I use this in karate. An excellent move. Have the opponent focus on a head attack but swiftly insert a hard ashi barai as the opponent commits to defend it's head. Drops like a sack of potatoes does the opponent!.
And if you want to take out the opponent it's ashi barai to just wobble them and almost simultaneously followed by a perfect hard gyakazuki (reverse punch) to the solar plexis. The fight will stop as they drop to the floor in agony, gasping for breath, thinking that their about to die but hey presto in 20-30 seconds they're all fine ready to fight again haha. It is easier to do than a boxing knockout and it incapacitates if you hit the spot right and also they don't lose conciousness.
No - this is Barai which means sweep, Gake is hooking and is much more about driving from the support leg - it a different mechanic to perform the throw.
Harai and barai are just two different translations of sweep / sweeping. I don't know why, but Harai should be used if it's the first word, while barai if it's the subsequent word. Translation between Japanese and English / Latin alphabet can be quite complex.
@@EfficientJudo Most sasaes I've seen just look like de ashi's. If you don't have that body turn, is it just de ashi? Because either way, it occurs during the step forward.
@@SeanWinters de ashi is a foot sweep performed laterally from outside to inside. In a Sasae you physically stop the opponents recovery step - one is forcing their foot to move, the other is preventing it from moving.
@@EfficientJudo Thank you, though I imagine attempting sasae often ends up just as a de ashi, considering the difference in energy needed to stop your foot, vs just pushing your foot through.
No, you don't watch feet in Judo. With experience you'll develop an understanding of ukes relative position, your own foot precision for attack, and the timing needed to execute these types of techniques - check out our Ashi-waza Drill video for ways to develop these aspects: ruclips.net/video/BePzzvvoz0I/видео.html
Thank you for your reply. I watched your related video. Isn't it an assumption that your opponent will move in step with you like a choreographed dance? In real life I think an opponent will be uncooperative. stopping, turning, changing rhythm, kicking, punching.
To get an understanding of the basics - yes - you and your partner work together. But with practice you'll develop the understanding, the timing and the footwork to apply it in a live scenario. Sparring against resisting opponents is only part of the training, you still practice the basics in a controlled environment - even the best boxers in the world still do pad work.
@@anilphilip546 Replying late here but to me, it also looks as though the sweep is performed on the same side where you maintain the collar grip. I assume pulling with the collar grip is also involved in presenting the opportunity for the foot sweep.
I use this in karate. An excellent move. Have the opponent focus on a head attack but swiftly insert a hard ashi barai as the opponent commits to defend it's head.
Drops like a sack of potatoes does the opponent!.
And if you want to take out the opponent it's ashi barai to just wobble them and almost simultaneously followed by a perfect hard gyakazuki (reverse punch) to the solar plexis.
The fight will stop as they drop to the floor in agony, gasping for breath, thinking that their about to die but hey presto in 20-30 seconds they're all fine ready to fight again haha.
It is easier to do than a boxing knockout and it incapacitates if you hit the spot right and also they don't lose conciousness.
@@MaroonedInDub One of my favorites too!
💪💪💙💙👍👍👏👏
Thanks for watching!
👏👏👍
Thanks for watching!
Hello, I have a question, isnt it almost the same move with kosoto gake ?
No - this is Barai which means sweep, Gake is hooking and is much more about driving from the support leg - it a different mechanic to perform the throw.
What’s the difference between harai and barai?
Harai and barai are just two different translations of sweep / sweeping. I don't know why, but Harai should be used if it's the first word, while barai if it's the subsequent word. Translation between Japanese and English / Latin alphabet can be quite complex.
Efficient Judo thanks!
@@EfficientJudo thanks
@@EfficientJudoI believe it would be due to rendaku.
I thought barai was when you sweep both feet into eachother and Harai was just one foot.
It should be done sleeve side right?
It can be done either side
@@EfficientJudo OK thanks
この形最後に受けの左足が前に出るのがおかしいと思う
C'est là reprise .. Le mec il s'entraîne 1 mois tous les 6 mois ^^ ..
C'est le judo que tu dois travailler ouchi gari, ko uchi gari, dz ashi barai
Thanks for watching!
So de ashi is with the lapel side, while sasae is with sleeve side?
No, sasae and de ashi are very different throws mechanically. Sasae is effective both sleeve side or lapel side.
@@EfficientJudo Most sasaes I've seen just look like de ashi's. If you don't have that body turn, is it just de ashi? Because either way, it occurs during the step forward.
@@SeanWinters de ashi is a foot sweep performed laterally from outside to inside. In a Sasae you physically stop the opponents recovery step - one is forcing their foot to move, the other is preventing it from moving.
@@EfficientJudo Thank you, though I imagine attempting sasae often ends up just as a de ashi, considering the difference in energy needed to stop your foot, vs just pushing your foot through.
@@SeanWinters if you push the foot through, you would end up with a harai-tsuri-komi-ashi
do you watch uke's feet to know the right moment?
No, you don't watch feet in Judo. With experience you'll develop an understanding of ukes relative position, your own foot precision for attack, and the timing needed to execute these types of techniques - check out our Ashi-waza Drill video for ways to develop these aspects: ruclips.net/video/BePzzvvoz0I/видео.html
Thank you for your reply. I watched your related video. Isn't it an assumption that your opponent will move in step with you like a choreographed dance? In real life I think an opponent will be uncooperative. stopping, turning, changing rhythm, kicking, punching.
To get an understanding of the basics - yes - you and your partner work together. But with practice you'll develop the understanding, the timing and the footwork to apply it in a live scenario. Sparring against resisting opponents is only part of the training, you still practice the basics in a controlled environment - even the best boxers in the world still do pad work.
Thank you. It would have been good if your videos included both left and right sides so we could learn to fight instinctively from both sides.
@@anilphilip546 Replying late here but to me, it also looks as though the sweep is performed on the same side where you maintain the collar grip. I assume pulling with the collar grip is also involved in presenting the opportunity for the foot sweep.
C’est ennoir mais je supose que c’est la caméra
C’est en noir