial arts academy in Europe where jujutsu judo aikido karate flourished right to this very day. All the gracies did was bring Brazilian jiujitsu to wider audiences they didn't do anything that traditional jujutsu and judo already taught they just used kosen judo techniques which judo took from fusen ryu jujutsu. The gracies haven't done anything to bjj in a long time, it's guys like Jean Jacques machado eddie bravo marcelo Garcia Dave Camrillo and others etchere guys are responsible for the evolution the bjj has gone through over the last 2 decades
@@niledunn4641 i agree with you but not only those you mentioned helped improve bjj there are a lot of brazilian competitors responsible for the growth of bjj. Also the Gracies stand for jiu-jitsu just the same Jigoro Kano for Judo, none of them invented anything they only organized the already existing techniques to a designed martial arts.