What Judo Can Learn from Wrestling - The Shintaro Higashi Show

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

Комментарии • 41

  • @counterhit121
    @counterhit121 Год назад +4

    One of my favorite things about Shintaro is his expertise across all the major grappling domains. So it's always a treat to hear him opine about ways to bring the best from one domain to another: in this case it was wrestling for judo, in others past its been bjj for judo. This type of cross-pollination is a breath of fresh air across all disciplines and gives me great hope for the future.

  • @bobbywilson5429
    @bobbywilson5429 Год назад +7

    I fenced in college and never thought to call myself a D1 athlete. I will now correct that going forward. 😁

  • @Jordanthecool7
    @Jordanthecool7 11 месяцев назад +2

    I recently joined judo since I couldn’t find any wrestling gym for adults where I’m from , and contrary to what people be saying about judo ( even the watered down version ) being ineffective , I really disagree. So many of the throws , trips, and sweeps can be used in both gi and no gi, it’s very practical even without leg grabs. A-lot of the takedowns in judo are actually really powerful and would be really damaging if your throwing a normal person on concrete , furniture , or other hard surfaces and the person don’t know how to fall correctly . Randori is also very affective at helping you learn how to apply the techniques against a resisting opponent . I can’t say weather it’s better or worse than wrestling , but I would say that it is a very affective martial art / combat sport.

  • @jtom416
    @jtom416 Год назад +4

    Been going down a rabbit hole of these episodes lately. Shintaro loves that tennis backhand example 😂

  • @aymanabaza6475
    @aymanabaza6475 Год назад +9

    As a former wrestler, a bjj and now a Nidan, Judo Black Belt, I can tell you yes wrestling does some good and hard workouts but that's nothing in comparison to a good Judo Club like ours. We cross train Traditional Japanese Ju Jitsu with our Judo with strikes, knee and ankle locks, we don't adhere to these ridiculous rules you can't touch the leg nonsense, we train real world Jugo/Ju Jitsu. Also, there's a great Jugo Club I follow. Welcome Mat Judo/Sambo and Japanese Ju Jitsu, it's a different world 🌎 in Judo, besides the throws everyone sees, Newaza and in Europe and other countries their NeWaza is Top Notch for sure

    • @markdaniels4178
      @markdaniels4178 Год назад +4

      I am an American who stand on what you're saying. I trained in bjj, judo and high-school wrestling and I totally agree . I dont separate bjj from judo or these crazy rules about not touching the legs. I strongly believe blending in traditional jiu-jitsu; we do this at my judo school. However, im straight judo now and don't really need bjj because my newaza is good enough

  • @TheAseer2020
    @TheAseer2020 Год назад +2

    Have a historical Judo question about the rear naked choke. Historically has this technique been a top submission finisher of contests? Is seems like in MMA and BJJ the rear naked choke is used a lot, but in Judo historically where does it rank in submission finishes of contests? My favorite choke is the Kata hajime, I wish this was used a lot more.

  • @seabassmorris
    @seabassmorris Год назад +2

    Love all your videos keep it up!

  • @CoelhoSports
    @CoelhoSports Год назад +5

    Quick question: when Japanese and Koreans play baseball, is it mandatory the use the English words strike, ball, hit, out, inning, etc, or do they use their own normal language when they play? I thought koreans don't use many Japanese terms when practicing judo the way English speaking countries seem to be required to use all Japanese terms.

    • @64wy4x8s
      @64wy4x8s Год назад +2

      In Korean baseball we use a mixture of English and Korean terminology for baseball. For certain terms like strike, ball, out, inning, we do have our own terms but we use them interchangeably with the Korean terminology as well.
      심판 - Umpire
      투수 - Pitcher
      포수 - Catcher
      타자 - Batter
      지명타자 - Designated hitter
      1루수 - First baseman
      2루수 - Second baseman
      3루수 - Third baseman
      유격수 - Shortstop
      좌익수 - Left fielder
      중견수 - Center fielder
      우익수 - Right fielder
      중간계투/구원투수 - Bullpen pitcher
      마무리투수 - Closer
      주자 - Runner
      1루타 - single
      2루타 - double
      3루타 - triple
      내야안타 - infield hit
      홈런 - homerun
      만루홈런 - grand slam
      도루 - Stolen base
      볼넷 - base on balls
      삼진 - Strike out
      직구 - Fast ball
      변화구 - Breaking ball
      내야 땅볼 - Ground out
      직선타구 - Line drive
      뜬공 - Fly ball
      견제구 - Pick-off throw
      땅볼 - Ground ball

    • @CoelhoSports
      @CoelhoSports Год назад +2

      @@64wy4x8s i assume it's the same in japan. they play the game in their own language and style. kano spoke fluent english and he probably expected judo to assimilate worldwide, like baseball and other sports.

  • @Quidoute
    @Quidoute Год назад +36

    Judo is harder to learn than wrestling, and a lot of non-patient practitioners get bored quickly and leave because they can't uchi mata someone.

    • @Jay-ho9io
      @Jay-ho9io Год назад +6

      Tell me you've never wrestled before without telling me you've never wrestled before.

    • @Quidoute
      @Quidoute Год назад +3

      @@Jay-ho9io Judo is harder than wrestling,
      facts don't care about ur feelings
      and I did wrestle for 2 years and just began judo 9 months ago
      do you really think pulling an uchi mata on a resisting opponent is easy ?
      you gotta revise ur mindeset if thats the case

    • @Jay-ho9io
      @Jay-ho9io Год назад +3

      @@Quidoute cool story.

    • @joe-jg4bh
      @joe-jg4bh Год назад +7

      Wrestling technique is just as hard to master. 15 years freestyle wrestling experience, 10 years Judo experience.

    • @MrSpiralling
      @MrSpiralling Год назад +5

      ​ Both are really hard sports, but judo is hard because of technique and wrestling's hard because it's more about strength and Conditioning then technique

  • @bbs6459
    @bbs6459 Год назад

    Halo Shintaro. Any advice for a guy that is 5 ft, in the 81kg weight category.

  • @BuddhismByKev
    @BuddhismByKev Год назад +1

    What’s the estimated net worth of all judo practitioners in the US?

  • @jonbeck6889
    @jonbeck6889 5 месяцев назад

    Good point about wrestling doing a lot more non cooperative training, but take note. The sport of wrestling is over at 22yo. Judo and jiu-jitsu can last a lifetime because the emphasis on cooperation.

  • @goku-pops7918
    @goku-pops7918 Год назад

    Shintaro have you ever do e MMA?
    You got that Japanese build like a tank like myself, short legs stocky 😘 much love

  • @syn3rgyz
    @syn3rgyz Год назад +1

    Levan needs to learn what survivorship bias is

  • @haraldodunkirk1432
    @haraldodunkirk1432 Год назад +1

    I love both. Wrestling is FAR more functional for BJJ or MMA. Plus…
    Nothing more annoying, when watching a judo match, than the sight of someone executing a beautiful ouchigari or kouchigari and opponent spins around to flop onto stomach. Zero score in judo (it would score in wrestling or advantage in BJJ). Total waste of a beautiful takedown.

  • @Marcelo-rv7rn
    @Marcelo-rv7rn Год назад +8

    Judo is basically Japanese wrestling

    • @Quidoute
      @Quidoute Год назад +4

      I like to say that Judo is just greco-roman-wrestling but on steroids

    • @TechnlcalTechnlques
      @TechnlcalTechnlques Год назад +10

      judo is more like jacket wrestling

    • @bruceparker6142
      @bruceparker6142 Год назад

      ​@@Quidoutemorote gari

  • @gajorg69
    @gajorg69 Год назад +1

    5% of the dojo being competitors seems so low to me.... I'm not in the states but judo is a healthy sport here and I'd say 50-60% or our dojo actively competes or has retired from competition at a reasonable and or high level.
    Is my club really that much of an outlier?

    • @Jay-ho9io
      @Jay-ho9io Год назад +2

      In the United States? Yes.

    • @gajorg69
      @gajorg69 Год назад +2

      @@Jay-ho9io gotcha, huh wouldn't have thought Canada (or at least my region) and US would have that much of a gap.

    • @markdaniels4178
      @markdaniels4178 Год назад

      Americans are brainwashed by bjj and mma and very delusional about judo and traditional Japanese jiu-jitsu.

    • @mndeg
      @mndeg Год назад +3

      US is weak in terms of competitive judo

  • @djignatin4043
    @djignatin4043 Год назад

    I live in pennsylvania. I was a wrestler. High school wrestling team. I didn't take Judo until later.