It's important to keep in mind that these are excellent examples of throws that can be adjusted in terms of angles, grips, setups, etc. For instance, no law says you have to set up a yoko otoshi with a sideways slide a la okuri ashi barai; you might decide to do it off a forward attack, a pull to make them step into a turn, etc. You may choose to execute it with a single sleeve grip and a different falling distance (something I favor in randori). The options are numerous. So yes, the versions shown in the Kodokan videos are often very "old school" and demonstrated in a way that maybe used to work in the past but not now, as they might be too stilted or reliant on movements a modern opponent is less likely to do. Nevertheless, even when this is the case, they can still provide an excellent foundation or "home base" from which you can modify the techniques as needed/desired. That's the way with many if not most of the conventional or "textbook" versions of the throws.
I love this series
Kuszushi is perfect to throw any opponents. It makes me more wisely can use when I gripped someone. It helps so much.
Thank you master.🥋
Verry nice
great!
Ooshh Sensei, Shihan....
Show
Buenas !! Tendrian que poner subtítulos en diferentes idiomas. El Judo ya es mundial. No solamente en Japonés ni en Ingles !!!
aprende ingles
Nice technics for kata. Can't see them working in a randori.
Yoko and tani I use regularly in competion uki I've only hit it once in Judo comp. I use all in bjj comp.
Tani-otoshi is one of the most effective techniques in randori
tani otoshi is one of the 6 or so most frequent throws in judo competition lol
Tani-otoshi is quite popular as a counter technique, but then it looks a bit different: th-cam.com/video/3b9Me3Fohpk/w-d-xo.html
It's important to keep in mind that these are excellent examples of throws that can be adjusted in terms of angles, grips, setups, etc. For instance, no law says you have to set up a yoko otoshi with a sideways slide a la okuri ashi barai; you might decide to do it off a forward attack, a pull to make them step into a turn, etc. You may choose to execute it with a single sleeve grip and a different falling distance (something I favor in randori). The options are numerous.
So yes, the versions shown in the Kodokan videos are often very "old school" and demonstrated in a way that maybe used to work in the past but not now, as they might be too stilted or reliant on movements a modern opponent is less likely to do. Nevertheless, even when this is the case, they can still provide an excellent foundation or "home base" from which you can modify the techniques as needed/desired.
That's the way with many if not most of the conventional or "textbook" versions of the throws.
🇮🇹👍🏼🌈