KOTEGAESHI Japanese Jujutsu

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2025
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Комментарии • 289

  • @freddiebishop2553
    @freddiebishop2553 4 года назад +91

    I'd like to see more Japanese jujitsu videos like this one.

    • @valnwk
      @valnwk 7 месяцев назад +3

      Me too. Every time I search for Traditional Japanese Ju Jitsu is showing me BJJ.😤

    • @deisoncoopen8767
      @deisoncoopen8767 4 месяца назад

      @@valnwk same . i've been practising traditional ju jitsu for 7 years ..better than bjj

    • @marcosyy87
      @marcosyy87 13 дней назад

      @@valnwk then look for Japanese "Jujutsu" instead. No "jitsu"

  • @iamthatiam49
    @iamthatiam49 4 года назад +136

    I love kotegaeshi!! Your Dad was smooth with it💪🏽. People don't understand how powerful kotegaeshi is.

    • @johnlloyddy7016
      @johnlloyddy7016 4 года назад +11

      Most people don't understand how it works. One of the most common mistakes people make when applying the kote gaeshi is to lean their head and shift their weight towards the uke, this gives him enough slack to maneuver and counter either by changing the angle and distance by clinching up or he can pull his arm down and throw a punch at you. The best way I learned to do it is to immediately lean away from the uke by shifting your head and weight back away from him forcing him to bend forward and flip over or else risk having his wrist broken.

    • @iamthatiam49
      @iamthatiam49 4 года назад +10

      No joke, my teachers have put this move and variations of this move on me. Alot of these MMA guys look at this as something new. As the old Masters would say "there's nothing new under the sun".

    • @Gamsir-gg3zh
      @Gamsir-gg3zh 4 года назад +4

      Yeah - a few years back I sparred with a much more higher belt. I saw the opportunity for a kote gaeshi and caught him completely off guard - unfortunately he got a mild concussion, but was a great sport about it. It’s one of those techniques where if you time it correct, it REALLY works.

    • @MegaRagingBunny
      @MegaRagingBunny 2 года назад

      @@iamthatiam49 "Alot of these MMA guys look at this as something new" I rolled my eyes so hard, i got a concussion.

    • @Grimloxz
      @Grimloxz Год назад +1

      I use it against the BJJ guys I roll with all the time except from the ground - no where to go and immediate tap out…

  • @GordiansKnotHere
    @GordiansKnotHere Год назад +6

    Gyaku Kotegaeshi - If you don't perform ukemi say goodbye to your wrist, elbow and shoulder... Devastating technique

  • @kevinedwards5061
    @kevinedwards5061 4 года назад +28

    I really like seeing the Japanese jujitsu. I'm ranked a nikyu in judo and would love to train Japanese jujitsu. However i haven't found anyone in St. Louis that teaches it. Please keep posting the demos. Arigatōgozaimashita

    • @kyle9648
      @kyle9648 4 года назад +3

      If you have a look at Kyushin Ryu Jujitsu on youtube it's got a few techniques up. But depending on the style of Jujitsu you look at they will all focus on different things, some throws, some striking, some grappling.

    • @jiujitsuismyoutlet
      @jiujitsuismyoutlet 2 года назад

      Do you train judo in saint Louis ? Where at ? I’m a few hours away and would love to visit sometime

    • @Supermomo2007
      @Supermomo2007 Год назад

      @@jiujitsuismyoutlet i train in judo and we only aikido in my city. is aikido good replacement for japanese jiu jitsu as addition to judo?

    • @thunderkatz4219
      @thunderkatz4219 Год назад

      @@Supermomo2007ehhh kinda

  • @kyle9648
    @kyle9648 4 года назад +48

    I train in 2 different styles of Jujitsu, one modern one more traditional. Both of these are slightly different to each other and the one demonstrated here. But its great to see some Traditional Jujitsu being done.
    People often underestimate how weak the wrist are. When enough force is applied the wrist can easily break. If you've ever had one done to you and you don't go with it fast enough you'll feel it in the wrist.

    • @dixienormus8231
      @dixienormus8231 2 года назад

      What styles do you do?

    • @kyle9648
      @kyle9648 2 года назад +1

      @@dixienormus8231 Kyushin-Ryu Jujutsu and a modern derivative of it.

  • @evanhassel3040
    @evanhassel3040 4 года назад +25

    Kote Gaeshi is dope!!! Thanks for the tech. My favorite part is you helping your Dad with tightening up the new belt.

  • @jasoncruz582
    @jasoncruz582 4 года назад +13

    I love how much love he has toward his dad. Thats what makes the videos so great.

  • @nicocontreras5366
    @nicocontreras5366 4 года назад +22

    Amazing, more than technique itself I love to see your dad still training and being so healthy.

  • @oneguy7202
    @oneguy7202 4 года назад +17

    Probably the moat famous wrist throw really good demonstration

  • @Jerry-n3r
    @Jerry-n3r 2 года назад +3

    I have done Japanese jujitsu for ten years now and I love it, this is one of my favourite techniques

  • @J3unG
    @J3unG 4 года назад +1

    So nice to see your father work. Thank you for this great demo.

  • @kallepikku4991
    @kallepikku4991 4 года назад +12

    Your old school Judo has some awesome stuff for street fighting and self-defense. Respect. This is coming from a life-long wrestler.

  • @bigmo931
    @bigmo931 4 года назад +2

    Your dad was super slick with it!!!!!!!

  • @iandougherty215
    @iandougherty215 4 года назад +20

    This is good to look at, because it reminds people that nobody is saying that a wrist lock is going to result in an effortless throw that forces your opponent to fly through the sky. In reality, if someone doesn't realize they have to turn and fall, their wrist just breaks instead without them falling at all. We DO take unnecessary falls and jumps...because if we don't, we suffer greater injuries than if we hadn't.
    ...or sometimes just because it looks cooler. C'mon, don't say it didn't look cool!!!

    • @killersalmon4359
      @killersalmon4359 4 года назад +5

      Taking the fall in those throws is basically like tapping out to a submission. You don't have to tap out. But that's going to be it for you for the day (and possibly for the month).

    • @sway71
      @sway71 4 года назад +2

      @@killersalmon4359 Yeah, and honestly I feel like taking the fall is the only way to relieve wrist pressure enough to recover. The less impressive looking awkward fall, like at 0:55, maintains the breaking pressure on the wrist, whereas doing the flip/roll gives you an opportunity to transition to newaza or open guard techniques.

    • @haffoc
      @haffoc 4 года назад +2

      Yeah, I've dropped kote gaeshi in resisting people and none of them made such a nice neat flippy fall. They went down, but it wasn't pretty.

    • @marcuspiscaer4120
      @marcuspiscaer4120 4 года назад

      The fall is the equivalent of a breakfall, it’s purely defensive and safer than risking tension on the wrist.

    • @marcuspiscaer4120
      @marcuspiscaer4120 4 года назад

      Exactly!

  • @dianecenteno5275
    @dianecenteno5275 4 года назад +1

    Love this technique! It can be used standing and on the ground not to mention the Aiki variations. Respect to you and your dad. Thanks for sharing!

  • @andyarndt1445
    @andyarndt1445 4 года назад +8

    Trained in aikido for 6 years, one of my favorite techniques!!!!!

  • @IronMartialArts
    @IronMartialArts 4 года назад +7

    I love Kotegaeshi! Highly underrated wristlock. Catch Wrestling has this wrist throw as well but I forget what they call it.

  • @jamesdavis1740
    @jamesdavis1740 2 года назад +4

    In Aikijujutsu a similar variation called gyaku kotegaeshi will turn the wrist and elbow into the opponents hip leaving little room for the ukemi. Results in a very tight throw that is different from most jujutsu and aikido versions.

    • @TRA25
      @TRA25 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the name of the throw, I was shown this variation in a seminar but the name wasn't mentioned. Any other interesting variations?

  • @neonhavok
    @neonhavok 4 года назад +6

    YESSS i love wrist locks from standing

  • @markceaser8073
    @markceaser8073 11 месяцев назад +1

    I train Daito Ryu Aikijujitsu and this is spot on. Thank you, sensei.

  • @bushido007
    @bushido007 4 года назад +2

    love the aiki stuff

  • @ryanbarnes8693
    @ryanbarnes8693 Год назад

    im a 2nd degree brown belt in jujutsu and i love doing wrist throws. your dad is also really smooth with the throw. love it :)

  • @samaeledward6300
    @samaeledward6300 4 года назад +6

    I used wristlock throw (slightly different than what you showed) at blue belt competition and my opponent went crazy bcuz he didnt saw that coming 😂😂😂
    I love that technique

  • @EndLess009
    @EndLess009 4 года назад

    So glad I found this page months ago, I’ve added tons of your no-gi techs to my boxing with great success over time. Keep up the awesomeness :)

  • @MP-db9sw
    @MP-db9sw 3 года назад +1

    Bro this is dope.

  • @davel6017
    @davel6017 4 года назад +1

    Great !!! And your dad is so impressive !!!

  • @henriquefrancisco300
    @henriquefrancisco300 4 года назад +1

    Love this technique. I'm always teaching this one. Beautiful stuff.

  • @manuelalejandro9523
    @manuelalejandro9523 Год назад

    I have remembered this video and came back to give a like.

  • @sambaker1212
    @sambaker1212 4 года назад

    You are INCREDIBLY TALENTED SIR.thank you so much for the uploads xx

  • @m.a.central9949
    @m.a.central9949 4 года назад

    These videos with your dad are awesome.

  • @nmnate
    @nmnate 4 года назад

    Ooh, yeah. I love that grip for kotegaeshi at 0:43. Can already tell that's an obscene amount of torque on the wrist.

  • @Nobody91021
    @Nobody91021 4 года назад +1

    wow, never thought that was possible using a wrist lock to force someone to either roll or flip. Well demonstrated👍

    • @johnlloyddy7016
      @johnlloyddy7016 4 года назад

      That's actually how wristlocks in Aikido works. That's why you see a lot of flying Uke in Aikido demos.

  • @Shindai
    @Shindai 3 года назад +2

    Never seen it done like this before I don't think (though I've been out of the game a long time now), looks very effective :) I love seeing how different styles do the same move, like certain aikido applications vs jujitsu, I did it differently again when I did aikijutsu. So many permutations of the same mechanical effect. Gotta collect em all lol

  • @themechakid
    @themechakid 4 года назад

    Oh my God this is gold! Please master Higashi 🙏open a dojo here in Georgia yes we're opened and it's cheaper too

  • @itsmyguitar
    @itsmyguitar 4 года назад

    Love it! Your Dad is bad ass!

  • @shanequigley7552
    @shanequigley7552 10 месяцев назад

    Great channel

  • @xrayfish2020
    @xrayfish2020 4 года назад

    Nice technique 👍 Merry Christmas 🌲☃️ from London 🇬🇧 keep safe

  • @AlCloutier
    @AlCloutier 2 года назад

    Another great video!

  • @SHADOWACTUAL
    @SHADOWACTUAL 3 года назад

    I just learned something new from y’all. Cool!

  • @frankhernandez1995
    @frankhernandez1995 4 года назад

    I just subscribed, great instructions and demonstrations.

  • @Omniblade_Gaming
    @Omniblade_Gaming 4 года назад

    Love this Chanel. One of the arts hopefully in the near future I can explore

  • @eliasbonilla8087
    @eliasbonilla8087 4 года назад +2

    Beutiful Form, Thank you! Please get a close up of the hand position for us novices in the future . .

  • @minorityofone1510
    @minorityofone1510 4 года назад

    Thanks, I just learned another variation of this powerful throw! (am used to executing from a top grab of the wrist)

  • @joetorres1861
    @joetorres1861 4 года назад

    Te Kagame also known as reverse Kote Gaeshi. A great lock from a straight or double wrist grab. Ty for sharing

  • @lmclm1755
    @lmclm1755 4 года назад +3

    Also found in Shorinji Kempo.

  • @eddierayvanlynch6133
    @eddierayvanlynch6133 4 года назад +1

    Your father looks strong as an ox!
    Judo does a body good.
    👍😀💯🥋♥️👏😎

  • @avenuex3731
    @avenuex3731 4 года назад +2

    In use the tendency of the person receiving the kotegaeshi will be to pull their wrist in and kill the lock. Because of this it is important that the kuzushi is taken simultaneously. If done so the throw occurs naturally.

    • @ETiDeQuenVesSendo
      @ETiDeQuenVesSendo 4 года назад +1

      I did hapkido (korean) for many years and Kote gaeshi is a low percentaje technique in grappling without strikes. If you want to implement it you have to pull towards you as soon as you grab the wrist. That way you are fighting a biceps curl with your own strength. It can work

    • @jamesfrankiewicz5768
      @jamesfrankiewicz5768 4 года назад

      If your opponent pulls back, you can follow the pull and thrust their hand to their rear shikaku (dead corner).

    • @avenuex3731
      @avenuex3731 4 года назад +1

      @@jamesfrankiewicz5768 I understand what you mean, but no. That isn’t the way it turns out if kuzushi isn’t taken first. They’ll pull their elbow in and wrist to the center and you’ll have to abandon the technique.
      If you want to go for the back corner you cannot legitimately get there moving directly toward it. You’ll get your ticket punched if their other hand/ side is free.
      The reason kotegaeshi is a “low chance” technique is that very few ever actually learn it.

    • @carlosluismendez7392
      @carlosluismendez7392 3 года назад +1

      in Daito Ryu you need to do aiki in the same moment the person grabs you. He needs to be unbalanced and when doing kotegaeshi you use your weight in the movement. The person can have a strong arm but 70 kg in the wrist is too much.
      The people who can't do kotegaeshi are doing it wrong.

  • @speedmanwx
    @speedmanwx 4 года назад +6

    That’s what I always see in all action movies

  • @pcm7315
    @pcm7315 4 года назад

    That was so smooth it almost didn't look real...but, of course it was.

  • @christopherbarrett6408
    @christopherbarrett6408 4 года назад

    Now that’s awesome

  • @j.montoya7051
    @j.montoya7051 3 года назад

    ¡ "THANK YOU" FOR EXPLAINING THE POTENTIAL OUT COME OF NOT TAKING THE FALL WITH THIS THROW ("LOVE" THE VIDEOS WITH YOUR DAD, BY THE WAY) ! ALL TOO OFTEN PEOPLE JUST ASSUME THAT UKE IS JUST "JUMPING INTO THE THROW" WITHOUT UNDERSTANDING WHY UKE IS "MOTIVATED" TO YIELD TO THE TECHNIQUE OR "SUFFER THE CONSEQUENCES" !

  • @NominoêRoisdesBretons
    @NominoêRoisdesBretons 4 года назад +2

    Always so impressded to see your father's technic and accuracy. He has great knowledge to share ! I would love to listen to him.
    Shintaro, I feel like you are great man thank you very for everything you are sharing with us ! You are truly special to our sport and martial art !
    (English isnt my mothertongue 👨🇨🇵)

  • @christophermedeiros1806
    @christophermedeiros1806 4 года назад

    one of my favorite locks ;) SOKI !!

  • @prvtthd401
    @prvtthd401 2 года назад

    This is indeed what many people misunderstood when these techniques were introduced. It is not ment to break anything. It is just another form of grip to break balance. It LOCKS your limbs and center mass into place so you can break balance.

  • @woozee4328
    @woozee4328 4 года назад +2

    More videos with your father please

  • @MP-db9sw
    @MP-db9sw 3 года назад

    Arigatou gozaimasu, Sensei.

  • @NateJones-tk9fb
    @NateJones-tk9fb 8 месяцев назад

    I learned this first in Ishin Ryu at 16. Then in Doce Pares in my twenties. A few years later in Krav Maga. Trained with a buddy who is an Aikido practitioner who also uses this. Same with a JKD buddy, and even Keysi buddy. It's a different technique in every style but the same lock. I guess there are only so many ways the human body can move. I learned different variations of the same locks, combatatives, and defenses. Martial arts really helped me learn how to learn anything. It fundamentaly changed the way I think and aproach a problem. If another man can do it I can too even if in a different way.

  • @PoppaJimmy
    @PoppaJimmy 4 года назад +4

    Awesome technique! May I ask where you got those green wall pads?

  • @marcelnowakowski945
    @marcelnowakowski945 Год назад

    Shintaro
    I always look for practical application.
    Where and when in real life will double wrist-lock happen?!
    I am 61 and have never seen it in a real street-fight...

  • @jesseliskola4366
    @jesseliskola4366 4 года назад

    Nice!

  • @Emiya_familia
    @Emiya_familia 3 года назад

    I miss doing aikido but I switch to grappling because I wanted to do more of a competitor's sport. I still wouldn't mind doing some wrist techniques

  • @emt5330
    @emt5330 4 года назад +5

    I just wish there was a close up on the hands

    • @user-bu2ls9lp1l
      @user-bu2ls9lp1l 4 года назад

      Hopefully these pointers help! 1) Make sure you grip their thumb meat with your 3 "little to middle fingers" 2) and have good PALM CONTACT, meaning zero airspace between your hand and theirs. 3) Lastly, you can amplify the pain by stepping backwards twice (Lead leg, than rear leg) while you crouch(turns it into a pin), instead of just turning as was demonstrated.

  • @Tovish1988
    @Tovish1988 2 года назад

    Really the fall is uki otoshi, dropping you into that hole off the front corner of your base. The kote gaeshi I think is a means of creating kuzushi from a static condition where there is no step being taken to exploit.

  • @justsomeguy6545
    @justsomeguy6545 3 года назад +1

    Fun fact this is the same throw Motobu choki used in his fight against gichin funakoshi

  • @GabrielPerez-ww9hy
    @GabrielPerez-ww9hy 4 года назад +1

    In Hakkoryu Jujutsu, this is called TeKagame. One of the first techniques you learn.

  • @JackValentine7
    @JackValentine7 3 года назад

    Shintaro un fratello.

  • @Account64000
    @Account64000 4 года назад +3

    I can never do this stuff off RUclips videos, should I take lessons

    • @whiterunguard9182
      @whiterunguard9182 4 года назад +4

      Yes, every martial arts work best if you have someone to guide you. It's efficient, and it can lessen injury risks

    • @jaketheasianguy3307
      @jaketheasianguy3307 4 года назад

      Take a class with a professional instructor is always the best way. Or you could just grab a friend and train together VERY SLOWLY from youtube instruction, that could work as well

    • @Account64000
      @Account64000 4 года назад +1

      @@jaketheasianguy3307 yes I did attempt this throw on him, he didn’t fall but I sprained his arm so at least I disabled the attacker

  • @eliotquintana9802
    @eliotquintana9802 7 месяцев назад +1

    Bushido techniques own skills with honor

  • @james101ride2
    @james101ride2 4 года назад

    You can add by sweeping the foot or leg while you do the kotegaeshi or use it transition too osotogari 😁

  • @iantolton9375
    @iantolton9375 4 года назад +2

    can you do more videos with your father

  • @kenwintin3014
    @kenwintin3014 3 месяца назад

    When practicing this technique, many people think that it hurts. When it is really used, people don't fly through the air because they don't know how to. They scream, cry and have serious injury. They pain described to me by someone who had experienced having it applied on them said it was the most painful experience of his long criminal life. He was crippled from it for years.

  • @PeterJonesKajuenRyu
    @PeterJonesKajuenRyu 4 года назад

    That’s closer to tenchi gaeshi than kote gaeshi. But of course they’re close cousins and are both hyper-supination locks.
    Nicely done.

  • @JustMe-vz3wd
    @JustMe-vz3wd 4 месяца назад +2

    Change the title of the awesome clip into something with AIKIDO and most comments would be BULLSHIDO ITS FAKE comments. Strange. It is as if ordinary martial artist fans are scared of Aikido and its unseen powers.

    • @jw-nz2vx
      @jw-nz2vx Месяц назад

      The main difference between this and what most Aikidoka are doing is that Higashi was trained by Kenji Tomiki and he believes in sparring and competition. Higashi knows which contexts this move applies in, many setups for it, and many variations of it because he has used it on people that were trying not to be thrown.

  • @sleepykid156
    @sleepykid156 4 года назад +3

    Can this be applied in a randori if I were to say use my legs to assist with the throw? Almost like doing a Korean Tai Otoshi? I am curious if this can be a good attack to do when my opponent has double sleeves grip that is not a Sode

    • @jedijudoka
      @jedijudoka 4 года назад +2

      Theoretically, but that would kinda be a jerk move, because you could really hurt them if they aren’t expecting it and they don’t comply.

    • @sleepykid156
      @sleepykid156 4 года назад +1

      @@jedijudoka ahhh I forgot that there is the twisting of the wrist aspect :/

    • @mauricematla1215
      @mauricematla1215 4 года назад +1

      Under Judo rules no.

    • @mauricematla1215
      @mauricematla1215 4 года назад +1

      @@prvtthd401 You can do Kote geishi in several directions.

    • @catzrulez5233
      @catzrulez5233 4 года назад +1

      for safety, do not try this in Judo.There's a reason why there's no randori in Aikido.

  • @luisandresperezrios1938
    @luisandresperezrios1938 4 года назад

    Tambien será necesario revisar los controles en el ne waza algo no tan conocido hoy

  • @medhasni6432
    @medhasni6432 4 года назад

    so it is kuzushi to the front and kuzushi using the wrist twist

  • @hirokawa990
    @hirokawa990 4 года назад

    右手を押し出したまま、投げる所が目に付いた。投げっぱなしなのですかね。柔術から技を取り入れた我々からすると、投げた後の押さえ技への移行が見れてないのですが、右手の使い方からすると押さえ技への移行は無いのでしょうか?

  • @chriswilcox8977
    @chriswilcox8977 Год назад

    My only issue with diving out of locks is that you get used to dealing with people who do it, so when they don’t, bad things can happen. Plus my awareness of Koryu JuJutsu involves no diving like this…perhaps other Koryu styles differ?

  • @henrikg1388
    @henrikg1388 4 года назад +1

    In my experience, people who have no "grappling" training, don't follow through in a throw. They just stand still and start screaming about the pain until you you practically break their wrist or let go. It doesn't make technique irrelevant, but you need to be aware of it.

  • @jasoncruz582
    @jasoncruz582 3 года назад

    I will hate for someone try this elderly man it will not go well for them. God bless Sir keep up the good work

  • @mikeabbot4616
    @mikeabbot4616 3 года назад +1

    If you don't mind me asking, which style of Japanese Jujutsu is that?

  • @Ozwi
    @Ozwi 4 года назад

    Also known as snap crackle pop when used lol - great demo -OSU

  • @naisiunnaheireann1752
    @naisiunnaheireann1752 4 года назад

    Amen

  • @РобертИсмаилов-у4ж
    @РобертИсмаилов-у4ж 4 года назад +1

    Хочю так уметь

  • @iainstewart423
    @iainstewart423 Год назад

    It really only works when your attacker isn’t paying attention. which is what your attacker does 90% of the time in reality. Definitely works!!

    • @William-JosephParker
      @William-JosephParker Год назад +1

      That's how it works. It causes so much pain that you don't care about your balance or posture and combine that with the off balancing to the side and sideways momentum, you flip.

  • @your_bunny_wrote420
    @your_bunny_wrote420 4 года назад

    It's working on the non wrestling bjj judo persons I would say. I'm not sure actually, my brother does many of these wrist locks and I been caught many times when I was relaxed. But when I put beast mode on it never works)))

    • @carlosluismendez7392
      @carlosluismendez7392 3 года назад

      thats because your brother technique sucks, you need to use all your body weight in the movement. And you need to be unbalanced at the moment of the grab already. It's actually a very soft technique but most people don't get it.

    • @your_bunny_wrote420
      @your_bunny_wrote420 3 года назад

      @@carlosluismendez7392 you ever tried it for wrestlers?

  • @jasontroy3911
    @jasontroy3911 4 года назад

    I've found I can eventually catch most guys once with a wristlock but once thier aware of it it's difficult to catch them again with it

    • @Jon-ov4nc
      @Jon-ov4nc 4 года назад

      Learn more wristlocks, there are dozens of different types in Chinese Qinna with multiple variations of each. Also, learn to transition from wrist to shoulder locks. Sequential locking is the solution.
      The more locks you stack the more control you will have so consider whether you have single, double, or triple lock. The technique in the video shows only holding the wrist which is a single lock only, you could press their elbow against your chest to make it a double lock, and then even place a figure-of-four hold to their wrist for triple lock.

  • @thethaifighter.2981
    @thethaifighter.2981 4 года назад

    🤩🤩

  • @thecubeman381
    @thecubeman381 2 года назад

    I have a question: what combination can you do after a Kote Gaeshi?

  • @ett40146
    @ett40146 9 месяцев назад

    How do you train this in live sparring without losing friends?

  • @luisandresperezrios1938
    @luisandresperezrios1938 4 года назад

    Oh Shintaro que bueno es que muestres cosas del Jujutsu, allí tendrás un tema amplio para nuevos videos que incluso puedes relacionar con las proyecciones, son las proyecciones con luxaciones, aquí se ve el poderoso Jujutsu tal y como es y el porque el Judo muchos consideran un arte noble. Si haces unas de estas técnicas hay que tener mucho cuidado con el uke puede a ver lesión, pero sería muy interesante develar la esencia de este poderoso arte de guerra y si quieres aún más como se realizan los golpeos, esquivas y entradas para buscar ángulos de ejecución de técnicas, si así lo quieres yo dentro de mis pocos conocimientos te podría dar una idea, ayudar a tu canal, donde siempre el reconocimiento será tuyo, no busco con esto mérito, ni dinero solo contribuir a tu canal exalte este maravilloso arte

  • @3liyyahu591
    @3liyyahu591 8 месяцев назад

    How is kuzushi used in jujutsu?

  • @Shinbusan
    @Shinbusan 4 года назад

    I just worried of fellow jiujiteiros in gym who do not know it. Kotegaeshi I know from aikido, but not sure if I want to try it on in bjj.

  • @mrv1271
    @mrv1271 4 года назад

    I did this only once by true accident in randori. The guy flew!!!! Imagine if I learned it.

  • @Kouhei.muay.Thai89
    @Kouhei.muay.Thai89 3 года назад

    I used to train in Japan in Yokosuka and in Mililani Hawaii. I did pretty good won gold a lot. I came to America and stopped judo I am now doin bjj. I am 32 am i to old to think about doin judo or anything fighting pro? I did it for 10 years as a child but I stopped for 15. Am I wasting my time

  • @Pug351
    @Pug351 29 дней назад

    No one was doing calf kicks in MMA until they were. Most Old school Jujitsu works, it's just that the practical application has been lost in kata and lack of pressure testing. As soon as someone starts snatching kote gaeshi in MMA, it will become a "practical" technique again.

  • @seoi_nage
    @seoi_nage 4 года назад +1

    is it can use in competition?

    • @TRA25
      @TRA25 2 года назад

      No

  • @adlmirab9967
    @adlmirab9967 Год назад

    Is this allowed in competitions?

  • @luisandresperezrios1938
    @luisandresperezrios1938 4 года назад

    Ah me faltó Feliz 2021

  • @Libertariandude
    @Libertariandude 4 года назад +1

    Just giving people a heads up in the comment section; if you do this technique for real to someone they will be taken down but they will flop down with a broken wrist. People who don't train don't fall very well. So just a heads up if you do this to someone for real you going to break the wrist. just make sure you can legally justify it because the police will question you.