What is Judogi Control?

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Understand what is the process of Judogi control and insights about this from the head of Education department.
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Комментарии • 18

  • @bbenny23
    @bbenny23 6 лет назад +6

    I'm judoka, love judo❤

  • @fernandoresende1522
    @fernandoresende1522 3 года назад +2

    Very good explanations!!!

  • @argensarybagysh1900
    @argensarybagysh1900 5 лет назад +2

    Judo is Father of Wrestling ☝️

  • @mrpandomim1
    @mrpandomim1 6 лет назад +4

    I ♥ JUDO

  • @holgerseffen8020
    @holgerseffen8020 2 года назад +1

    Is there a regulation about patches?

    • @pablopiblito7955
      @pablopiblito7955 Год назад

      Good question.
      Approved judogis are ridiculously expensive.

  • @ObamaOnTren
    @ObamaOnTren 8 месяцев назад

    Only in olympics right?

  • @Gandzha313
    @Gandzha313 6 лет назад +3

    Like

  • @jimmyalderson1639
    @jimmyalderson1639 6 лет назад +7

    'You have too many rules'
    'No we don't
    'The length of the skirt and distance between the collars of the lapels must be exactly what you demand and you even have a tool specifically designed to make sure thr clothes i wear specifically and exactly fit your demands'
    '...'
    'I'm sure this is what true judo is all about: making things perfectly equal so the contest comes down to practically luck. Once upon a time you had nudoka training hard to beat bigger fighters and higher grades. Now you've controlled this element so strictly that you can disqualify a judoka for having sleeves that are a centimenter too short'

    • @M_______._
      @M_______._ 6 лет назад +1

      jimmy alderson
      *down to pure skill

    • @DavidB5501
      @DavidB5501 6 лет назад

      Many sports have rules on clothing and equipment, aimed at ensuring fairness and safety. In boxing, for example, there are rules on the size and weight of gloves. Maybe you think it would be more interesting if boxers could wear knuckle-dusters?
      (And incidentally, both BJJ and Sambo wrestling also have rules on the size and fit of their clothing. The IBJJF has rules for 'gi inspection' before matches which look very similar to the Judo 'gi control' rules as described in the video. They even have a standard measuring stick.)

    • @jimmyalderson1639
      @jimmyalderson1639 6 лет назад +3

      DavidB5501 the difference is that in boxing they don't also have a million rules on the exact way you can step, exact way you can punch, and a list of the few punches you are still allowed to do ontop of their ones on clothing.
      It's not the rules on clothing specifically that pisses me off, it's the accumulation of rules after rules after rules that look a lot like some old guy at the IJF saw judoka fight and said 'no i want them to do it this way because i like this way, not that way' and hence you can get rules on how to grip specifically (apparently having a skillful grip is unfair?) how specifically you can perform a counter attack, no leg grabs including the illegalisation of throws like kataguruma, kuchiki daoshi, morotegari, ouchi ashi dori, kibisu gaeshi and several others. Just a few seconds n newaza (in fact at one of the recent grandslams or grandprixs a guy had a shimewaza applied and the ref stood them up without a second thought). weird rules about how to apply sutemiwaza which contradict some of the principles of how the waza must be applied.
      Things like this really get me, and to add to that there are a million specifications your gi must pass before you can even think about worrying about memorising these rules that change every few months.
      A lot of the skill's been taken out of judo, now it's the art of lightly tripping your opponent up or winning by your opponent getting themselves disqualified due to stepping one foot outside the mat area thrice. You can win with two crappy throws as long as they qualify for waza ari, and a lot of the dynamics of transitioning from katamewaza to nagewaza to newaza and back to nagewaza have all been taken out due to the rules on katame waza as well as newaza and kumikata. Imagine if Katsuhiko Kashiwazaki and Neil Adams, etc, competed now and were hypothetically in their prime. They wouldn't get anywhere because they're newaza experts. Judo is about overcoming your opponent's force with skill, and yet if a big buff dude who can lift you with one hand fights Katsuhiko KashiwaAki now, Katsuhiko (instead of performing sutemiwaza and then controlling his opponent on the ground) will attempt his usual style (which would result in him displaying that he is clear,y superior in judo) but then the ref would stand them up, shido him for false attacking, and big buff guy would get his arse saved and win on points and be really happy about it.
      That isn't judo. IJF should start their own fersion of judo called 'the art of foot sweeps' because what i see at these competitions (with occassional exceptions) is big muscles and foot sweeps and crying for the ref to save your arse when you go to the ground - that is not judo

    • @DavidB5501
      @DavidB5501 6 лет назад

      jimmy
      I agree with some of what you say, but I won't reply in detail because most of it is way off-topic from the video.
      Just for the record, I think what you say about boxing is misleading. In fact, boxing has detailed rules on what kind of punches are legal and illegal. For example, you are not allowed to hit with the side or back of the fist or with an open hand, and you are not allowed to hit with one hand while holding the opponent with the other. You are not allowed to hit the back of the head or neck, or the kidneys, or anywhere below the belt. And of course you are not allowed to grapple, or to strike the opponent with anything other than the fist. In brief, you are allowed to hit the opponent over a well-defined area of his head and body, using the front of your clenched fist, wearing an approved type of glove. Any other form of attack is illegal. So the range of permitted actions is much narrower than in a judo contest, even under the present IJF rules.

    • @jimmyalderson1639
      @jimmyalderson1639 6 лет назад +1

      DavidB5501 i do agree that boxing has more limitations. But i also think that's by nature of what it is. Blxing is about fist fighting. Whereas judo isn't about throwing, it's about grappling. But because the public think it's about just throwing, the IjF suck up to them and tell them 'yeah it is all about throwing'
      As you said, it is off topic, but i think at the rate the IJf are going judo will be just as free an expression of martial skill as blxing is an expression of taekwondo