Too bad I dont live in Arkansas or I would definitely be in your school. From one veteran to another, you seem super knowledgeable about a lot of the martial arts. All that attention to detail we learned in the military. Lol. Sure wish I was a student there.
@@toe2toefirearmsandtraining857 I am going to definitely recommend it to my school. And once you get up here to Kentucky, we're gonna keep ya. lol. Have a blessed day, sir.
Honestly I prefer the throwing and ground work of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu but I have trained in Japanese jujutsu, aiki-jutsu, and Judo. This is old school Japanese jujutsu for the most part.
@@conwaytoe2toejiu-jitsu in judo it's banned from standing but in bjj and judo and of obviously in CACC it's totally legal and yes great for self defense
We are definitely not a competition focused school in spite of having plenty of time in the ring, the cage, and so forth. This particular series is instructional and has value in teaching how to affect balance and body mechanics (using arm locks)
Elaborate please. Surely you would agree that the word Jiu-Jitsu or jujutsu is Japanese. Surely you would agree that the history and lineage of these martial arts are Japanese in nature. I would agree that plenty of Americans have adopted these techniques.
@curtissrobinson5581 it's jiu-jitsu 100 percent, I'm only saying because you're not in Japan but people for some reason in the west think anything not Brazilian is automatically Japanese. If you are in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 it should be called UK jiu-jitsu and so on. However, im not questioning your jiu-jitsu because it is legitimate 100 percent
Always get confused when people refer to a technique as traditional Japanese JuJutsu, do they mean anything post war, or something Koryu? There’s two strands of Japanese JuJutsu and Koryu is way different to anything that came from post war teaching. This feels more post war to me. Whether that’s traditional or Japanese is likely open for debate.
Potato, potato lol The point is super simple...we don't do this technique much anymore but it still has value and I wanted to teach it. In addition, it is awesome that guys like you want to comment. That makes the conversation worthwhile.
Students wearing blue uniforms and not white. Male students wearing T.Shirts under their Dogis (uniform) Students wearing shoes in the Dojo. Instructor with a (marvel) punisher design on his back also wearing shoes and not a proper Kuro Obi (Black belt) Students are not standing to attention while the Sensei demonstrates or talks. ................................................They call THIS TRADITIONAL JIU JITSU........................................................... I AM NOT BAD MOUTHING THIS JIU JITSU HOWEVER............... I live in Japan and if a Japanese Master / instructor walks in this dojo he would immediately think what a LOAD OF RUBBISH. Though some of the techniques maybe practical you are not passing on the message of the martial arts.
In many ways you are correct. We are not passing on traditional culture from Japan. We are passing on very practical Jiu-Jitsu. I've got nothing against traditional Japanese martial arts and I have trained in many of the traditional forms under budo including: karate do, Judo, aikido, kendo and so forth. While training in those traditional systems I was careful to wear the assigned uniform and I never wore shoes on the mats. I've also trained in a number of arts including Filipino stick and knife fighting, Kali / escima, shoot fighting, TKD and I have touched on Jeet kune Do. All of these systems favor shoes and allow for a variety of street clothes or more typical uniforms. I certainly hope you wouldn't walk into any academy and immediately make poor assumptions that would be considered disrespectful. Likewise I wouldn't immediately walk into another academy then observe traditional attire and choose not to comply with the culture.
I LOVE it when we do things like this we don't normally do.
Awesome details there I hadn't seen before. You've also got an opportunity for iriminage there if he pulls his arm back from the straight armbar.
Great comment 😊
Legit techniques! Probably the best and only good set up I've seen at the moment of that figure four takedown.
Glad you liked it
Traditional Japanese techniques are very valuable in the modern age as they are meant to function against individuals in body armor.
Ha...at first I was confused but yes, samurai wore armor. I like your thinking 😊
Interesting stuff. I’ll give this a whirl
Hi, from the UK. I teach Japanese Jujutsu, the old way.
Rocking the gi.
All the best
Steve
Thanks brother....would love to visit or have you fly over if you have time.
@@conwaytoe2toejiu-jitsu I'll do some vids for you of different locks and concept applications if you wish.
All the best.
Steve
good stuff
Thank you sir
Too bad I dont live in Arkansas or I would definitely be in your school. From one veteran to another, you seem super knowledgeable about a lot of the martial arts. All that attention to detail we learned in the military. Lol. Sure wish I was a student there.
Thank you so much.
I am always willing to travel to your school if you would like me to help with a seminar
@@toe2toefirearmsandtraining857 I am going to definitely recommend it to my school. And once you get up here to Kentucky, we're gonna keep ya. lol. Have a blessed day, sir.
Very cool moves! 😁😁😁
The last technique is a waki-gatame from judo. This stuff is awesome...Many thanks
Yes Sir
Jujutsu had waki-gatame long before Judo did.
So what particular styles of Jujutsu do you practice?
Honestly I prefer the throwing and ground work of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu but I have trained in Japanese jujutsu, aiki-jutsu, and Judo.
This is old school Japanese jujutsu for the most part.
That is a fujiwara armbar and is illegal in judo and some bjj tournaments
Lots of things are illegal these days. This is a great real world technique (self defense)
@@conwaytoe2toejiu-jitsu in judo it's banned from standing but in bjj and judo and of obviously in CACC it's totally legal and yes great for self defense
That actually wouldn’t be a scoring takedown in BJJ competition cause the rules are weird.
We are definitely not a competition focused school in spite of having plenty of time in the ring, the cage, and so forth.
This particular series is instructional and has value in teaching how to affect balance and body mechanics (using arm locks)
This is not Japanese or traditional jiu-jitsu, it'd American jiu-jitsu
Elaborate please.
Surely you would agree that the word Jiu-Jitsu or jujutsu is Japanese.
Surely you would agree that the history and lineage of these martial arts are Japanese in nature.
I would agree that plenty of Americans have adopted these techniques.
@curtissrobinson5581 it's jiu-jitsu 100 percent, I'm only saying because you're not in Japan but people for some reason in the west think anything not Brazilian is automatically Japanese. If you are in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 it should be called UK jiu-jitsu and so on. However, im not questioning your jiu-jitsu because it is legitimate 100 percent
I get it.
Reasonable comment.
Thanks
Always get confused when people refer to a technique as traditional Japanese JuJutsu, do they mean anything post war, or something Koryu? There’s two strands of Japanese JuJutsu and Koryu is way different to anything that came from post war teaching. This feels more post war to me. Whether that’s traditional or Japanese is likely open for debate.
Potato, potato lol
The point is super simple...we don't do this technique much anymore but it still has value and I wanted to teach it.
In addition, it is awesome that guys like you want to comment. That makes the conversation worthwhile.
Students wearing blue uniforms and not white.
Male students wearing T.Shirts under their Dogis (uniform)
Students wearing shoes in the Dojo.
Instructor with a (marvel) punisher design on his back also wearing shoes and not a proper Kuro Obi (Black belt)
Students are not standing to attention while the Sensei demonstrates or talks.
................................................They call THIS TRADITIONAL JIU JITSU...........................................................
I AM NOT BAD MOUTHING THIS JIU JITSU
HOWEVER...............
I live in Japan and if a Japanese Master / instructor walks in this dojo he would immediately think what a LOAD OF RUBBISH. Though some of the techniques maybe practical you are not passing on the message of the martial arts.
In many ways you are correct.
We are not passing on traditional culture from Japan.
We are passing on very practical Jiu-Jitsu.
I've got nothing against traditional Japanese martial arts and I have trained in many of the traditional forms under budo including: karate do, Judo, aikido, kendo and so forth. While training in those traditional systems I was careful to wear the assigned uniform and I never wore shoes on the mats.
I've also trained in a number of arts including Filipino stick and knife fighting, Kali / escima, shoot fighting, TKD and I have touched on Jeet kune Do. All of these systems favor shoes and allow for a variety of street clothes or more typical uniforms.
I certainly hope you wouldn't walk into any academy and immediately make poor assumptions that would be considered disrespectful. Likewise I wouldn't immediately walk into another academy then observe traditional attire and choose not to comply with the culture.