The book “The Origins & History of Judo” is now available on Amazon worldwide in English, French, and Japanese, not just the links below. You can search for it in the Amazon of your own country. Amazon EU: amzn.eu/d/bfEkJmQ Amazon US: a.co/d/dNyMInt Amazon Asia: amzn.asia/d/aRU8ZXn French version: amzn.eu/d/8SN3DNs Thank you all.
@@marktripp138maybe a few old men did but go to any Gracie gym. All they do is praise every aspect of grappling. Wrestling and judo are highly revered.
@ you mean old men like every member at the top of the hierarchy? How about when one of them said in a published martial art magazine that Jigoro Kano created judo to be a fake martial art to keep the real secrets of jujitsu from the round eyes? If you need to hear more, just let me know !
I just had this exact same experience happen in the dojo I'm currently attending. When I first arrived there earlier this year, there were mostly middle aged men who practiced once or twice a week after work. They are all quite fit (they cycle, run, swim), but they do know the limits of their bodies. Sparring with them was always a game of chess with brief explosions of action, and I was learning a lot. A few months back, a team from an university in town need a new place to practice and started going 3 times a week to the dojo. All 19, 20-somethings way too eager even months before they have any competitions. They all mean well and renewed the energy at the dojo, but damn, I'm at high alert at all times to avoid injury, and it's exhausting 😅
I really appreciate the notes and warnings about how to play these strategies safely. It's very easy to get overly excited and forget considering safety first. There was a Jesse Enkamp video about sparring and top martial arts competitors, as well as Shintaro Higashi often talking about proper sparring. The fact that someone is not trying to rip your head off doesn't mean it's not good and effective sparring worth paying attention to. In fact if it looks relaxed you're probably doing it right. I like that multiple judo youtubers and martial artists are voicing it out lately. It needs to be heard. Everyone has practiced with someone who hasn't understood what randori is about and will try to win and rip your head off. Nobody likes practicing like that. It just means they're panicking and not thinking about improving. That they're not comfortable in playing from losing or even position. If most of the young testosterone filled, undeveloped brain men figured out the intensity thing and practicing effectively, the amount of unnecessary training injuries would go down and their seriousness would also drop. Leading to more of those fully effective training hours and greater longevity. Probably allows you to hit the gym harder alongside judo as well, allowing you to improve your judo and physicality more effectively. Sure you need to sometimes play at high intensity but most of the time not.
Totally agree, some guys do randori like its a matter of life or death, if all your energy and attention is spent muscling your opponent youll never understand the mechanics of the techniques and most importantly the mechanics of KUZUSHI
Actually, I saw the book the other day. I was wondering what it was about because the book was wrapped up, and I didn't want to bother the worker. Would you mind sharing what the book is about?
Excellent video! I watch this Mifune footage at .25 speed all the time, like a ritual. The fundamentals of base and connection that Rickson always talks about are fully on display here. Beautiful. 🥹❤
I also agree with the training method. I tell my classes that their one consistent goal is to be the least tired person at the end of class. The more technical we can be, the more energy we can save.
Bonjour Chadi, En regardant ta vidéo, je mes suis demandé si tu étais allé t'entraîner au Gracie Ju Jitsu à l'Académie des Gracie en Californie ? Ce serait pour "ressentir" leur judo. Je crois que ce sont des frères de Rickson Gracie qui dirigent cette académie. Nicolas
@@Chadi Yep, I know that but that is just silly to me that you would score a throw full ippon if you land in serious trouble. Espesially if the other guy is bigger and/or stronger than you are. You don't even have to use a submission from side control - just shoulder pressure alone should get a tap.
I agree with your philosophy. In judo competition( and most randori sessions) you win with the ippon so it’s irrelevant and you reset. But in every other context, whether bjj, mma, real life combat, it’s a bad habit. I train mostly bjj these days and teach judo at a bjj gym and I never teach the roll through and always try to stay standing or at least on top
I have a hard time taking grappling seriously when there is no striking or weapons involved. These things change the dynamic massively. I understand there is a sportive and educational purposes to the arts. It is a game we have all agreed to play so we can improve our skills, but when you remove a category of technique from fighting, all the other categories left over expand to fill the space left behind. In a sport of fewer rules or real violent situations, many of these positions can and do result in the person on bottom getting beat on like a drum. I suppose that's fine if the people training are aware of those blind spots and have accepted it. But lets be real, many are not aware and leave their Judo/BJJ class equating their dominance on the mat with a 1:1 crossover to less limited situations, whether that be MMA, two dudes playing dominance hierarchy games seeing what the other is made of, or true violent assaults with a large disparity in capability between aggressor and victim. I love this stuff but it is not complete martial arts.
Martial means Military. Military arts don't focus strongly upon unarmed fighting. You wanna learn true martial arts join the Infantry then try to join Ranger Regiment
The book “The Origins & History of Judo” is now available on Amazon worldwide in English, French, and Japanese, not just the links below. You can search for it in the Amazon of your own country.
Amazon EU:
amzn.eu/d/bfEkJmQ
Amazon US:
a.co/d/dNyMInt
Amazon Asia:
amzn.asia/d/aRU8ZXn
French version:
amzn.eu/d/8SN3DNs
Thank you all.
¡ YOU ARE MORE THAN ENTITLED TO TAKING A "BREAK" my BROTHER, AFTER ALL THIS IS NOT YOUR PRIMARY ENDEAVOR !
@@j.montoya7051 thank you for understanding 🙇🏻♂️
Do not take a break, Kurt Osiander "Go Train!!!!"
@@ChadiThe greatest artists take their time to make masterpieces.
Mifune's book, "The Canon of Judo" is still ahead of it's time.
Wow. Didn’t know the original Judo had so much ground game. The Gracie’s excellent marketers!
Anyone with any knowledge of martial arts knows Judo has ground game and the Gracie’s never said anything to the contrary.
@@Patrick-sheenall due respect, look closer. They crapped all over judo and still do.
@@marktripp138maybe a few old men did but go to any Gracie gym. All they do is praise every aspect of grappling. Wrestling and judo are highly revered.
@ you mean old men like every member at the top of the hierarchy? How about when one of them said in a published martial art magazine that Jigoro Kano created judo to be a fake martial art to keep the real secrets of jujitsu from the round eyes? If you need to hear more, just let me know !
Yup, GENIUS marketers. Look up Kosen Judo
I just had this exact same experience happen in the dojo I'm currently attending. When I first arrived there earlier this year, there were mostly middle aged men who practiced once or twice a week after work. They are all quite fit (they cycle, run, swim), but they do know the limits of their bodies. Sparring with them was always a game of chess with brief explosions of action, and I was learning a lot. A few months back, a team from an university in town need a new place to practice and started going 3 times a week to the dojo. All 19, 20-somethings way too eager even months before they have any competitions. They all mean well and renewed the energy at the dojo, but damn, I'm at high alert at all times to avoid injury, and it's exhausting 😅
I really appreciate the notes and warnings about how to play these strategies safely. It's very easy to get overly excited and forget considering safety first.
There was a Jesse Enkamp video about sparring and top martial arts competitors, as well as Shintaro Higashi often talking about proper sparring. The fact that someone is not trying to rip your head off doesn't mean it's not good and effective sparring worth paying attention to. In fact if it looks relaxed you're probably doing it right. I like that multiple judo youtubers and martial artists are voicing it out lately. It needs to be heard. Everyone has practiced with someone who hasn't understood what randori is about and will try to win and rip your head off. Nobody likes practicing like that. It just means they're panicking and not thinking about improving. That they're not comfortable in playing from losing or even position. If most of the young testosterone filled, undeveloped brain men figured out the intensity thing and practicing effectively, the amount of unnecessary training injuries would go down and their seriousness would also drop. Leading to more of those fully effective training hours and greater longevity. Probably allows you to hit the gym harder alongside judo as well, allowing you to improve your judo and physicality more effectively. Sure you need to sometimes play at high intensity but most of the time not.
Totally agree, some guys do randori like its a matter of life or death, if all your energy and attention is spent muscling your opponent youll never understand the mechanics of the techniques and most importantly the mechanics of KUZUSHI
@@Cars_of_yesteryear 100%
Kuzushi should be cultivated with uchi komi drills and kata.
Not by randori.
I'm judo and JJB's teacher... I love your videos ! .. Thanks a lot !❤
@@AnnesoWorkout j’apprécie énormément ton commentaire 🙇🏻♂️
I'm glad you're back
@@rustyshackleford735 thank you
His book, canon of judo, is still cutting edge
Actually, I saw the book the other day. I was wondering what it was about because the book was wrapped up, and I didn't want to bother the worker. Would you mind sharing what the book is about?
@@pohkimcheng59Instructional book on judo
@pohkimcheng59 drive.google.com/file/d/1fVBEJ5ETRSHTrcIYoPrISz9Z_GjWVNdg/view?usp=drivesdk
This type of sparring is the key to longevity and improvement, another excellent video
@@Patrick-sheen thank you
Keep posting brother!
From a fellow judoka
Finally someone representing how great/effective this art is
Love and respect from Australia🥋 🇦🇺
@@DecimusDrip thank you 🙇🏻♂️
It always a pleasure to watch a foitage of the great Mifune his judo was amazing almost like aikido.
Excellent video! I watch this Mifune footage at .25 speed all the time, like a ritual. The fundamentals of base and connection that Rickson always talks about are fully on display here. Beautiful. 🥹❤
I also agree with the training method. I tell my classes that their one consistent goal is to be the least tired person at the end of class. The more technical we can be, the more energy we can save.
@@RadicalTrivia thank you for watching brother 🙇🏻♂️
Kyuzo Mifune did deep half guard before BJJ even existed
Woah the first one is some kind of very quick deep half backdoor thing when the top guy is on the verge of mount
Going to try some of this in class tonight
Mifune simply had an uncanny body control/balance.
Bonjour Chadi,
En regardant ta vidéo, je mes suis demandé si tu étais allé t'entraîner au Gracie Ju Jitsu à l'Académie des Gracie en Californie ? Ce serait pour "ressentir" leur judo. Je crois que ce sont des frères de Rickson Gracie qui dirigent cette académie.
Nicolas
Nice throw, but if you end up on bottom of side control, then what is the point?
@@JoriMikke78 in bjj yes, but in judo after the ippon you just let go and relax.
@@Chadi Yep, I know that but that is just silly to me that you would score a throw full ippon if you land in serious trouble.
Espesially if the other guy is bigger and/or stronger than you are. You don't even have to use a submission from side control - just shoulder pressure alone should get a tap.
I agree with your philosophy. In judo competition( and most randori sessions) you win with the ippon so it’s irrelevant and you reset. But in every other context, whether bjj, mma, real life combat, it’s a bad habit. I train mostly bjj these days and teach judo at a bjj gym and I never teach the roll through and always try to stay standing or at least on top
It is a respect issue he is a old man, it is good for him to get on the matt and train.....Come on man
I have a hard time taking grappling seriously when there is no striking or weapons involved. These things change the dynamic massively. I understand there is a sportive and educational purposes to the arts. It is a game we have all agreed to play so we can improve our skills, but when you remove a category of technique from fighting, all the other categories left over expand to fill the space left behind. In a sport of fewer rules or real violent situations, many of these positions can and do result in the person on bottom getting beat on like a drum. I suppose that's fine if the people training are aware of those blind spots and have accepted it. But lets be real, many are not aware and leave their Judo/BJJ class equating their dominance on the mat with a 1:1 crossover to less limited situations, whether that be MMA, two dudes playing dominance hierarchy games seeing what the other is made of, or true violent assaults with a large disparity in capability between aggressor and victim. I love this stuff but it is not complete martial arts.
Martial means Military. Military arts don't focus strongly upon unarmed fighting.
You wanna learn true martial arts join the Infantry then try to join Ranger Regiment
I don't like when in modern judo you must turn your back when you throw your opponent on the ground
Judo always had turn throws brother. When kuzushi is properly applied there’s no danger of your back being taken.
Привет Шади.
🙇🏻♂️