5 basic judo hold downs and pins (osaekomi)
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- Опубликовано: 26 авг 2019
- I learned this from Jimmy Pedro when I lived and trained at the National Training Center up in Mass.
After yoko shiho gatame, you can also transition to kuzure kesa gatame, bringing the series full circle. Can you figure out how and when??
Terms:
Kuzure kesa gatame
Kesa gatame
ushiro kesa gatame
yokoshiho gatame
kami shiho gatame Спорт
This is the first Newaza my instructor teach me, he even teach us how to transitions between those just like you.
Amazing to finally see some ground work from a judoka. The BJJ guys started to get to cocky with that. Some of them actually think that judo has no ground work at all.
The best judo channel
Thank you!
Facts
Wonderful sequence. I'm a purple belt in BJJ. Prior to that, I trained in jujutsu for around 5 years at a cross-disciplinary school which for reasons still not entirely clear to me choose to refer to itself as a sambo club. Personal history aside, I often hear my BJJ partners talk of my pressure when we roll. They comment on how I feel unquantifiable "heavy". I attribute this complement to my time practicing jujutsu and its appreciation for the pin.
BBJ's focus on submission is well warranted. As a martial sportsman whose love extends beyond any singular ruleset or lineage, however, my particular appreciation extends to all properties of the grappling arts. From the takedown and throw, to the transition, sweep, submission, and pin. Unlike the submission which for all intent and purposes signifies your opponent's would-be physical death, the pin symbolizes something far more coveted--his psychological surrender. As well-rounded grapplers, we would do well to practice, utilize, and preach the pin's effectiveness on the ground, no matter the name on our patch or flag on our wall.
Higashi Sensei runs a fantastic RUclips channel with exemplary judo. Definitely subscribed and can't wait to binge more content.
Very helpful and clear instructions, good job :)
This page is gold!!! Thank you!
You are welcome!
Sweet newaza transition there.
Once again Monsieur, really nicely done.
Thank you !
Thank you for watching and for your kind words!
Very strong breakdown, sir (as always). It's great ti review this as I start putting together some basics for ground work on my channel -- or at least start *trying* to.
Just started doing ne waza at my dojo (I'm white belt). Great step by step tutorial!
Awesome! I hope you drill this and get really good at it.
@@Shigashi84 thanks will do!
I go to judo and i used this and pinned my friend thanks!
cool. btw, what's the equivalent of bjj's back mount for judo?
This video is awesome and the positions explained so logically! I do BJJ and I miss this constructive way of explaining which Judo still has, because it has an kept its roots.
You do NOT want to fight a judoka on the floor(he will lift you up and then put you on the floor)
Shintaro sensi can you explain the ura gatame? I don’t see it here. Is it not used as much or something?
What’s the traditional purpose of a pin? Or is it just purely sport application
Correct me if I’m wrong because I’m not a full bottle on the terms yet but isn’t Kami shiho gatame also known as North/South in BJJ? Would I be able to use any of these techniques after using an Ogoshi?
@@emperorjimmu9941 I don't agree that you can use the same sequence. From kuzure kesa gatame you won't land in ushiro kesa gatame since uke won't be able to slide his arm and head through. Instead you are more likely to go to side mount/mune gatame (i.e. a variant of yoko shiho gatame where you have your arm not around the leg, but around uke's opposite arm) and work your way from there to kami shiho gatame.
It is similar, but not the same.
finally! a good osaekomi instruction.... imo it doesn't only work in judo, it can work in self defense and to an extent even BJJ!
for sure!! :-)
Hey, I'm new but was thinking, would and ogoshi-to-ouchi gari or ogoshi-to-kouchi gari be a good combo?
Just try that with your partner. It should work if you done that fast enough.
Yes it would. Give it a shot.
Any idea wher I can start training Judo in Dallas, Texas?
Eastside dojo
Did a quick google search. The top two results seem like good options. I know a few people over in those dojos. Hope you have a chance to visit them.
Thank you so much
Coolest type of grappling Judo JUJITSU wrestling moves
Pins throws locks
Maybe a dumb question but i've always wondered why isn't kesa gatame more popular. It looks very dominant but everyone i've seen for years tries it gets and swept or can't hold. Do just 90% of people do it wrong?
No dumb questions! When the person on bottom is creating back and forth momentum, you have to adjust. A bigger stronger person can roll you through, so you need to be able to post and base out wide.
@@Shigashi84 Steve Scott actually said the base on the ground is so important to understand biomechanically, great newaza content hope we get more!
Best about judo is, their start in stand up position. And keep stand if posible or stay on top. That is the reality of fight.
Muhammadali Saifullah judo is far from a real fight but it's still a amazing art and has some application
Awesome. Are these in BJJ too?
You can use in bjj, but you can't win a fight with a pin.
@@testemunhosdahistoria9688 that's true!
@@testemunhosdahistoria9688 Actually you can, by points. But otherwise in BJJ there is the rule "Position before Submission". You practically always need to secure a better position before you can even think about a submission. So yes, you actually *should* use them in BJJ too.
In Judo those pin like Kesa Gatame is to push your opponent lung to the point you cant breath. Never done BJJ, but it should work too if you push him a lot until he/she tapped out.
@@m5a1stuart83 Nah, it doesn't. Sometimes happens for beginners if they don't know how to breathe and panic, but you are not able to tap out a blue belt this way.
Also, they are not "designed" to do that. They are designed to be controlling positions.
i take classes at this place
Bruh