Baker was olympic champion indeed. This is also known as Ole Bischof reverse seoi nage. Is it still allowed in the current rule set (since reverse seoi nage got banned) I wonder? Would like it to be the case!
ofc it is, since this is actually a (leg-free) kata guruma as Shintaro says. In fact you can clearly see the opponent travels from one shoulder to the other before falling, and tori is perpendicular to uke. If you goo too far in so that you're parallel to the opponent, then it might blend with an actual regular drop seoi nage, although you entered in reverse, as he showed already in the video. Still I don't think that is banned either as it's not actually a "reverse seoi" as the ban means, i.e. the "korean seoi" which actually throws not forward but backwards/straight down, generally with no lift at all (i.e. it's more of a drag down), although sometimes it can be finished with throwing directly over your head if the opponent resists the initial drag down and you step in.
Not a reverse seoi. In fact it's a kata guruma in some sense. This technique was used by the heavyweight japanese lady judoka in Doha 2023 to win her world championship
@@rikyako88 yea I saw that, I think she even did it twice. Probably still legal then. But google Ole Bischof reverse seoi nage and you will see where it's coming from.
Shintaro, sir, could you upload an instructional video that gives tips on how to grapple/restrain and throw others when our body has become very tired?
th-cam.com/video/tRCTnLSfRlE/w-d-xo.html This is an old video of 2 nogi options for this. Only do the chin strap one to your best buddy's or worst enemies 😂
If we want to go into judo politics, nah it won't be banned as long as Japanese (or French) judokas are doing it. If it were Koreans, Russians, Georgian, or some minor Asiatic state, maybe... Though, if we don't want to go too far into kind-of conspiracy theories, in truth, they tend to ban techniques that do not look clean and judo-like (compared to their idea of judo ofc) and nice for spectators. Korean seoi nage was one such technique, it's really a messy drag down more than a throw usually, and it does often end in opponent falling weirdly/dangerously if he tries to resist. This one instead is very clean, very judo-like, I don't foresee this getting banned ever. I'm still mad they banned the original kata guruma though, that one I will never forgive. They could have banned _just_ leg-only techniques (i.e. shooting) if they really had to differentiate themselves from wrestling.
Very useful demonstration, as always! Thank you and much respect from Canada.
Another fire upload. Thank you from a bjj guy!
Awesome content always guys. Kudos!
Baker was olympic champion indeed. This is also known as Ole Bischof reverse seoi nage. Is it still allowed in the current rule set (since reverse seoi nage got banned) I wonder? Would like it to be the case!
ofc it is, since this is actually a (leg-free) kata guruma as Shintaro says. In fact you can clearly see the opponent travels from one shoulder to the other before falling, and tori is perpendicular to uke.
If you goo too far in so that you're parallel to the opponent, then it might blend with an actual regular drop seoi nage, although you entered in reverse, as he showed already in the video. Still I don't think that is banned either as it's not actually a "reverse seoi" as the ban means, i.e. the "korean seoi" which actually throws not forward but backwards/straight down, generally with no lift at all (i.e. it's more of a drag down), although sometimes it can be finished with throwing directly over your head if the opponent resists the initial drag down and you step in.
Not a reverse seoi. In fact it's a kata guruma in some sense. This technique was used by the heavyweight japanese lady judoka in Doha 2023 to win her world championship
@@rikyako88 yea I saw that, I think she even did it twice. Probably still legal then. But google Ole Bischof reverse seoi nage and you will see where it's coming from.
Nice work, thanks
Shintaro, sir, could you upload an instructional video that gives tips on how to grapple/restrain and throw others when our body has become very tired?
I know this is an absolute basic but how do you do that grip where you can grab them but they can’t grab you. You were using it
Thank you!
This is the technique the heavyweight japanese lady judoka did in her final match. The setup and execution is classy, it was pure Judo.
Hello from Brasil guys 🇧🇷🥋
So stylish 🥋
I'm gonna try to drill the first one after class in bjj, is it safe? I won't hurt myself or my partner doing it right?
You know, Eugene kinda looks like an athletic Fred Armisen
I don’t see it
Eugene is actually a Fred Armisen character, he’s been working on it and perfecting it for years now.
th-cam.com/video/tRCTnLSfRlE/w-d-xo.html
This is an old video of 2 nogi options for this. Only do the chin strap one to your best buddy's or worst enemies 😂
Why not hit the yoko gake when he doesnt turn into you
This is a huge bomb
🌈 🇮🇹👍🏼
If it works too well it'll be banned lol
If we want to go into judo politics, nah it won't be banned as long as Japanese (or French) judokas are doing it. If it were Koreans, Russians, Georgian, or some minor Asiatic state, maybe...
Though, if we don't want to go too far into kind-of conspiracy theories, in truth, they tend to ban techniques that do not look clean and judo-like (compared to their idea of judo ofc) and nice for spectators. Korean seoi nage was one such technique, it's really a messy drag down more than a throw usually, and it does often end in opponent falling weirdly/dangerously if he tries to resist. This one instead is very clean, very judo-like, I don't foresee this getting banned ever.
I'm still mad they banned the original kata guruma though, that one I will never forgive. They could have banned _just_ leg-only techniques (i.e. shooting) if they really had to differentiate themselves from wrestling.