Jarrel, aikido has a few effective techniques, but It seems pretty unrealistic in anything that doesn't go with the flow. I think jiu jitsu is over all most realistic. Just my opinion
If you wanna fight like broly or yujiro hanma, jiu jitsu is the answer...legends say that if you master jiu jitsu you'll become a fusion of the two named before
I didn't think I could miss anything as much as I miss doing Jujitsu. Man, this brings back some happy and awesome (and painful) memories!! I miss all of the amazing people I used to train with. I loved every second of the 20 years I put in to this amazing Martial Art.
@@deltasans3943 Mental health issues as well as too many physical injuries. Plus, the style I studied disappeared. Now there is nowhere locally that offers traditional Jujitsu classes. I was training to be an instructor, but personal life changing issues put an end to that.
AIKIDO HE TRAINS HE TALKS HE READY But he don't attack Edit : after 4 long years I got into a competitive fight with an aikido user and I know feel qualified to say it's useless lol I completely ragged doll him im not even joking and he was the best in his team lol
2 + years in a wheel chair -- took my first few steps recently without holding on to anything. I have a nice 10 X 13 framed poster on my wall, it says: "Everything is Training". I know it. I will continue my journey to be my best. These guys are great motivators.
Don’t believe the hype these guys are not great motivators as they are all fluff and puff as they say, open your eyes and let reality be your motivator.
@@tiagorochagoncalves9140 I know what needs doing, so I am doing it. In this, I achieve mastery. Thank you for the encouragement. I made another sign with a black crayon and hung in my workout area: "There's no such thing as difficult or easy. There is only training".
These guys put together a great show. I was throughly entertained. The guy in the blue gi is an excellent martial artist. I know the Aikido guys was meant to be seen as the weaker opponent . They let him get in a few good throws and flips just to make it look good. But all in all very well done outstanding performance by both of these martial artists
@El Lorenzo if you can pull of which 90 percent you would not able to because all the moves require perfect teqnice,timing And the one you are doing the aikido move must be a 140yr old grandma with alzeimer and brain cancer only if all of these happen in same time then aikido works
I have been training Aikido for 3 years right now. The fact that is Aikido never start the fight. It is just for defense, waits for the attack but Aikido demonstration are absolutely amazing if two sensi are doing it. If I do even I am doing it super slowly, I usually make wrong move lol. I would suggest you to choose ju jutsu due to my experience of aikido
Aikido doesn't start the fight, but it doesn't end it either. As a way of handling stress, enjoying an activity, etc I have nothing against it, but as a martial art it is almost useless
@@MajorKreissack88 I think it depends on the person. Aikido was initially taught to high ranking martial artists, and I can see why. To fight you have to learn how to fight, which is something aikido doesn't teach, however, I have met people who learned how to fight elsewhere and augmented it with Aikido, they are scary.
@@jannap.2811 nah what he said is true it’s almost next to useless unless you ask your partner to stand absolutely still and do nothing while you flip them. It’s never tested which is why it’s never seen in any functional martial arts fight
Jujutsu is the original martial art that both Japanese Jiujitsu and Judo, as well as Aikido descend from. It was an actual combat martial art used in war in the samurai era, and it was brutal. Today's Jiujitsu is not Jujutsu, it's a martial art for self defense and sport, but not as brutal and ruthless as the original Jujutsu
@@AvenjaysGuitar No se ve en ninguna pelea por que si el movimiento se ejecuta hasta el final el resultado es brazo, codo u hombro roto. Eso no lo van a permitir en ninguna competición y si no lo ejecutas hasta el final no vas a poder vencer al contrincante, entonces para que emplearlo?.Cuando ves como "Bailan" como decís muchos es que literalmente no tienes otra opción, te están moviendo de un lado a otro con agarres en los que tienes las muñecas o los codos a punto de explotar de dolor. Una cosa es ver el movimiento y otra sentirlo, para hablar primero hay que probar
If I was kimura'ed explosively like these guys do, I'd tap like a fish out of water too. I tapped like a fish out of water even from just watching this.
I just watched 2 friends having fun and helping each other do drills, also serving as a demo video . Now I'm about to read all the experts about how this is staged and wouldn't work in a real fight or in the ufc...
In real fight situations, sometimes, yes, there is a chance for the enemy like UFC fighters to counter since they know how aikido works. But in a real-world fight where you dont know any background from your enemy, things are different. It WILL ALWAYS DEPEND ON HOW TECHNIQUES ARE EXECUTED.
@buzz magister we all know that thing bruv, you know I was referring to real-world combat fights. But yeah the real fight of life is striving to survive by working hard all day
@buzz magister thanks man, I've been to fights but luckily it didnt reach to the point where people are killing. And yes restrain is essential since you/we are still responsible of our opponents lives. If by chance we came up to killing someone, we then face the law. I always kept that in mind whenever I find myself in a fight.
I have a huge grin on my face because I recognise the style of movement and tactics from the man in the blue gi. My deceased dad was a judoka and it brings me great joy to see other martial artists having so much fun. I will be looking to join my local dojo as soon as lock down lifts, but in the meantime I am practicing solo drills and conditioning to get ready. Thank you so much for the video x
I am amazed how they train with the drills and how they explore the arts. They both performed an excellent flow of techniques smooth and fast. Jiujitsu its deploys techniques in both standing and ground.
Jiu jitsu doesn't use standing techniques, the one that appears in the video is ju jitsu that uses standing and on the ground techniques, ju jitsu is also known as morganti ju jitsu
@@thigame5Japanese jiu jutsu not bjj. Father of judo and BJJ and Sambo. As a judo guy I appreciate the atemi waza and wish we could bring it back to most of the dojos
Judo was born from jujitsu. The second was made and used for war, the first is softer because is meant only for knowing techniques (there wasn't any war and they made a "version" without many hits or joint locks that were meant only to finish the opponent quickly without caring elegance)
@@marcomartina4690 My master told me this story. He told me that when judo and jiujitsu practitioners met, the judo practitioners would usually win, because of judo's less dangerous nature (not destroying your body) they were able to get a lot more practice out of it.
@@Divinemakyr that makes sense. I didn't say that judo is worse i only wanted to say that is more gentle and was created after. Thanks for telling this story i think it's pretty cool to know😉👍🏻
@@marcomartina4690 Yeah, thanks mate. From what I thought, original jiujitsu was used by samurai, correct? But the brutal techniques could not be trained very much.
***** The core concepts of aikido come from traditional jujutsu. There are a ton of aiki techniques embedded in there. The difference you saw was a mixed martial artist versus a single style.
this is honestly really cool seeing just genuine good sport and like them having fun while displaying their skill at the same time. just a good wholesome spar :)
Once again, the make-believe fantasy world of "Style vs. Style"! The world that ONLY looks good in choreographed demos and movies! It's alright to practice a "Style". Just have the good sense to know that when the REAL FIGHT in on, in the REAL WORLD??----"Style" goes out the window! And the only two things that remain, indeed the only two things that matter, are SKILLS and ATTRIBUTES!! SKILLS: (Can you PUNCH? Can you KICK? Can you GRAPPLE? How's your TIMING, your FOOTWORK, your EVASION AND COUNTERING skills? NOT "What 'style' do you practice?). ATTRIBUTES: (Are you IN SHAPE? Are you FAST? Are you STRONG? Are you PHYSICALLY and MENTALLY and EMOTIONALLY TOUGH? How's your STAMINA? NOT "Are you TKD, Muay Thai, BJJ, Shotokan, or Wing Chun?") Throw two guys together in a REAL FIGHT, and you won't be able to distinguish "Kung Fu" from "Karate", or "Aikido" from"Jujitsu", or "TKD" from "JKD". The only thing you'll be able to distinguish is: Which one can FIGHT, and which one CAN'T!
+Tyehimba Jahsi apparently you never watched the first 5 UFC matches. Skills: No punching or kicking only his style that he practiced BJJ Attributes: He was not in the best shape, not fastest, not strongest. It was his style BJJ that won over all others. Unless you study BJJ when encountered by it you will most likely lose and size, speed and other fighting skills do not matter as he demonstrated.
I did watch the first five UFC matches. He had grappling skill. His opponents didn't. He had awareness of body dynamics that his opponents lacked. Yeah, for a while it looked to the world like "BJJ beats everything". It was all new to fighters who had only been trained to think in terms of punching and kicking. Once the awareness was out there, punchers and kickers realized they had to adapt their way of moving to reduce vulnerability and expand their skill set to include grappling. Once they did, the strikers started to do better and the grapplers then realized that they had to expand their skill set to include striking. So now you have strikers with grappling skills they didn't have before, and grapplers with striking skills they didn't have before. So once again, it all comes back to the basic issue of one man's skills and attributes vs.one man's skills and attributes, not "style vs. style".
+Tyehimba Jahsi nice turn arround u did back there.. but i disagree... because u r saying that styles go out the window.. but actualy... they dont.. they remain because a style is nothing else but the study of a sertain perception of fight... so actualy its not about skills. but about education.. education of accurate and eficient fighting and safety, u can get very fullskilled on hitting a wall... and make ur hand looks like a hammer... but that way of getting skills gets what its called? a style... in that case even if u want to the jashi style... the term "style" its only the grammatic way of saying that u educate urself about some stuffs... so u aint have "grappling" skills.. u have neither wrestlers or bjj grapling skills... until some new chinese guy maybe invent some other even better grapling tecnics... which i dont spect to happen but hwo knows... now. i do agree on some other stuffs u said. the attributes r real deal... if 2 persons have exactly the same education in fighting and 1 its 70kg and the other its 130kg (dunno about pounds) the big guy will crush the smaller... and indeed its about a man skills vs other man skills... but those skills came from styles.. that make the person hwo use it, even a potential style creator.... making some new way called dafuq he wants to.. which again it will be the sum of its education... sorry 4 bad english.. i am from argentina we speech spanish here and never been on a english speacked country....
+Tyehimba Jahsi That's mostly true, but some things will remain. For example, compare a Capoeira fighter on the streets to an Aikido fighter on the street. While they won't use moves and forms they were taught (except for some of the base ones,) the capoeira fighter will probably move quickly, attempting to dodge his opponent and get up close, followed by swift strikes with the legs or fists. By contrast, and Aikido fighter would allow his enemy to get close to him and quickly counter his attacks before pinning him. A Jujutsu fighter would do quick counters and grapples to put pressure on weak spots, thus incapacitating his foe. While their strict forms and disciplines would be gone, the themes and tactics would remain.
Precisely and also very good technique shown in the video, even things from other arts, outside of Ju jitsu/aikido, such as karate with striking, I dont know if heel hooking is a tradition ju jitsu technique, so possibly BJJ and general fighting which overall I guess you could just consider an MMA style of fighting, an "actual full on fight". But regardless these two guys are high level overall even if its just for show
This was the coolest video Ive seen in months! Great talent, great training relationship and great engagement times! I liked there was no "I punch and wait 30 seconds for you to react as I stand frozen" kind of BS!
It was a fun sparring match, they were playing and displaying their skills. Don't read into it like this one art going against another in a death match. They're obviously good friends.
Acho que a demonstração não eh nem de Jiu Jitsu. Eu posso até estar enganado, mas o cara usou golpes como chutes e socos, não lembro de ter visto isso em treinos de Jiu.
....dude they're making fun of aikido, either that or this dude learned nothing in his dojo about aikido. You never attack with aikido... Ever. It's completely based on a response to another person's aggression
Jacob Richter more traditional forms of Aikido (i.e. Aikijujitsu) were combat-oriented. Aikido isn't exclusively for pacifists and old people, just the modern selling of it is.
If you have a bad temper, your Aikido will be combat oriented too. A martial art is what you choose to make out of it. My Aikido looks like Traditional Jujutsu because (sadly) I have violent tendencies and a bad temper.
+All For Jesus: Think you're dangerous boy? Bet the good Lord is proud of you ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) You're as harmless as a lamb all the way there behind your monitor, you couldn't even trash-talk me if you tried :D Speaking of 'can't get a girl', it has been 9 months since you've not even been friendzoned yet, how does it feel to be so close and yet so far? Remember you asked for this
two friends having fun....and besides being a good "uke" it is essential to practice and learn judo or aikido, the aidoka is doing uke, so that tori looks fantastic
Thank you for the video. Impressive! This type of jiu-jitsu it's far more appealing to me than Brazilian jiu-jitsu. I would like to see a this stand-up Jiu-Jitsu practitioner defend a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu practitioner's attempt at a two-leg takedown. Keep up the good work.
As a complete system and spectator sport absolutely. I appreciate the skills of BJJ but I don't want to fall on my arse and spread my legs every time someone jumps me.🤣🐙
Attention ! This comment is not made to disparage or make a sport look good!. Aikido is a martial art and here the man in the aikido suit is attacking! If you have noticed, the man in Jiu Jutsu suit is using aikido technique because he is attacking in the 0:52 scene, because more men in Aikido suits attack him in this video, the man in Ju-jitsu suit was able to do more techniques to him, which showed Ju-jitsu as a better martial art.. Aikido and Ju Jitsu are incomparable 2 sides a good sport and effective...
0:50 This is where the distinction between Aikido and JiuJitsu blur or fuse. The techniques are one and the same. Here, the Aikido ends the combat succinctly. And though it's final aim is not to kill, the assailant *is* maimed, because the arm and wrist will be broken, and the upper arm yanked out of the socket. This is considered "combat survival Aikido", which it becomes as horrific as JiuJitsu *without* *ever* *striking* or never *throwing* *blows* Because in every instance of throwing blows or striking with an appendage (arm-fist-hand/elbow, or, leg-foot/knee) the appendage is extended, and becomes a lever, fulcrum, or cantilever (in the case of human anatomy, equipped with *joints* ). 1:12 Here, the JiuJitsu student is actually applying pure Aikido.
Hi all, I tried to break down the video into techniques to the best of my knowledge. But first some context: The video is called "jujitsu vs aikido", but I also found some claims that the guy in blue is training hapkido. Luis Valderrama, could you confirm this? Is this you there? Man, your video has over 16 million views as of today. Talk to us :) Hapkido is a Korean martial art originating from daito-ryu aikijujutsu, just like aikido, but also taking a lot from several Korean striking martial arts which later merged into taekwondo. That being said, a lot of throws and joint locks he performs are also present in standard aikido. After all, there's only a limited number of ways you can twist someone's wrists and elbows or throw down a human body. A lot of techniques in many martial arts just have to look similar. Oh, and I might have made some mistakes, but also sometimes one technique has several names, one being popular in one school or style, the other in another. 0:10 - koshinage 0:15 - koshinage attempt 0:20 - koshinage again 0:24 - koshinage again 0:27 - sumi otoshi 0:34 - aiki otoshi 0:39 - I like it a lot, but have trouble with the name. I would say it's a very simple variation of kaitennage? If the tori just pinned the uke to the ground instead of throwing him, it would be kaiten osae. 0:41 - I could call it one of the otoshi techniques, but tbh he just grabbed him and pushed him :) 0:46 - a variant of koshinage (?) 0:51 - kotegaeshi 0:56 - sankyo 0:58 - koshinage 1:01 - shihonage, my favourite :) 1:03 - juji gatame, that's judo and bjj, not aikido 1:11 - kotegaeshi 1:15 - I would also call it a variant of koshinage (but in judo it may have its own name?) 1:22 - sumi otoshi 1:27 - a very short variant of udekimenage. love it. 1:31 - a more typical udekimenage 1:35 - nikyo? the light makes it hard to see... 1:36 - a transport lock; I think it's called kamakubi, but it's not a standard aikido technique 1:38 - whoa, a flying juji gatame, sadly also not aikido :) 1:51 - a very sneaky sode otoshi, completely against aikido principles ;) 2:08 - not aikido; that foot lock reminds me of daito-ryu, but no idea how it can be called
You could argue that this is hapkido and aikido because it has the looks of it. Jiu Jitsu is at the base of many other styles and the things that work in other styles get adapted back to jiu-jitsu. At least that's how it's done here in the Netherlands. For example basic atemi within jiu-jitsu isn't always that good, but within kickboxing it is mostly about kicking and punching and therefore many jiu-jitsu schools here use techniques from karate and kickboxing as basic atemi. There are basic requirements but on the other hand if you can't make something work for you then you train something that does work. To me this is a nice demonstration of aikido vs jiu-jitsu. There are similarities in all martial arts. Furthermore, from an aikido point of view, in my opinion anyway, you're summary off techniques is very much on point. I studied jiu-jitsu and aikido and they complement each other very well. Aikido makes for great mae ai and fluidity. Jiu-jitsu makes for good basic stands, atemi, and power, and thus a well rounded fighter. The combination could lack in power if confronted by multiple attackers though. But if trained with pressure testing, does give an answer to a multitude of situations. The same would go in my opinion for someone who trains, say, judo and kickboxing. The last would be more effective in my opinion because both kickboxing and judo specialise in one or two fields. Aikido has nasty stuff, but is not trained to be nasty per say. If they used more atemi, say 50-50 instead of 20-80 the aikido would could be more practical. On the other hand aikido looks beautiful and makes people softer and more kindhearted. So to say aikido is b*llsh*t is a great mistake in my opinion.
@@j.knoops8243 : After ten years of aikido (give or take - I had a few long breaks in-between) I'm now training kickboxing. I want to return to aikido one day, but only when I'm confident in my abilities. And then I want to experiment with aikido techniques. So, I imagine, I'd like to learn a bit something like in this video, but also a bit like what Bruce Bookman teaches in his "Aikido Extensions" course.
@@makingthematrix sounds good. Combining styles and abilities can be very useful if you wish to develop. In my own case, I came along katori shinto ryu about three years ago, it's a swordfighting style from Japan. I'm thinking about re-joining jiu-jitsu. Because they "feel" and perform in a similar mindset I found. To make a long story short, do what you love and feels right to you and the rest will fall into place. Take care!
1:38 this stressed me out so bad, I'd never in my life had the courage for that move. I've seen a video of an athlete trying out the same move but he didn't rotate fully and his opponent wasn't trained what to do so he tried to pull out from the grab. The guy doing the move fell on his head and broke his neck, his crying still haunts me to this day.
That sounds awful. It is a move that, well executed, looks great, but the risk is very high. It could be replaced with some other less risky with the same effect. What you tell is something that could happen in a street fight if you decide to make the wrong move. Most likely, he was left in a wheelchair if he survived at all.
Comments like this are why I worry about training Judo. It can be so effective, but if you go up against a rookie who doesn't know what they're doing or does something too fast, something can break. Or even up against an experienced guy who wants to try a new move on you or who really doesn't want to lose, something can break.
@@markonline2166 This is a good observation, I have seen brutal physical injury to the foot with bones sticking out, but only with Ju Jitsu style training at a student's sport campus. There the students come an go (or not for weeks!) whenever they like, often with their mind still way into their courses/deadlines. Then when they get a move to learn/practise, they simply think, - ok these are the steps and go... just slamming their foot into the other person's foot without prioritising control, doing things slowly first, checking in with the other, etc. Actually, Judo, Jujitsu etc. are meant to be trained with full respect and awareness of ones own body ánd of the other person(s). Judo being, in my experience, the less violent/risky one. But, it really does matter where you train and who trains you, the student campus had an extra cushioned floor and so, nobody learned how to fall properly, but falling properly is step 1... so never train somewhere with soft floors... it's better to have some pain learning to fall on the hard mats, than learning the hard way out in the streets!! A good instructor will emphasize the importance of learning to fall properly! The first time I went to a good place, I got swung over someone's shoulder with my legs at full momentum slapping the hard mats. I quickly learned how to adjust😀
Poizin Rath Thats True i was training when we were practicing how to not hurt our self and also practicing how to do takedowns and my teacher came up to me and tripped me when i wasnt ready and also tried to make a run for a gap but he tripped me and i landed on my shoulder and fractured my collar bone :(
This is a video of one guy fighting and the other allowing himself to get his ass kicked and he's wearing a Aikido outfit. Totally useless. Try that obvious ju jitsu stuff on a real kung fu master and then see what happens.
that already happened in WW2 the Japanese Army were very well versed in Jui Jutsu and they steam rolled the Chinese, they even challenged the local so called kung fu masters to un armed combat, it did not go over well for the kung fu masters
Oh really? Well they have not done so well when they have visited the Shaolin Temple in recent decades. The Japanese army committed the most cruel and inhuman atrocities against the Chinese people during their occupation. The Japanese army in WWII were no model of humanity never mind martial arts. They murdered millions including thousands of American POW's who were either marched or starved to death. Look for another example.
John Coppola AND?????????whats the deal of your story you are out of the subject he say chinese martial art dont work and you say chinese martial get destroy and you put the point on japanese cruelty so WHATS YOUR POINT?????
Alright first of all Akidio tells you to wait and react to your opponents attacks, rarely do you see an Akidio individual throwing themselves into the opponent. Second of all, half of the moves that Jujitsu dude did also exists in Akidio, so I was confused as who was actually the Akidio dude o_o
dam corn They are just demonstrating their respective techniques. Also, the styles they use all come from the same thing. They are just different versions of the martial art Samurai developed
1. Waiting and reacting for your opponent to attack is dumb af, and one of the reasons why Aikido is ineffective 2. Aikido is a derivative of Jiujitsu, so you're going to see crossover. From what I've heard, Classical Jiujitsu is the closest to the Japanese Mother Art - which all modern Japanese systems have splintered from. Notice how Japanese Jiujitsu contains all of the fighting aspects: striking, grappling (both throws and newaza), weapons, etc. Story goes, the modern systems are expressions of the individual aspects of the mother art - the grappling became Judo, the weapons became iaido, etc.
Eric Arroyo You know wrong. First, Aikido isn't a derivative of Jiujutsu. It derived from Aiki-Jiujutsu (Jiujutsu, too). Second, Karate was called "Okinawate" because it was born in Okinawa and its style came from a kind of Kung-fu.
I am sick of hearing people literally bitch about Aikido and it being "fake"/in-effective... First of all, Aikido has many different styles, the most famous and most taught is Aikikai. Aikikai is literally all about fancy throws and break-falls, fucking flower arranging compared to the style originally taught by O'Sensei Morihei Ueshiba. His style, THE FIRST AND REAL AIKIDO that a dojo I used to belong to used to teach before our master passed away and I left, in England due to real connections to the original Dojo and O'Sensei himself (I won't go into the history). Now that style was still very relaxed but a more straight down to business, some one attacks you (ON THE STREET-REAL FIGHT WITH NO RULES) you break his arm and then pin him/throw him away from you in order to get away. Barely any fancy throws from the shoulder. Other Aikido styles, like Steven Seagal's include big throws if they are realistic and can be done from a realistic situation on the street. The father Art, the art I study now, Aikijujutsu, includes all of the techniques from Aikido, and throws but ONLY if they are street worthy, also including strikes and even more joint breaks. You have to learn a proper style with a proper dojo with proper history to understand Aikido, I have experienced Aikikai, it doesn't work, Real fights or competition fights it is ineffective. Real Aikido is straight to the point, making sure an attacker in a REAL fight on the street (that is what a real fight is BTW, on the street) won't get back up to attack you again, but if he does, you are either long gone, or you break his other arm. (On the street, with inexperienced pub thugs, or back alley thieves, a "fancy throw" will shatter arm bones, dislocate shoulders and could even kill depending on the landing!! they are fancy in the Dojo so we don't get hurt, you dig?) I do not claim to be a master, I do not claim to even be any good, but I do claim knowledge to all I just said and more people need to hear it.
The father art Daito-ryu Aiki Jujutsu has also a lot of "Bullshido" just like Aikido. But half of the techniques I see in Jujutsu exist in a very similar or even the same form in Aikido. Also the more effective "real" techniques you're mentioning are basically what Ueshiba taught in his younger years, but in his later years Ueshiba would soften his techniques himself, making the movements larger, emphasizing harmony over efficiency as a self-defense. E.g. irimi-nage in Ueshibas early films/photos can be seen as a straight movement and using a punch with the open hand to the chin, instead of the later large spiraling moves and just using your arm bent over the opponents shoulder to down him). I'm always puzzled that people aren't aware of this. My teachers always told me that these big moves are to explain the principles of the movement in an easy to understand fashion, but if you want to apply it to a real life situation you'd always go with the short direct moves. And people shitting on Aikido and saying Jujutsu is da shit, don't understand that Aikido and Jujutsu share much more than they are different. Even the names of many techniques are the same. Please note that my Aikido experience is a mere 4-5 years of practicing 20 years ago (now I'm a fat and soft couch potato), so take this with a pinch of salt.
TheLydianRocks No I definitely do not mean that. Because Aikido and Jujitsu has many overlapping techniques. Jujitsu was one of the arts that Aikido was based upon.
Agreed. Uke is telegraphing his actions way too much for it to appear as though this is actual Kumite; more like Kata. A nice looking Kata, but closer to Randori than anything else. No offense to Jiu Jutusu or Tori, but the title IS misleading.
Es natural cuando la gente no conoce ni x asomo o practique ningun arte marcial el estar denostando lo q nunca se ha hecho es entendible... Cada estilo y arte marcial tiene su libro de aprendizaje y su tiempo asi como su efectividad los artistas marciales pasan del comun denominador de gente a un nivel un poco mas alto de entendimiento de defensa y ataque las aryes marciales no es un deporte es la forma de aniquilar sin armas mas q solo tu propio cuerpo por lo tanto no hay estilo malo existen solo alumnos malos o maestros malos ya es cuestion de elegir bien a su sensei saludos
but in boxing theirs not alot to learn compared to other martial arts but the moves cant be mastered to any degree , its a sport more than a martial arts but it is effective (i do ju jitsu and boxing)
I can see that they are both very good martial artists and good friends, very good humility sense and good sense of humor and the end thank you both, very inspiring.
I am still waiting for the guy to do some aikido... aikido is the art of using your opponent's strength against them... which is why he is being so lame at attacking. Let's see the jujitsu guy do some attacks and the aikido guy defend.
Nymeria Meliae I agree. I used to practice jiu jitsu and it is so technical I got uncomfortable learning! I mean martial arts should be purely defensive, easy to learn and that's why I love aikido. Our sensei always emphasized no competition and no confrontation unless you are cornered or your life and your loved ones are in danger.
Alexis Patrick Lozare The thing with competition though is it prepares you more than you know. The adrenaline rush, the adrenaline dump, when you first compete you maybe only utilize one of your move because it's all happening so fast. That's a big factor in a real fight, and competition can greatly help you defend yourself
Greg Man I beg to disagree. When we practice aikido, we do so we can control ourselves better, and thus avoid confrontation. We practice until it becomes as routine as breathing. And besides, no amount of competition will prepare you for the real thing. My friend is a black belt karate and had 2 thugs beat the crap out of him in a face-off hold up. No guns, just 2 thugs with a knife each. Now you would imagine with all those years of practice AND competition, he would be able to defend himself but no!! He was stabbed so bad & lost a lot of blood that my friends & I had to donate our blood to save his @ss!!
Alexis Patrick Lozare When you say we practice until it's like breathing, you can do that with anything; people who skateboard, people who do judo, people who dance, and what do all those people do to make themselves better; competition. I'm not saying if you compete you will be prepared, but it helps, your friend, he isn't everyone else. Everyone is different and takes from martial arts what connects to them, so just because it didn't work for him doesn't means it's not going to work at all. I stand by my original comment, competition helps you become a better martial artist. Is it for everyone? No.
Alexis Patrick Lozare Wow, such compassion for your friend, so moved i want to cry. And Nymeria isn't wrong, Aikido is using your opponent's strength against them. Those thugs had knives and it was 2 of them so it wasn't a fair fight to begin with.
The "aikido" guy wasn't using aikido. A true aikido fighter will never attack first. It goes against the fundamental teachings of aikido. If an aikido guy runs at you with a punch or kick, he probably failed as a student.
***** any aikido school worth its salt will teach you that aikido is about redirecting force against an attacker. there is no such thing as an attack in aikido. you should do some studying.
No, my friend, I don't need to do any thinking. You're clearly ignorant of aikido's principles, and no amount of me pondering anything is going to change that. I suggest you watch the Aikido episode of Samurai Spirit for starters, and stop making a fool of yourself by trying to lecture people on something you obviously know nothing about.
***** you dont need a attacking partner to train... Aikido is a martial art created to disarm and put attackers in submission without actually hurting them
***** you really need that power of the mind right now... They can obviously have sparring practices but it wont be the same as other martial art... Btw I practice karate not aikido
***** you can go over the techniques and practice them by one person practicing aikido defending and another one using either a weapon or another martial art. Akido is only used for redirecting your attackers momentum and not actually striking them. The martial art was created on the principle so you can disarm and/or put your attacker in submission without actually hurting them.
This isn't even aikido at all. The aikido practice would never ever attack first. The stupid talking reveals there is no philosophical mindset, bad bad fighting there. Maybe he had trained in some wannabe aikido dojo, would be the answer to his stupid actions. But well, very funny someone really thinks that guy use aikido.
Spare me your adolescence and stupid behaviour, i'm not some aikido fanboy. That video is just a big fake / lie. Nothing is right her, not even the basic stance, its not present at all. He doesn't use the energy of his opponent and wait for the attack, those are basic rules for aikido too. I don't like liars and people who write such moron posts like you.
there is 2 kinds of Aikido 1 that moves the opponent without injuring or killing them and 2 the old original Aikido, where there are no rules no hold barred precision attacking and movements intended to kill or injure the opponent but that can be said about any form of martial arts in this day and age of violence, I would not be a bit surprise if the old ways are taught again and rightly so...
I think no mma is usefull, if you do not see it coming. I mean if you use mma, you must do the first punch. That makes you the attacker and the doughbag the victim. Best way, not to come into that kind of situation. If you are alone...leave! If you are with frends...leave! If you are with girlfrend...leave! Be the man.
Edit: Very important! And if you get robbed. Gave him your wallet. No money is so important, then your health. No hero has lived long, its only in movies. But if he charge, then fight like there is no tomorrow.
? The MMA guy has to strike first? What are you on about? We shoot under the punch, pick the guy up, gently lay him down, then sit on the person and ask why he is acting up, and offers a free cup of coffee if they have calmed down.
Nick Vázquez The best war, is the war that never has started. And i did not said, take the punch and run. To leave before it get started,,,doesn`t make you a sissy. And if someone is with you ( friend or family ), you have to protect him/her the best way. If mess has started....wait, did you read my post? By the way, how i read your post...i would say, you are a trouble starter.
As a practitioner of shaolin kung fu, I feel a lot of respect for martial arts like aikido and jujitsu. Kung Fu has Qinna (joint locks), but none this sophisticated.
Elliot Borge both r different fighting approach. kung fu is, mostly, if u can touch opponents leg/arm/whatever, then just hit it/ break it. judo is if u can hold stuff, grab it and lock, throw the guy. now, u gotta choose what way u will go.
I don't really care about the "Aikido guy" not actually using classical Aikido because I'm so impressed with the fluidity, control and seamless integration of creative striking, throws and subs... And yes, I understand it wasn't "real" - the Jiu Jitsu guy still seemed like he was absolutely tuned into the secrets of the universe lol I mean damn that was smooth XD
Me after learning a technique:
Where's my brother?
Is this a Sasuke reference 😭😭😭
Ciiss Amellio no
Sealy you don’t know
Hexalot because it’s not I know what he’s talking about
Sealy so do I
*_Their moves were faster than my country's internet connection_*
You might be brazilian LOL
@@maurovinicius5226 brazilian jiu-jitsu boiiii
Hi fellow Indonesian. I completely agree with you
I am in Australia and can confirm.
Bangsat
Whoever invented jiu jitsu had some serious anger issues🤣 I LOVE IT
Lol
Is aikido good
Jarrel, aikido has a few effective techniques, but It seems pretty unrealistic in anything that doesn't go with the flow. I think jiu jitsu is over all most realistic. Just my opinion
@El Lorenzo I'm getting signed up is it similar to taekwondo or kung fu or jui jutsu
If you wanna fight like broly or yujiro hanma, jiu jitsu is the answer...legends say that if you master jiu jitsu you'll become a fusion of the two named before
I didn't think I could miss anything as much as I miss doing Jujitsu. Man, this brings back some happy and awesome (and painful) memories!! I miss all of the amazing people I used to train with. I loved every second of the 20 years I put in to this amazing Martial Art.
Why did you stopped training?
@@deltasans3943 Mental health issues as well as too many physical injuries. Plus, the style I studied disappeared. Now there is nowhere locally that offers traditional Jujitsu classes. I was training to be an instructor, but personal life changing issues put an end to that.
@@sierradelta6524 damn
@@sierradelta6524 you should go back at it.
@@boxingbull523 That's the plan. I just have to find the right club.
Aikido: slams u in the flor
Ju jitsu: hits u, slams u in the flor and breakes your arm
@Adam Torralba sound ju jitsu more brutal
Note: man there shit load of comments since last time I check this video again
@@bananaboi4108 is it Jiu-Jitsu or judo? It's like judo
@@deadflower3159 XD?
@@deadflower3159 it's the original Jiu Jitsu from Japan
@@deadflower3159 its the original jiu jitsu from japanand i haev to say that the original jiu jitsu looos a lot like karate and judo
1:49
- (struggling)
- you alright, you alright ???
- ( yeets the guy)
- oh shit !
Kkkkkkkkkkkj
im ur 300th like
I knew they were close friends after that
Very funny.
My favourite part, the way he laughs after the dropping full shoulder.( assuming it is that throw)
0:23 The guy hits so hard that he bounces off the ground.
This floor is the best for this cind of fight
I noticed, reminds me of the old days when I could take a fall like that. :)
@@caminooneninesixone i just did it last month
@@flapafloupas4262 KIND of fighting
@@caminooneninesixone show off
Wow - I was in jujitsu for a few years and we learned all those falls and they really are effective at preventing injury. Takes me right back!
AIKIDO
HE TRAINS
HE TALKS
HE READY
But he don't attack
Edit : after 4 long years I got into a competitive fight with an aikido user and I know feel qualified to say it's useless lol I completely ragged doll him im not even joking and he was the best in his team lol
SamuraiAtlas TSM because he can’t
It's a demonstration
Jiu-Jitsu =Samurai
Aikido works if you're fighting a handicap 12 year old
Selat
Aikido guy is AFK or lagging ?
haha
+Corvus Clamor LMAO
+Corvus Clamor 500 of ping
GG
Actually, as an aikidoka myself, I find the aikidoka in this video insanely slow. This is NOT how Aikido looks.
"That shit was weak."
"Fuck you."
LMAO
The respect, dignity, and sportsmanship the martial arts are known for.
Boom King i know right
Don't forget MOTIVATION.
2 + years in a wheel chair -- took my first few steps recently without holding on to anything. I have a nice 10 X 13 framed poster on my wall, it says: "Everything is Training". I know it. I will continue my journey to be my best. These guys are great motivators.
I liked this post, I really did.
Don’t believe the hype these guys are not great motivators as they are all fluff and puff as they say, open your eyes and let reality be your motivator.
@@Aaronsmith-cu8ii Thank You
I wish you all the strength in the world. There's no limit to what you can accomplish.
@@tiagorochagoncalves9140 I know what needs doing, so I am doing it. In this, I achieve mastery. Thank you for the encouragement. I made another sign with a black crayon and hung in my workout area: "There's no such thing as difficult or easy. There is only training".
These guys put together a great show. I was throughly entertained. The guy in the blue gi is an excellent martial artist. I know the Aikido guys was meant to be seen as the weaker opponent . They let him get in a few good throws and flips just to make it look good. But all in all very well done outstanding performance by both of these martial artists
Sinchi Mike I agree, thank you for your explanation
Which one is the tikudo guy
@El Lorenzo if you can pull of which 90 percent you would not able to because all the moves require perfect teqnice,timing
And the one you are doing the aikido move must be a 140yr old grandma with alzeimer and brain cancer only if all of these happen in same time then aikido works
Aikido guy was more of the Uke
The training style for aikido is different than jiu jitsu
I admire their energy. Looks like they’re having a good time.
1:39 was just freaking badass lol
I have been training Aikido for 3 years right now. The fact that is Aikido never start the fight. It is just for defense, waits for the attack but Aikido demonstration are absolutely amazing if two sensi are doing it.
If I do even I am doing it super slowly, I usually make wrong move lol. I would suggest you to choose
ju jutsu due to my experience of aikido
Aikido doesn't start the fight, but it doesn't end it either. As a way of handling stress, enjoying an activity, etc I have nothing against it, but as a martial art it is almost useless
@@MajorKreissack88 I think it depends on the person. Aikido was initially taught to high ranking martial artists, and I can see why. To fight you have to learn how to fight, which is something aikido doesn't teach, however, I have met people who learned how to fight elsewhere and augmented it with Aikido, they are scary.
@@jannap.2811 nah what he said is true it’s almost next to useless unless you ask your partner to stand absolutely still and do nothing while you flip them. It’s never tested which is why it’s never seen in any functional martial arts fight
Jujutsu is the original martial art that both Japanese Jiujitsu and Judo, as well as Aikido descend from. It was an actual combat martial art used in war in the samurai era, and it was brutal. Today's Jiujitsu is not Jujutsu, it's a martial art for self defense and sport, but not as brutal and ruthless as the original Jujutsu
@@AvenjaysGuitar No se ve en ninguna pelea por que si el movimiento se ejecuta hasta el final el resultado es brazo, codo u hombro roto. Eso no lo van a permitir en ninguna competición y si no lo ejecutas hasta el final no vas a poder vencer al contrincante, entonces para que emplearlo?.Cuando ves como "Bailan" como decís muchos es que literalmente no tienes otra opción, te están moviendo de un lado a otro con agarres en los que tienes las muñecas o los codos a punto de explotar de dolor. Una cosa es ver el movimiento y otra sentirlo, para hablar primero hay que probar
The sound of the aikido guy tapping sounded like a fish out of water
Yoni K So specific 😂😂😂😂
You tap to let your opponent know you've had enough of that and then they finish the technique
We know what tapping means... what does that have to do with what he said?
If I was kimura'ed explosively like these guys do, I'd tap like a fish out of water too. I tapped like a fish out of water even from just watching this.
more like when you're beating your meat and your mums going to be home any minute
I just watched 2 friends having fun and helping each other do drills, also serving as a demo video . Now I'm about to read all the experts about how this is staged and wouldn't work in a real fight or in the ufc...
In real fight situations, sometimes, yes, there is a chance for the enemy like UFC fighters to counter since they know how aikido works. But in a real-world fight where you dont know any background from your enemy, things are different. It WILL ALWAYS DEPEND ON HOW TECHNIQUES ARE EXECUTED.
Well I had to use Jiu-Jitsu some time and it always worked 😏
aikido is still shit either way @@zachschmeitzer2645
@buzz magister we all know that thing bruv, you know I was referring to real-world combat fights. But yeah the real fight of life is striving to survive by working hard all day
@buzz magister thanks man, I've been to fights but luckily it didnt reach to the point where people are killing. And yes restrain is essential since you/we are still responsible of our opponents lives. If by chance we came up to killing someone, we then face the law. I always kept that in mind whenever I find myself in a fight.
One of the best martial arts demos that I've ever seen. You could really understand and see what they were doing. Great demo
“What do you do after you throw them?”
“I just wait for them to fix their GI”
Ah, a Sensei Seth enjoyer I see
HA i get this joke
I have a huge grin on my face because I recognise the style of movement and tactics from the man in the blue gi. My deceased dad was a judoka and it brings me great joy to see other martial artists having so much fun. I will be looking to join my local dojo as soon as lock down lifts, but in the meantime I am practicing solo drills and conditioning to get ready. Thank you so much for the video x
Yeah, I recognize a lot of it from Judo and I even pulled off some of it in wrestling.
Cuz Judo (and Aikido too) derives from various Jujutsu schools.
Hey Emma. I hope you are safe and practising 👍
I am amazed how they train with the drills and how they explore the arts.
They both performed an excellent flow of techniques smooth and fast.
Jiujitsu its deploys techniques in both standing and ground.
Jiu jitsu doesn't use standing techniques, the one that appears in the video is ju jitsu that uses standing and on the ground techniques, ju jitsu is also known as morganti ju jitsu
@@thigame5Japanese jiu jutsu not bjj. Father of judo and BJJ and Sambo. As a judo guy I appreciate the atemi waza and wish we could bring it back to most of the dojos
The guy wearing the blue has some wicked Judo skills.
Jujutsu skills *
Since Judo is an extract of Japanese Jujutsu
Judo was born from jujitsu. The second was made and used for war, the first is softer because is meant only for knowing techniques (there wasn't any war and they made a "version" without many hits or joint locks that were meant only to finish the opponent quickly without caring elegance)
@@marcomartina4690 My master told me this story. He told me that when judo and jiujitsu practitioners met, the judo practitioners would usually win, because of judo's less dangerous nature (not destroying your body) they were able to get a lot more practice out of it.
@@Divinemakyr that makes sense. I didn't say that judo is worse i only wanted to say that is more gentle and was created after. Thanks for telling this story i think it's pretty cool to know😉👍🏻
@@marcomartina4690 Yeah, thanks mate. From what I thought, original jiujitsu was used by samurai, correct? But the brutal techniques could not be trained very much.
Hiring these guys to choreograph the fight scenes for all future Batman films
Choreograph is the word of the week.
Just all movies in general
With the clapping things ofc
Jo Jo Williams facttttssss this fake ass shit
So true.
This is the kind of video I like to see. Two dude just broing out having a good time
Don't care what you guys say - these guys are probably better (in their respective arts) than 99% of the people commenting on this video.
I agree
Amen
The move at 1:38 is insane. I replayed that shit like 10 times
Flying arm bars look cool but are very dangerous
so many good takedowns... amazing... im a jiu jitsu practioner, and i love it... mad respect for aikido.
The guy acting out Aikido wasnt even trying. I think this video is an advert to recruit more into jiu jitsu.
***** i should know i do aikido and i could have defended some of those and im only just a black belt
Vote Nick +1
***** The hits from the aikido guy were telegraphed
***** The core concepts of aikido come from traditional jujutsu. There are a ton of aiki techniques embedded in there. The difference you saw was a mixed martial artist versus a single style.
this is honestly really cool seeing just genuine good sport and like them having fun while displaying their skill at the same time. just a good wholesome spar :)
Once again, the make-believe fantasy world of "Style vs. Style"! The world that ONLY looks good in choreographed demos and movies! It's alright to practice a "Style". Just have the good sense to know that when the REAL FIGHT in on, in the REAL WORLD??----"Style" goes out the window! And the only two things that remain, indeed the only two things that matter, are SKILLS and ATTRIBUTES!!
SKILLS: (Can you PUNCH? Can you KICK? Can you GRAPPLE? How's your TIMING, your FOOTWORK, your EVASION AND COUNTERING skills? NOT "What 'style' do you practice?).
ATTRIBUTES: (Are you IN SHAPE? Are you FAST? Are you STRONG? Are you PHYSICALLY and MENTALLY and EMOTIONALLY TOUGH? How's your STAMINA? NOT "Are you TKD, Muay Thai, BJJ, Shotokan, or Wing Chun?")
Throw two guys together in a REAL FIGHT, and you won't be able to distinguish "Kung Fu" from "Karate", or "Aikido" from"Jujitsu", or "TKD" from "JKD". The only thing you'll be able to distinguish is: Which one can FIGHT, and which one CAN'T!
+Tyehimba Jahsi apparently you never watched the first 5 UFC matches.
Skills: No punching or kicking only his style that he practiced BJJ
Attributes: He was not in the best shape, not fastest, not strongest. It was his style BJJ that won over all others. Unless you study BJJ when encountered by it you will most likely lose and size, speed and other fighting skills do not matter as he demonstrated.
I did watch the first five UFC matches. He had grappling skill. His opponents didn't. He had awareness of body dynamics that his opponents lacked. Yeah, for a while it looked to the world like "BJJ beats everything". It was all new to fighters who had only been trained to think in terms of punching and kicking. Once the awareness was out there, punchers and kickers realized they had to adapt their way of moving to reduce vulnerability and expand their skill set to include grappling. Once they did, the strikers started to do better and the grapplers then realized that they had to expand their skill set to include striking. So now you have strikers with grappling skills they didn't have before, and grapplers with striking skills they didn't have before. So once again, it all comes back to the basic issue of one man's skills and attributes vs.one man's skills and attributes, not "style vs. style".
you're right
+Tyehimba Jahsi nice turn arround u did back there.. but i disagree... because u r saying that styles go out the window.. but actualy... they dont.. they remain because a style is nothing else but the study of a sertain perception of fight... so actualy its not about skills. but about education.. education of accurate and eficient fighting and safety, u can get very fullskilled on hitting a wall... and make ur hand looks like a hammer... but that way of getting skills gets what its called? a style... in that case even if u want to the jashi style... the term "style" its only the grammatic way of saying that u educate urself about some stuffs... so u aint have "grappling" skills.. u have neither wrestlers or bjj grapling skills... until some new chinese guy maybe invent some other even better grapling tecnics... which i dont spect to happen but hwo knows... now. i do agree on some other stuffs u said. the attributes r real deal... if 2 persons have exactly the same education in fighting and 1 its 70kg and the other its 130kg (dunno about pounds) the big guy will crush the smaller... and indeed its about a man skills vs other man skills... but those skills came from styles.. that make the person hwo use it, even a potential style creator.... making some new way called dafuq he wants to.. which again it will be the sum of its education... sorry 4 bad english.. i am from argentina we speech spanish here and never been on a english speacked country....
+Tyehimba Jahsi That's mostly true, but some things will remain. For example, compare a Capoeira fighter on the streets to an Aikido fighter on the street. While they won't use moves and forms they were taught (except for some of the base ones,) the capoeira fighter will probably move quickly, attempting to dodge his opponent and get up close, followed by swift strikes with the legs or fists. By contrast, and Aikido fighter would allow his enemy to get close to him and quickly counter his attacks before pinning him. A Jujutsu fighter would do quick counters and grapples to put pressure on weak spots, thus incapacitating his foe.
While their strict forms and disciplines would be gone, the themes and tactics would remain.
This video always makes me smile, 2 friends having fun and laughs while getting in a good workout.
Finally 2 guys, who can really do it. Wonderful! Very nice!
Both of these guys are good. Excellent demo, fast and fluid.
It made the whole video a shame.
Interesting, I find words like fuck to be quite beautiful and useful in lots of different social situations .
Precisely and also very good technique shown in the video, even things from other arts, outside of Ju jitsu/aikido, such as karate with striking, I dont know if heel hooking is a tradition ju jitsu technique, so possibly BJJ and general fighting which overall I guess you could just consider an MMA style of fighting, an "actual full on fight". But regardless these two guys are high level overall even if its just for show
+Lloyd Richardson real jujuitsu contained strikes
Is the blue one aikido or jujitsu
0:35 WHAT WAS DAT ! he fliped him like a god damn tortilla
“sukui nage” i believe
😂😂😂
Only works from that position if the opponent is cooperating.
He was a human tortilla
@@true5667
RIGHT
😂😂😂
I love how everything has a flow. It almost looks like a dance.
What type of dance do you mean ? Belly dance ? Disco dance ? Salsa ? Samba ? Which one ?
@@naifgobory6212 yomama dance
They should retitle this video as "jujitsu vs. aikido punching bag"
Demonstration ^^ Aikido must be agressive for the demonstration ^^*
Døctør Hannibal exactly, a demonstration. They should have sparred to see what happens
you mean, the ones that definitely don't work. lmfao! yellow bamboo must be the ultimate martial art then :')
Well, the aikido guy DID beat the jujitsu guy like twice.
Masculine Buddha right
I love the look on peoples' faces when they prepare to be thrown :) 0:45
Obviously they're playing, nice spirit.
Kaiz O if u call playing being thrown to the ground repeatedly playing than u make a difference in this world
Even if this was for demonstration (I think), both are being professional about it. I kind of feel sorry for the guy in white, though.
They are happy when they get hits.
Bye
ftremblay379 that is true
RI Kim Aww look at those bonafide killers play
This was the coolest video Ive seen in months! Great talent, great training relationship and great engagement times! I liked there was no "I punch and wait 30 seconds for you to react as I stand frozen" kind of BS!
Now I know how to take down my neighbors fish
The essence of these martial arts is harmony and peace, something this thread lacks....
Eric Fitzgerald, these guys aren't fighting, they're just having fun
It was a fun sparring match, they were playing and displaying their skills. Don't read into it like this one art going against another in a death match. They're obviously good friends.
Jiujitsu e maravilhosa mas não pegaria um cara o aikido fácil assim não. Os cara também são feras..
Acho que a demonstração não eh nem de Jiu Jitsu. Eu posso até estar enganado, mas o cara usou golpes como chutes e socos, não lembro de ter visto isso em treinos de Jiu.
....dude they're making fun of aikido, either that or this dude learned nothing in his dojo about aikido. You never attack with aikido... Ever. It's completely based on a response to another person's aggression
Jacob Richter more traditional forms of Aikido (i.e. Aikijujitsu) were combat-oriented. Aikido isn't exclusively for pacifists and old people, just the modern selling of it is.
If you have a bad temper, your Aikido will be combat oriented too. A martial art is what you choose to make out of it. My Aikido looks like Traditional Jujutsu because (sadly) I have violent tendencies and a bad temper.
Best video on yt ( for me ) in 10 years. Well done gentlemen!!
When you dont know the controls for mortal kombat. That's what this reminds me of.
Random Cockblock Message: Look at this Jesus guy trying to hit on a gamergirl, classic bro let's hear some more ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
+All For Jesus: Think you're dangerous boy? Bet the good Lord is proud of you ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) You're as harmless as a lamb all the way there behind your monitor, you couldn't even trash-talk me if you tried :D Speaking of 'can't get a girl', it has been 9 months since you've not even been friendzoned yet, how does it feel to be so close and yet so far? Remember you asked for this
X.VORTEXIA LIVES
Shadow Lucifer And you’re one of them.
And I'm assuming you are an offspring of two .
two friends having fun....and besides being a good "uke" it is essential to practice and learn judo or aikido, the aidoka is doing uke, so that tori looks fantastic
Very cool. I love the spirit and comraderie of their practice. They are incorporating some realistic flow while having fun. Very talented guys.
Camaraderie.
You tried
Thank you for the video.
Impressive! This type of jiu-jitsu it's far more appealing to me than Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
I would like to see a this stand-up Jiu-Jitsu practitioner defend a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu practitioner's attempt at a two-leg takedown.
Keep up the good work.
As a complete system and spectator sport absolutely. I appreciate the skills of BJJ but I don't want to fall on my arse and spread my legs every time someone jumps me.🤣🐙
I've been hoping to find this video again. This is one of the best if not the very best video with the repetition and so on that i've ever seen.
When he goes in a circle tapping his chest reminds my of Curly on the Three Stooges. All that is missing is woo, woo, woo.
Omg trey're just exercising (practising) wake up
Sparring is more like the term for it.
They both know Aikido, that much is clear. And all you guys saying Aikido doesn't attack that much, it was for demonstrative purposes.
Actually jujutsu looks similar to aikido so the jujutsu guy may not know aikido
Dubcord Devin it's different pay attention
Attention ! This comment is not made to disparage or make a sport look good!.
Aikido is a martial art and here the man in the aikido suit is attacking! If you have noticed, the man in Jiu Jutsu suit is using aikido technique because he is attacking in the 0:52 scene, because more men in Aikido suits attack him in this video, the man in Ju-jitsu suit was able to do more techniques to him, which showed Ju-jitsu as a better martial art..
Aikido and Ju Jitsu are incomparable 2 sides a good sport and effective...
Haha, it made my day watching 2 guys having fun
0:31 my fav move
Imagine an elbow at the end though lol
wtf? That's not jui-jitsu. This whole video is choreographed
+Aj007cool It's jujutsu or japanesse jiujitsu, not BJJ
+DimebagVision the japanese style sucks...
its all cinematographic
hahaha im a BJJ fighter, and yes i can beat it!!
it's mount jiujitsu it's jujutsu the one before Gracie changed. Gracie learnt this and changed it abit.
+DimebagVision Isn't BJJ all about fighting on the ground anyway? So by falling on his face, the BJJ guy gains an advantage! Kappa.
0:50
This is where the distinction between Aikido and JiuJitsu blur or fuse.
The techniques are one and the same.
Here, the Aikido ends the combat succinctly.
And though it's final aim is not to kill, the assailant *is* maimed, because the arm and wrist will be broken, and the upper arm yanked out of the socket.
This is considered
"combat survival Aikido", which it becomes as horrific as JiuJitsu *without* *ever* *striking* or never *throwing* *blows*
Because in every instance of throwing blows or striking with an appendage (arm-fist-hand/elbow, or, leg-foot/knee) the appendage is extended, and becomes a lever, fulcrum, or cantilever (in the case of human anatomy, equipped with *joints* ).
1:12
Here, the JiuJitsu student is actually applying pure Aikido.
You do realise Ju-jitsu is the origin of Aikido, BJJ, Judo, Karate etc?
Also, Aikido isn’t very practical.
I never realised how little defence is involved in these demonstrations.
Hi all,
I tried to break down the video into techniques to the best of my knowledge. But first some context:
The video is called "jujitsu vs aikido", but I also found some claims that the guy in blue is training hapkido. Luis Valderrama, could you confirm this? Is this you there? Man, your video has over 16 million views as of today. Talk to us :)
Hapkido is a Korean martial art originating from daito-ryu aikijujutsu, just like aikido, but also taking a lot from several Korean striking martial arts which later merged into taekwondo. That being said, a lot of throws and joint locks he performs are also present in standard aikido. After all, there's only a limited number of ways you can twist someone's wrists and elbows or throw down a human body. A lot of techniques in many martial arts just have to look similar.
Oh, and I might have made some mistakes, but also sometimes one technique has several names, one being popular in one school or style, the other in another.
0:10 - koshinage
0:15 - koshinage attempt
0:20 - koshinage again
0:24 - koshinage again
0:27 - sumi otoshi
0:34 - aiki otoshi
0:39 - I like it a lot, but have trouble with the name. I would say it's a very simple variation of kaitennage? If the tori just pinned the uke to the ground instead of throwing him, it would be kaiten osae.
0:41 - I could call it one of the otoshi techniques, but tbh he just grabbed him and pushed him :)
0:46 - a variant of koshinage (?)
0:51 - kotegaeshi
0:56 - sankyo
0:58 - koshinage
1:01 - shihonage, my favourite :)
1:03 - juji gatame, that's judo and bjj, not aikido
1:11 - kotegaeshi
1:15 - I would also call it a variant of koshinage (but in judo it may have its own name?)
1:22 - sumi otoshi
1:27 - a very short variant of udekimenage. love it.
1:31 - a more typical udekimenage
1:35 - nikyo? the light makes it hard to see...
1:36 - a transport lock; I think it's called kamakubi, but it's not a standard aikido technique
1:38 - whoa, a flying juji gatame, sadly also not aikido :)
1:51 - a very sneaky sode otoshi, completely against aikido principles ;)
2:08 - not aikido; that foot lock reminds me of daito-ryu, but no idea how it can be called
Wow thank you!
D
You could argue that this is hapkido and aikido because it has the looks of it. Jiu Jitsu is at the base of many other styles and the things that work in other styles get adapted back to jiu-jitsu. At least that's how it's done here in the Netherlands. For example basic atemi within jiu-jitsu isn't always that good, but within kickboxing it is mostly about kicking and punching and therefore many jiu-jitsu schools here use techniques from karate and kickboxing as basic atemi. There are basic requirements but on the other hand if you can't make something work for you then you train something that does work. To me this is a nice demonstration of aikido vs jiu-jitsu. There are similarities in all martial arts.
Furthermore, from an aikido point of view, in my opinion anyway, you're summary off techniques is very much on point.
I studied jiu-jitsu and aikido and they complement each other very well. Aikido makes for great mae ai and fluidity. Jiu-jitsu makes for good basic stands, atemi, and power, and thus a well rounded fighter.
The combination could lack in power if confronted by multiple attackers though. But if trained with pressure testing, does give an answer to a multitude of situations. The same would go in my opinion for someone who trains, say, judo and kickboxing. The last would be more effective in my opinion because both kickboxing and judo specialise in one or two fields.
Aikido has nasty stuff, but is not trained to be nasty per say. If they used more atemi, say 50-50 instead of 20-80 the aikido would could be more practical.
On the other hand aikido looks beautiful and makes people softer and more kindhearted. So to say aikido is b*llsh*t is a great mistake in my opinion.
@@j.knoops8243 : After ten years of aikido (give or take - I had a few long breaks in-between) I'm now training kickboxing. I want to return to aikido one day, but only when I'm confident in my abilities. And then I want to experiment with aikido techniques. So, I imagine, I'd like to learn a bit something like in this video, but also a bit like what Bruce Bookman teaches in his "Aikido Extensions" course.
@@makingthematrix sounds good. Combining styles and abilities can be very useful if you wish to develop.
In my own case, I came along katori shinto ryu about three years ago, it's a swordfighting style from Japan. I'm thinking about re-joining jiu-jitsu. Because they "feel" and perform in a similar mindset I found.
To make a long story short, do what you love and feels right to you and the rest will fall into place. Take care!
*Aikido being slammed on the floor for multiple times*: Am I ragdoll to you?
lol
I like how the traditional aikidoist finishes with a fuck you and a middle finger.lol
I liked that too. Because that's how AIkidoka conduct themselves, right ?
Obi-wan Kenobi Just because someone practices aikido, that means they cant curse? wtf
1:38 this stressed me out so bad, I'd never in my life had the courage for that move. I've seen a video of an athlete trying out the same move but he didn't rotate fully and his opponent wasn't trained what to do so he tried to pull out from the grab. The guy doing the move fell on his head and broke his neck, his crying still haunts me to this day.
ok
That sounds awful. It is a move that, well executed, looks great, but the risk is very high. It could be replaced with some other less risky with the same effect. What you tell is something that could happen in a street fight if you decide to make the wrong move. Most likely, he was left in a wheelchair if he survived at all.
Comments like this are why I worry about training Judo. It can be so effective, but if you go up against a rookie who doesn't know what they're doing or does something too fast, something can break. Or even up against an experienced guy who wants to try a new move on you or who really doesn't want to lose, something can break.
@@markonline2166 This is a good observation, I have seen brutal physical injury to the foot with bones sticking out, but only with Ju Jitsu style training at a student's sport campus. There the students come an go (or not for weeks!) whenever they like, often with their mind still way into their courses/deadlines. Then when they get a move to learn/practise, they simply think, - ok these are the steps and go... just slamming their foot into the other person's foot without prioritising control, doing things slowly first, checking in with the other, etc. Actually, Judo, Jujitsu etc. are meant to be trained with full respect and awareness of ones own body ánd of the other person(s). Judo being, in my experience, the less violent/risky one. But, it really does matter where you train and who trains you, the student campus had an extra cushioned floor and so, nobody learned how to fall properly, but falling properly is step 1... so never train somewhere with soft floors... it's better to have some pain learning to fall on the hard mats, than learning the hard way out in the streets!! A good instructor will emphasize the importance of learning to fall properly! The first time I went to a good place, I got swung over someone's shoulder with my legs at full momentum slapping the hard mats. I quickly learned how to adjust😀
Yes that move is extremely dangerous, moreso for you than your opponent
Wait, so this was a demonstration for Jiu Jitsu? The Aikido guy sure was cooperating a lot....
Yes
yes
Yes
yes
Yes
Bjj at 1:38 is just elegant as all get out. He climbed on this man's arm and made him come to the ground 😂😂😂
Not bjj two different things
I mean like your not wrong but he did a flying armbar
You can really hear their bodies being slammed to the ground. I wonder if it hurts.
wesley ogilvie They're on mats.
actually it was their feet and leg slammed on mats, I'm now training Aikido and it is kind of a way of self protection.
Poizin Rath Thats True i was training when we were practicing how to not hurt our self and also practicing how to do takedowns and my teacher came up to me and tripped me when i wasnt ready and also tried to make a run for a gap but he tripped me and i landed on my shoulder and fractured my collar bone :(
nope
...
wow! slam-kido! there is more here in 2 minutes than two hours of some stuff. one of my favorite vids on the whole internet
This is a video of one guy fighting and the other allowing himself to get his ass kicked and he's wearing a Aikido outfit. Totally useless. Try that obvious ju jitsu stuff on a real kung fu master and then see what happens.
that already happened in WW2 the Japanese Army were very well versed in Jui Jutsu and they steam rolled the Chinese, they even challenged the local so called kung fu masters to un armed combat, it did not go over well for the kung fu masters
Oh really? Well they have not done so well when they have visited the Shaolin Temple in recent decades. The Japanese army committed the most cruel and inhuman atrocities against the Chinese people during their occupation. The Japanese army in WWII were no model of humanity never mind martial arts. They murdered millions including thousands of American POW's who were either marched or starved to death. Look for another example.
John Coppola AND?????????whats the deal of your story you are out of the subject he say chinese martial art dont work and you say chinese martial get destroy and you put the point on japanese cruelty so WHATS YOUR POINT?????
I thought the guy throwing was aikido and one getting arse kicked was jiu jitsu? :S I'm pretty sure jiu jitsu sensei's wear the black bottoms only
jonnyh1994 Nope, your gi can be any color you want it to be, my jiu jitsu teacher has like 5 gis and only one is black.
Alright first of all Akidio tells you to wait and react to your opponents attacks, rarely do you see an Akidio individual throwing themselves into the opponent. Second of all, half of the moves that Jujitsu dude did also exists in Akidio, so I was confused as who was actually the Akidio dude o_o
dam corn They are just demonstrating their respective techniques. Also, the styles they use all come from the same thing. They are just different versions of the martial art Samurai developed
dam corn Aikido is derived from Jiu-Jitsu
1. Waiting and reacting for your opponent to attack is dumb af, and one of the reasons why Aikido is ineffective
2. Aikido is a derivative of Jiujitsu, so you're going to see crossover. From what I've heard, Classical Jiujitsu is the closest to the Japanese Mother Art - which all modern Japanese systems have splintered from. Notice how Japanese Jiujitsu contains all of the fighting aspects: striking, grappling (both throws and newaza), weapons, etc. Story goes, the modern systems are expressions of the individual aspects of the mother art - the grappling became Judo, the weapons became iaido, etc.
Karate is Okinawan
Eric Arroyo You know wrong.
First, Aikido isn't a derivative of Jiujutsu. It derived from Aiki-Jiujutsu (Jiujutsu, too).
Second, Karate was called "Okinawate" because it was born in Okinawa and its style came from a kind of Kung-fu.
I wouldn't call this "Jujitsu vs Aikido", so much as "Jujitsu Techniques Used on Aikido Training Dummy"
Great demonstration!! Pretty quick and fluid movements.
I am sick of hearing people literally bitch about Aikido and it being "fake"/in-effective...
First of all, Aikido has many different styles, the most famous and most taught is Aikikai.
Aikikai is literally all about fancy throws and break-falls, fucking flower arranging compared to the style originally taught by O'Sensei Morihei Ueshiba. His style, THE FIRST AND REAL AIKIDO that a dojo I used to belong to used to teach before our master passed away and I left, in England due to real connections to the original Dojo and O'Sensei himself (I won't go into the history). Now that style was still very relaxed but a more straight down to business, some one attacks you (ON THE STREET-REAL FIGHT WITH NO RULES) you break his arm and then pin him/throw him away from you in order to get away. Barely any fancy throws from the shoulder.
Other Aikido styles, like Steven Seagal's include big throws if they are realistic and can be done from a realistic situation on the street. The father Art, the art I study now, Aikijujutsu, includes all of the techniques from Aikido, and throws but ONLY if they are street worthy, also including strikes and even more joint breaks.
You have to learn a proper style with a proper dojo with proper history to understand Aikido, I have experienced Aikikai, it doesn't work, Real fights or competition fights it is ineffective. Real Aikido is straight to the point, making sure an attacker in a REAL fight on the street (that is what a real fight is BTW, on the street) won't get back up to attack you again, but if he does, you are either long gone, or you break his other arm. (On the street, with inexperienced pub thugs, or back alley thieves, a "fancy throw" will shatter arm bones, dislocate shoulders and could even kill depending on the landing!! they are fancy in the Dojo so we don't get hurt, you dig?)
I do not claim to be a master, I do not claim to even be any good, but I do claim knowledge to all I just said and more people need to hear it.
👍😎
The father art Daito-ryu Aiki Jujutsu has also a lot of "Bullshido" just like Aikido. But half of the techniques I see in Jujutsu exist in a very similar or even the same form in Aikido. Also the more effective "real" techniques you're mentioning are basically what Ueshiba taught in his younger years, but in his later years Ueshiba would soften his techniques himself, making the movements larger, emphasizing harmony over efficiency as a self-defense. E.g. irimi-nage in Ueshibas early films/photos can be seen as a straight movement and using a punch with the open hand to the chin, instead of the later large spiraling moves and just using your arm bent over the opponents shoulder to down him). I'm always puzzled that people aren't aware of this. My teachers always told me that these big moves are to explain the principles of the movement in an easy to understand fashion, but if you want to apply it to a real life situation you'd always go with the short direct moves. And people shitting on Aikido and saying Jujutsu is da shit, don't understand that Aikido and Jujutsu share much more than they are different. Even the names of many techniques are the same.
Please note that my Aikido experience is a mere 4-5 years of practicing 20 years ago (now I'm a fat and soft couch potato), so take this with a pinch of salt.
its like 95% jujitsu demo, but still - very nice. well done!
You mean 99% Aikido. The guy in blue is using Aikido as well despite the gui
TheLydianRocks No I definitely do not mean that. Because Aikido and Jujitsu has many overlapping techniques. Jujitsu was one of the arts that Aikido was based upon.
Yes but are you saying everything the guy in blue is doing is JJ?
TheLydianRocks Yes, because they are actually part of JJ techniques as well as part of Aikido with slight modifications. Thats what 'overlap' means.
Agreed. Uke is telegraphing his actions way too much for it to appear as though this is actual Kumite; more like Kata. A nice looking Kata, but closer to Randori than anything else.
No offense to Jiu Jutusu or Tori, but the title IS misleading.
1:35 is the coolest part.
El de aikido es un muñeco
Literal jaja
💀
Sí
Es natural cuando la gente no conoce ni x asomo o practique ningun arte marcial el estar denostando lo q nunca se ha hecho es entendible... Cada estilo y arte marcial tiene su libro de aprendizaje y su tiempo asi como su efectividad los artistas marciales pasan del comun denominador de gente a un nivel un poco mas alto de entendimiento de defensa y ataque las aryes marciales no es un deporte es la forma de aniquilar sin armas mas q solo tu propio cuerpo por lo tanto no hay estilo malo existen solo alumnos malos o maestros malos ya es cuestion de elegir bien a su sensei saludos
@@manuelpolanco8979 el aikido es malo por la simple razón de que no sirve para nada
Good jujitsu shown but the "aikido" man was mostly just a standing dummy...bullcrap.
+pepe cohetes Someone hast to be :P.
I agree with you pepe
+pepe cohetes its just realistic.
agreed pepe
+pepe cohetes in a real fight the aikido would've lost a arm jiu jitsu >>> aikido.
Wow these new tekken graphics look amazing
yea awsome
As a Boxer, this looks kinda complicated
every martial art is complicated compared to boxing lol
but in boxing theirs not alot to learn compared to other martial arts but the moves cant be mastered to any degree , its a sport more than a martial arts but it is effective (i do ju jitsu and boxing)
Choreography at it's best,love it !
0:54Oh fack he actually got him for once
1:10 Damn! That juijitsu guy just do an aikido move😃
Kotegaeshi huh
Aikido comes from jujutsu.
@@eskiltester3913 aikijiujutsu
@@multatuli1 which is a substyle of jujutsu.
@@dojimanoryu4969 not the other way around?
I can see that they are both very good martial artists and good friends, very good humility sense and good sense of humor and the end thank you both, very inspiring.
This is my go to when I'm to explain what I think a real fighter moves like.
I am still waiting for the guy to do some aikido... aikido is the art of using your opponent's strength against them... which is why he is being so lame at attacking. Let's see the jujitsu guy do some attacks and the aikido guy defend.
Nymeria Meliae I agree. I used to practice jiu jitsu and it is so technical I got uncomfortable learning! I mean martial arts should be purely defensive, easy to learn and that's why I love aikido. Our sensei always emphasized no competition and no confrontation unless you are cornered or your life and your loved ones are in danger.
Alexis Patrick Lozare The thing with competition though is it prepares you more than you know. The adrenaline rush, the adrenaline dump, when you first compete you maybe only utilize one of your move because it's all happening so fast. That's a big factor in a real fight, and competition can greatly help you defend yourself
Greg Man I beg to disagree. When we practice aikido, we do so we can control ourselves better, and thus avoid confrontation. We practice until it becomes as routine as breathing. And besides, no amount of competition will prepare you for the real thing. My friend is a black belt karate and had 2 thugs beat the crap out of him in a face-off hold up. No guns, just 2 thugs with a knife each. Now you would imagine with all those years of practice AND competition, he would be able to defend himself but no!! He was stabbed so bad & lost a lot of blood that my friends & I had to donate our blood to save his @ss!!
Alexis Patrick Lozare When you say we practice until it's like breathing, you can do that with anything; people who skateboard, people who do judo, people who dance, and what do all those people do to make themselves better; competition. I'm not saying if you compete you will be prepared, but it helps, your friend, he isn't everyone else. Everyone is different and takes from martial arts what connects to them, so just because it didn't work for him doesn't means it's not going to work at all. I stand by my original comment, competition helps you become a better martial artist. Is it for everyone? No.
Alexis Patrick Lozare Wow, such compassion for your friend, so moved i want to cry. And Nymeria isn't wrong, Aikido is using your opponent's strength against them. Those thugs had knives and it was 2 of them so it wasn't a fair fight to begin with.
The "aikido" guy wasn't using aikido. A true aikido fighter will never attack first. It goes against the fundamental teachings of aikido. If an aikido guy runs at you with a punch or kick, he probably failed as a student.
***** any aikido school worth its salt will teach you that aikido is about redirecting force against an attacker. there is no such thing as an attack in aikido. you should do some studying.
No, my friend, I don't need to do any thinking. You're clearly ignorant of aikido's principles, and no amount of me pondering anything is going to change that. I suggest you watch the Aikido episode of Samurai Spirit for starters, and stop making a fool of yourself by trying to lecture people on something you obviously know nothing about.
***** you dont need a attacking partner to train...
Aikido is a martial art created to disarm and put attackers in submission without actually hurting them
***** you really need that power of the mind right now... They can obviously have sparring practices but it wont be the same as other martial art... Btw I practice karate not aikido
***** you can go over the techniques and practice them by one person practicing aikido defending and another one using either a weapon or another martial art. Akido is only used for redirecting your attackers momentum and not actually striking them. The martial art was created on the principle so you can disarm and/or put your attacker in submission without actually hurting them.
This isn't even aikido at all. The aikido practice would never ever attack first. The stupid talking reveals there is no philosophical mindset, bad bad fighting there. Maybe he had trained in some wannabe aikido dojo, would be the answer to his stupid actions. But well, very funny someone really thinks that guy use aikido.
Agreed. This is a strange video.
EXACTLY!!!!
"WAAAAAAHH!!!
THIS ISN'T TRUE AIKIDO, WAAAAAAAH!!! I NEED A DIAPER CHANGE! ;_; " -- zehaha111
Spare me your adolescence and stupid behaviour, i'm not some aikido fanboy. That video is just a big fake / lie. Nothing is right her, not even the basic stance, its not present at all. He doesn't use the energy of his opponent and wait for the attack, those are basic rules for aikido too. I don't like liars and people who write such moron posts like you.
zehaha111 this is a beautiful demonstration so enjoy or shut the fuck up
This is so beautiful. I love it
jewjitsu is when the bank steals all ur money
LMAO
o-o
i like turtles
And people doesn't even realized they've been submitted.
a big nazi comment, and everyone is laughing, fukked up hatefull people on the internet
there is 2 kinds of Aikido
1 that moves the opponent without injuring or killing them
and 2 the old original Aikido, where there are no rules no hold barred precision attacking and movements intended to kill or injure the opponent
but that can be said about any form of martial arts
in this day and age of violence, I would not be a bit surprise if the old ways are taught again and rightly so...
I think no mma is usefull, if you do not see it coming. I mean if you use mma, you must do the first punch. That makes you the attacker and the doughbag the victim.
Best way, not to come into that kind of situation. If you are alone...leave! If you are with frends...leave! If you are with girlfrend...leave! Be the man.
Edit: Very important! And if you get robbed. Gave him your wallet. No money is so important, then your health. No hero has lived long, its only in movies. But if he charge, then fight like there is no tomorrow.
? The MMA guy has to strike first? What are you on about? We shoot under the punch, pick the guy up, gently lay him down, then sit on the person and ask why he is acting up, and offers a free cup of coffee if they have calmed down.
Hehe, yes..! :}
HeAintGonnaEmailYou
You do not realy has read my post? Have you?
Nick Vázquez
The best war, is the war that never has started. And i did not said, take the punch and run. To leave before it get started,,,doesn`t make you a sissy. And if someone is with you ( friend or family ), you have to protect him/her the best way. If mess has started....wait, did you read my post? By the way, how i read your post...i would say, you are a trouble starter.
Ok you guys are having Way Too Much fun!
Great presentation, thank you.
Old school Jiu-Jitsu is so exciting to look at.
Definitivamente siii
I am a fan of aikido, now when I see a comparison of these styles in battle I am very impressed. Beauty, efficiency and simplicity
As a practitioner of shaolin kung fu, I feel a lot of respect for martial arts like aikido and jujitsu. Kung Fu has Qinna (joint locks), but none this sophisticated.
Arn't you monks meant to be shut up in your cave meditating, not socialising with the world .... XD
precision 2 Monks and martial artists are different things you know. You don't have to be a monk to be a martial artist.
Elliot Borge both r different fighting approach. kung fu is, mostly, if u can touch opponents leg/arm/whatever, then just hit it/ break it. judo is if u can hold stuff, grab it and lock, throw the guy.
now, u gotta choose what way u will go.
Was that filmed in Tenri Judo dojo los angeles? Looks very alike that's were I learned my judo
They are speaking Spanish, I don't think it's there
This jujitsu fighter is great!
He can do aikido & Jeet Kune Do.
1:32 KING KONG WITH 1000 ms
LOL!!!
lol
true
pedrox gamer hsushsushsush
Caraca vei
Ri muito nessa do king kong
XD
lmao!!!
It really doesn't matter what martial discipline you practice, what matters is the desire to win, determination and the skills of the martial artist.
The guy's back must've been purple after all that !
All the slams to the floor made my back hurt. 😂
0:11 ese derribo fue brutal
I don't really care about the "Aikido guy" not actually using classical Aikido because I'm so impressed with the fluidity, control and seamless integration of creative striking, throws and subs...
And yes, I understand it wasn't "real" - the Jiu Jitsu guy still seemed like he was absolutely tuned into the secrets of the universe lol I mean damn that was smooth XD
This is so clean. Those break falls are mental