Well done to both, result was expected. Black belt could have thrown him a touch softer was obvious from his first grip up he wasn’t that experienced. Light wazari and hold…
He's not a child. A lot of people respect you more when you actually fight them instead of just going light. I knew this guy before the fight and knew he could take it.
I couldn’t disagree more. Throw your opponent softer? Nah man, that’s how injury is more likely to occur. Maybe opponent thinks he can post out with his arm because he is being thrown “softly” and then breaks his arm. I’m surprised this got as many upvotes. It’s a foolish statement.
Nah, this is one of Judo’s most devastating throws, there is no light version of this throw especially in competition. As a judoka entering a competition you should understand how to break fall to protect yourself. These throws may look rough to the average person, and a lot are, but the uke in judo learns how to absorb impact to a remarkable degree that the average person probably can’t perceive.
It is unforgiving don't get me wrong. But this was no small error, you never let your foot get that far out, and if you do, you should at least make an attempt to defend that leg. But again, everyone makes mistakes sometimes, even big ones, and most of the time from what I see, matches seem to end by someone walking straight into the technique. I love Judo, it gives you such a great understanding of the human body and its mechanisms, peoples natural reflexes, the rhythm of a fight, etc.
Kudos to him for stepping up to fight. It's one thing to train, another thing to compete. No shame in losing to anyone on the day, you still beat everyone who didnt compete at all.
That's why judo guys are so tough. Almost every tournament I've spectated is open belt. Training's even harder - you could be a white belt for two or three weeks and you'll be sparring with black belts for long periods of time by then.
Thx for the "No Shame". My match for 1st place in my age/weight class at the National AAU lasted all of maybe 5 seconds. My opponent executed a beyond perfect I don't even know, Moroto Seoi Nage or Ippon Seoi Nage so flawlessly and effortlessly, I didn't realize what had actually happened until I was already off the mat and sitting back with my team hahaha. . . won a sweet 2nd place medal though :-)
Bro I've been doing judo for 11 years and you still made me feel like a beginner when we did randori at Denver judo haha. People talking trash don't realize that sometimes you just compete against whoever shows up. I had to fight 2 and 3rd Dan when I was an orange belt, and I had the choice to opt out if I wanted to.
I’ve never done judo in my life, but I’m guessing the beginner just had his hips too rotated and his legs too close together when his opponent approached, leaving him off balance and an easy sweep with that catch. a wider stance and your hips FACING your opponent stabilizes your base, no? harder to trip and/or push over? and then u just make your move after him? I’m not sure that’s just how I’d imagine getting around this
@@WillyDaG1818The orange belt was just in over his head. Had he stood the way you described, the black belt would have simply used a different technique such as Ippon Seoi Nage or Uchi Mata etc. after a quick unbalance (kuzushi) technique.👍🥋
You don't know how hard it is until you actually try it. Put on a Judo gi, enter the open weight division and let me know how you do. Anybody who has done Judo would actually understand how hard it is to work up the courage to step on a mat regardless of age, weight or experience. Please understand that things like this happen even at the highest level. ( I have trained with this guy before, he's not half bad. ANYBODY can get can get caught, all it takes is one mistake... That's the beauty of judo!
He is lying. It is a LOT of fun and I am 5'2 and 135 I can't get enough of it. It is like a HUGE puzzle. Esp. coming from another martial arts background. Listen, I used to CF. Ripped. Cool story. But when a 15 year old is mopping the floor with me...I had to get better lol
Judo comps are weird like that. I entered one with three months of "Judo" experience and managed to make it to the finals by pins and subs before getting out pointed by someone that actually knew what they were doing.
The place of the scripture which he read was this, He was led as a sheep to the slaughter; and like a lamb dumb before his shearer, so opened he not his mouth: Acts 8:32But Jesus held his peace, And the high priest answered and said unto him, I adjure thee by the living God, that thou tell us whether thou be the Christ, the Son of God. Matthew 26:63
@@jacobshroyer2420 Good job. Ground work is great for Judo. My teacher heavily focuses on ground work at the same time as throws. It gives you a better understanding of the biomechanics of their body, and lets you somewhat easily take the win when you get to the ground.
There is no shame in this, these are real arts based on skill, if a guy with 4 years experience easily beats someone with 14 years there's something wrong there. Fair play for him stepping up
@wrestlingjudoms1302right, I was a blue belt after 4 years going for brown lol. It doesn't seem like he has 4 years of experience. The 4 year mark is where you start actually getting very skilled at that point. Maybe he trains once every 3 weeks for 4 years lol.
@wrestlingjudoms1302 I'm still yon-kyu after 4 years, about to do the exam for San kyu, in my case because of my Sensei's vision, he thinks that raising an excellent sho dan requires at least 8 years, and I'm ok with that, I'm enjoying the journey, at least in the technical aspect, I have already knowledge of the 100 techniques, so surely I haven't wasted my time in these 4 years of practice. Getting the dan will only be a consequence of the effort. I went to several national competitions at university level, so I can say that kind of things happens to everyone at some point, it doesn't matter if you're a dan or kyu belt, and everyone has its own time to be skilled in shiai.
I can understand. But in my country this doesn't exist. I won against people with Black belt several times, but had a too low belt for my time of experience. I would be very bored at matching belt tournaments. You learn the skill of a another person when you always train and compete with them. The first 100 times it will be just loosing but you will win skill by the time. In most countries were judo is popular you don't have belt matching training or competition. Win by loosing.
Training and learning Judo as an adult is not easy at all. It takes a lot of coordination, strength, and sensitivity. I started at age 36 and have competed in Senior elite in a few tournaments. It is hard as hell. He is a Gokyo and if he is a BJJ higher rank, he has to test the waters at these tournaments to get that experience. You definitely bombed him, Jesse. 😂 Atleast his Ukemi was decent.
Judo was always the most fun for me. I took BJJ classes and Judo back to back every wednesday, friday, and saturday for 8 years, and there's definitely nothing more satisfying then throwing someone 40 pounds heavier than you over your head like they're a toddler mattress. I just wish i wouldve stayed with it when I moved and found a new gym, but my mom really couldnt afford it anymore. Now I'm grown and can't even afford toilet paper 😅😂
@@jacobarmstrong9227 im 100% serious . I stopped using toilet paper . Just make sure you only use your left hand and wash with soap . Only using paper now is disgusting to me . Also . The whole of Asia and the Middle East also use this tactic
@@UndefeatedEagle shit bro, I thought all food was just instant ramen for like the first 5 years of my life. I didn't know any other meal until I started school 😂
been doing judo for 4 years as well. before that i did BJJ for 4 years as well and the learning curve between the two arts are waay different. props to the orange belt for taking on a challenge!
I felt the same against the Austrian champion under -73kg, but it took him longer to take me down. Although it felt from really high by a hane goshi. I was a judo blue belt then 😂. It was a nice flying experience haha.
In 4 years you can have invested 2000 hours in to judo or just 400 hours. It varies. And ranking also varies greatly by location. Too many variables to measure skill in years. There is correlation in years, but not enough to assume skill.
@InspiriumESOO True, but even 400 hours is more than an orange belt IIUC, unless you're an extreme outlier like me who's still a white belt in BJJ after 10 years of consistent training but that's a 1 in 1000 outlier
@@MaxLohMusic 4 years is enough to learn most of the Judo techniques to adquacy, but not how to set them up in competition unless you trained specifically to become a one-trick pony. Learning the timing and finesse for competition you either learn as a kid or it will take a decade or more as it is truly the hardest thing.
@@tobiasrietveld3819 that's only true if you're an extremely slow learner such as myself. The average person gets a Judo black belt in 4-5 years and is able to hit throws in competition. It also depends on how you train and how often you spar. One of the biggest reasons people think Judo is "hard" is some techniques are drilled the opposite way of how it's done in competition. Osoto gari is the most obvious example of this. This is just artificially raising the skill gap when you could've just drilled it the same way as it's done in sparring and competition.
That’s crazy. What people don’t realize is that dude that got slammed would destroy the VAST majority of untrained humans with massive, destructive success. There’s levels to this shit
No he wouldn't. He looked like he had been doing it for about 4 minutes, not 4 years. I'd bet that most average ability athletes(of pretty much any sport) could probably pretty easily take this guy.
Most tournaments are not split by experience, only weight and age. However, judoka in officially sanctioned ijf tournaments have points that they get, and a win for this gentleman against the orange belt would not get him any points.
@@SeanWinters its been a while but back when I competed in California they’d often bracket out white/green, brown and black belts separately unless it was a smaller tournament and they didn’t have enough people to fill out.
Bro u cud tell that he was terrified. He took the class to try n make himself gain confidence but he my friend is made for a desk job with paper and staplers and tasks for each hour
I love watching judo, but practicing this art form I’d have broken bones lol correct me if I’m wrong he kinda looked like he’s been training for 4 months lol and the 14year guy was warming up with a training partner lol
You can notice the experience by their stances ,the experienced guy had his arms close to his chest where it's the strongest while the other guy had his arms out .
Sportsmanship 👍. Fantastic example of how the best of the best, always seem to "makes it look easy." Mind-blowing to see how a black belt, in just one breath, maybe a half of breath, is 100% in control. The skills and focus are scary.
Great how he didnt wanna use on him some crazy throw that he didnt learn how to fall yet as an orange belt. Could have ended his career. So he went with a simple but effective one. Great sportmanship
Oh noooo. You can tell the orange belt was setting himself up, just by looking at his stance. Right foot directly out and easily accessible😭 THE O SOTO GARI WAS GOOD THO❤❤
Before even looking at the belts, just by how each of them behaved and moved I could easily tell which one was the 14 years epxerienced one and which one was the 7 years experienced one.
@@johnpauljones9310yeah plus he was teaching with his power hand instead of his weak hand which is why he got blasted with that Osoto. They teach you not to do this as a white belt. I don’t see how one can train for four years and make such a huge fundamental mistake like that. Reaching with your power hand in Judo is like a Boxer crossing their feet.
Is 22 too old to start judo, and what are specific places/organizations to look for to see if I can. I have a wrestling background back in middle and high school but I have always wanted to try judo.
Nope ...starting at 22 is fine.....depends what you want out of it . Probably not going to the Olympics .....but you are still young enough to learn and enjoy as well as being able to compete . your wrestling background will give you a great base . guaranteed you will love it .....Nobody Teaches people to Fly, so many different ways, better than a Judoka Good luck
@@youngkwak9931 Everyone I fight is treated equally. I won't hold back because of rank. By signing up for an open weight category, you should know what you're signing up for.
@@youngkwak9931 it’s an open weight category so you know what you’re signing up for if orange belt read that and was still clueless on wtf that meant then maybe he should pick a diff sport maybe instead of a gi he should pick up classes that helps with his third grade reading level cause learning to understand what he’s reading can save his life.. literally
So did the other guy, whatever grip make a throw with it. My instructor always said fight waste effort fighting for a particular grip take what uki gives you and make a throw with it, he was first white guy to make black belt at the kodokan, MP during Vietnam.
I want to learn judo? How do I start? I can’t find any gyms near me. I used to be a basketball athlete/weightlifter so I feel like judo would be best for me
Tip #1 when starting to compete or competing up. Focus on not getting beat. Here you were focused on getting your grip. In practice, that is good. In comps, that is wrong. Always have to be aware that the other guy is trying to catch you off guard. Always on guard then look for openings and try to execute.
@@Jbutler.90 Sorry my friend ...didn't realise this was you in the vid. Don't think a lot of people on here realise that your Osoto on this Orange Belt was actually quite compassionate ....seeing as you could have ended this Match anyway you wanted ...... He gave you the opening, you took it , no messing ...Nicely done good sir .
I don't get why people are so mad at the orange belt. He stepped in, got smashed onto the tatami, and owned his loss. It's Judo, you either win, or lose. This time he lost, and there's nothing wrong with that.
Well done to both, result was expected. Black belt could have thrown him a touch softer was obvious from his first grip up he wasn’t that experienced. Light wazari and hold…
He's not a child. A lot of people respect you more when you actually fight them instead of just going light. I knew this guy before the fight and knew he could take it.
I couldn’t disagree more. Throw your opponent softer? Nah man, that’s how injury is more likely to occur. Maybe opponent thinks he can post out with his arm because he is being thrown “softly” and then breaks his arm. I’m surprised this got as many upvotes. It’s a foolish statement.
It did not seem excessive to me - just enough force to maximize probability of ippon and no more, is what I saw.
Nah, this is one of Judo’s most devastating throws, there is no light version of this throw especially in competition. As a judoka entering a competition you should understand how to break fall to protect yourself. These throws may look rough to the average person, and a lot are, but the uke in judo learns how to absorb impact to a remarkable degree that the average person probably can’t perceive.
The slam wasn't the problem for me it was the elbow dropping with it that I had a problem with 🤔🤔
Judo is so unforgiving, margin for error so small, consequences so high
It is unforgiving don't get me wrong. But this was no small error, you never let your foot get that far out, and if you do, you should at least make an attempt to defend that leg. But again, everyone makes mistakes sometimes, even big ones, and most of the time from what I see, matches seem to end by someone walking straight into the technique. I love Judo, it gives you such a great understanding of the human body and its mechanisms, peoples natural reflexes, the rhythm of a fight, etc.
What kind of consequences are you talking about?
It's punishing as f****
@@NoskPur ...did you not see his head bounce off the canvas? LOL
The consequence is you get hit with the planet lol.
Kudos to him for stepping up to fight. It's one thing to train, another thing to compete. No shame in losing to anyone on the day, you still beat everyone who didnt compete at all.
That's why judo guys are so tough. Almost every tournament I've spectated is open belt.
Training's even harder - you could be a white belt for two or three weeks and you'll be sparring with black belts for long periods of time by then.
Lol, Kudo
And the ones who train beat those who don’t train at all! Which is 90% of the population as a rough guesstamation
Thx for the "No Shame". My match for 1st place in my age/weight class at the National AAU lasted all of maybe 5 seconds. My opponent executed a beyond perfect I don't even know, Moroto Seoi Nage or Ippon Seoi Nage so flawlessly and effortlessly, I didn't realize what had actually happened until I was already off the mat and sitting back with my team hahaha. . . won a sweet 2nd place medal though :-)
@@KenKrollo LOL ONE POSSER
Bro I've been doing judo for 11 years and you still made me feel like a beginner when we did randori at Denver judo haha. People talking trash don't realize that sometimes you just compete against whoever shows up. I had to fight 2 and 3rd Dan when I was an orange belt, and I had the choice to opt out if I wanted to.
I've been going at it for 10 and i know like 4 attacks and 1 counter bc i forgot everything
True in our dojo there is one white 3 Orange and like 5 Black 3 bronze😂
I’ve never done judo in my life, but I’m guessing the beginner just had his hips too rotated and his legs too close together when his opponent approached, leaving him off balance and an easy sweep with that catch. a wider stance and your hips FACING your opponent stabilizes your base, no? harder to trip and/or push over? and then u just make your move after him? I’m not sure that’s just how I’d imagine getting around this
@@WillyDaG1818The orange belt was just in over his head. Had he stood the way you described, the black belt would have simply used a different technique such as Ippon Seoi Nage or Uchi Mata etc. after a quick unbalance (kuzushi) technique.👍🥋
There should not be such a disproportion of actors becouse lower grade (still kyu) might get sirious injured.
Didn't know Pedro Pascal was a judoka lol
He does it all. 😂
😂
LOL
Vote for Pedro
he also was alot of things
You don't know how hard it is until you actually try it. Put on a Judo gi, enter the open weight division and let me know how you do. Anybody who has done Judo would actually understand how hard it is to work up the courage to step on a mat regardless of age, weight or experience. Please understand that things like this happen even at the highest level. ( I have trained with this guy before, he's not half bad. ANYBODY can get can get caught, all it takes is one mistake... That's the beauty of judo!
He is lying. It is a LOT of fun and I am 5'2 and 135
I can't get enough of it.
It is like a HUGE puzzle. Esp. coming from another martial arts background.
Listen, I used to CF. Ripped. Cool story.
But when a 15 year old is mopping the floor with me...I had to get better lol
Nah I body these guys
Im always scared but I was always walk away with Gold somehow 😂
@@Lowkey-Elz This is next level stuff
@@YesitisDex I am a girl 😂
This comment section is ridiculous. Guy had the guts to compete and he got smashed by a national level player. Zero shame in that.
International at that! He needs huge props. He did what 90% of people won't.
Where's your dojo? I'd like to do randori
@@Jbutler.90 ...and has a concussion for it
AMEN
He's fine
Judo is probably one of the most intense and amazing martial arts. My hats go off to every euro practitioner, regardless of rank.
Why only euro?
14 years of experience, damn this was like leading a lamb to slaughter
Judo comps are weird like that. I entered one with three months of "Judo" experience and managed to make it to the finals by pins and subs before getting out pointed by someone that actually knew what they were doing.
The place of the scripture which he read was this, He was led as a sheep to the slaughter; and like a lamb dumb before his shearer, so opened he not his mouth: Acts 8:32But Jesus held his peace, And the high priest answered and said unto him, I adjure thee by the living God, that thou tell us whether thou be the Christ, the Son of God. Matthew 26:63
@@jacobshroyer2420 Good job. Ground work is great for Judo. My teacher heavily focuses on ground work at the same time as throws. It gives you a better understanding of the biomechanics of their body, and lets you somewhat easily take the win when you get to the ground.
Great follow through! Perfectly executed
Orange belt was just happy to be there
Good on you for getting in there, keep it up!
Nice osoto gari 🥋👏🔥
Respect to the guy who was keen on doing the fight. Fighting with people better than you can improve your skills so much more
This just makes me want to start training judo. Nothing but respect for both of you
There is no shame in this, these are real arts based on skill, if a guy with 4 years experience easily beats someone with 14 years there's something wrong there. Fair play for him stepping up
Still, 4 years of judo and still standing with a heavy front leg…
@wrestlingjudoms1302right, I was a blue belt after 4 years going for brown lol. It doesn't seem like he has 4 years of experience. The 4 year mark is where you start actually getting very skilled at that point. Maybe he trains once every 3 weeks for 4 years lol.
@wrestlingjudoms1302 I'm still yon-kyu after 4 years, about to do the exam for San kyu, in my case because of my Sensei's vision, he thinks that raising an excellent sho dan requires at least 8 years, and I'm ok with that, I'm enjoying the journey, at least in the technical aspect, I have already knowledge of the 100 techniques, so surely I haven't wasted my time in these 4 years of practice.
Getting the dan will only be a consequence of the effort. I went to several national competitions at university level, so I can say that kind of things happens to everyone at some point, it doesn't matter if you're a dan or kyu belt, and everyone has its own time to be skilled in shiai.
Hit with the osoto after 4 years
@wrestlingjudoms1302 Right, 4 years you're at least blue belt unless you don't train on a regular basis.
@@daelimin8rI’m noticing that they don’t teach (or rather they don’t practice) how to take a proper fall in jujitsu. Why is that?
That throw was as gentle as he could have made it.
like, “ya, I’m gonna win. but don’t worry, I won’t hurt ya.”
That's why I don't like local tournaments without strict rules on matching belts
I can understand. But in my country this doesn't exist. I won against people with Black belt several times, but had a too low belt for my time of experience. I would be very bored at matching belt tournaments. You learn the skill of a another person when you always train and compete with them. The first 100 times it will be just loosing but you will win skill by the time. In most countries were judo is popular you don't have belt matching training or competition. Win by loosing.
Gotta go way beyond orange belt in four years. Guess he's been practicing for a lot less long, maybe less than 2 years
No
My buddy got his brown in 2 years
@@kaipo8489I got my black belt in less than a week
Could have had it in a lot less if I was willing to spend more on shipping
@@Meowface.😂😂
@@kaipo8489not possible
That was mercy right there. Glad he didn't kill the poor guy
Training and learning Judo as an adult is not easy at all. It takes a lot of coordination, strength, and sensitivity. I started at age 36 and have competed in Senior elite in a few tournaments. It is hard as hell. He is a Gokyo and if he is a BJJ higher rank, he has to test the waters at these tournaments to get that experience.
You definitely bombed him, Jesse. 😂 Atleast his Ukemi was decent.
This is like a seminar video, experience written in movement.
Well that went exactly as I expected it to 😂
No hesitation at all as soon as he had grips. I made the same sound as the crowd with how smooth it was lol
Judo was always the most fun for me. I took BJJ classes and Judo back to back every wednesday, friday, and saturday for 8 years, and there's definitely nothing more satisfying then throwing someone 40 pounds heavier than you over your head like they're a toddler mattress. I just wish i wouldve stayed with it when I moved and found a new gym, but my mom really couldnt afford it anymore. Now I'm grown and can't even afford toilet paper 😅😂
Who needs toilet paper . Water is best
@@UndefeatedEagle 🤣💀
@@jacobarmstrong9227 im 100% serious . I stopped using toilet paper . Just make sure you only use your left hand and wash with soap . Only using paper now is disgusting to me . Also . The whole of Asia and the Middle East also use this tactic
@@jacobarmstrong9227 but i do know . I lived on instant ramen for 6 months . Its not fun
@@UndefeatedEagle shit bro, I thought all food was just instant ramen for like the first 5 years of my life. I didn't know any other meal until I started school 😂
great attack, he was stretched out and already on one foot before kuzushi applied.
Ah yes, I see that you know your Judo well.
been doing judo for 4 years as well. before that i did BJJ for 4 years as well and the learning curve between the two arts are waay different. props to the orange belt for taking on a challenge!
One of the smoothest Osoto's I've seen 👀
We've all been on the losing side of this, some of us have been on the winning side of this. Its part of doing martial arts. Good on both men
I felt the same against the Austrian champion under -73kg, but it took him longer to take me down. Although it felt from really high by a hane goshi. I was a judo blue belt then 😂. It was a nice flying experience haha.
*I fell
The feeling of struggle followed by effortless flying in a clean throw is magic.
We all just gonna casually ignore that "4 years" of experience is an orange belt now? Did Judo suddenly switch to BJJ standards for belt colors??
In 4 years you can have invested 2000 hours in to judo or just 400 hours. It varies. And ranking also varies greatly by location. Too many variables to measure skill in years. There is correlation in years, but not enough to assume skill.
@InspiriumESOO True, but even 400 hours is more than an orange belt IIUC, unless you're an extreme outlier like me who's still a white belt in BJJ after 10 years of consistent training but that's a 1 in 1000 outlier
He made that look so effortless
Bro looks like 4 minute of judo…
The problem with a non experienced Judoka is that he is panicking, look at the calmness on the other guy.
Ah yes tfw 4 years of experience qualifies as "inexperienced" these days...
@@MaxLohMusic 4 years is enough to learn most of the Judo techniques to adquacy, but not how to set them up in competition unless you trained specifically to become a one-trick pony. Learning the timing and finesse for competition you either learn as a kid or it will take a decade or more as it is truly the hardest thing.
@@tobiasrietveld3819 that's only true if you're an extremely slow learner such as myself. The average person gets a Judo black belt in 4-5 years and is able to hit throws in competition.
It also depends on how you train and how often you spar. One of the biggest reasons people think Judo is "hard" is some techniques are drilled the opposite way of how it's done in competition. Osoto gari is the most obvious example of this. This is just artificially raising the skill gap when you could've just drilled it the same way as it's done in sparring and competition.
Sensei Butler, how would you deal with a more experienced student who appears to enjoy hurting or devastating a newbie?
Was that a cross collar osoto? Really like where you placed your weight in that throw
That’s crazy. What people don’t realize is that dude that got slammed would destroy the VAST majority of untrained humans with massive, destructive success. There’s levels to this shit
Lmao
No he wouldn't. He looked like he had been doing it for about 4 minutes, not 4 years. I'd bet that most average ability athletes(of pretty much any sport) could probably pretty easily take this guy.
@@pimplepickerton cool, good thing I specifically said untrained humans and not athletes 🤙
No he wouldn’t 😂
Orange belt is fuck all, do you do judo?
Judo is so fun, I've recently added it to my BJJ training and I can't get enough of it.
Standing straight up was his first mistake
The black belt is very aware of his foot distance. He keeps his fight tight and doesn’t even expose them until he leans out for the sweep.
That’s exactly how I looked going up against my BJJ instructor who is also a black belt in judo today.
This is not 4 years of judo, more like 4 months
ZERO years of Judo should tell you to not put all your weight on your front foot, and stick it out into harms way🙄.
The way he just walks into him, lays him down and moves off 😂
Wait…”4 years of Judo” went down that quick and easy?
Must’ve been a really small pool for them to match them up lol
Most tournaments are not split by experience, only weight and age. However, judoka in officially sanctioned ijf tournaments have points that they get, and a win for this gentleman against the orange belt would not get him any points.
@@SeanWinters its been a while but back when I competed in California they’d often bracket out white/green, brown and black belts separately unless it was a smaller tournament and they didn’t have enough people to fill out.
The Addidas brand Gi is a dead givaway that man is skilled AF 😂
Name of the throw ?
He had a go and that's more than 90% of watchers would do, to embarrassed to learn that there are levels to the game😊
Most of us will never come close of being that good
Whats the name of the throw?
Bro has 4 years of judo or 4 months? That was ridiculous 😂
It's the nuanced details that bought you another milliseconds withing that hold and press downward.
His ukemi was actually decent
Bro u cud tell that he was terrified. He took the class to try n make himself gain confidence but he my friend is made for a desk job with paper and staplers and tasks for each hour
Rude and ignorant thing to say.
This is 4 days.
Yes 👍🏻 😂 💯 true something like maybe 4 hours
You’re seriously underestimating the skill level of a judoka.
@@jorgeherrera1074 Yess, i am onley 3.dan.
4 minutes..
@@nenadzdravkovic950 Must be a McDojo then.
David Beckham doing side quests
This is great and all, but how is your newaza?
I love watching judo, but practicing this art form I’d have broken bones lol correct me if I’m wrong he kinda looked like he’s been training for 4 months lol and the 14year guy was warming up with a training partner lol
You can notice the experience by their stances ,the experienced guy had his arms close to his chest where it's the strongest while the other guy had his arms out .
What is the name of that move?
O Soto Gari
Sportsmanship 👍. Fantastic example of how the best of the best, always seem to "makes it look easy." Mind-blowing to see how a black belt, in just one breath, maybe a half of breath, is 100% in control. The skills and focus are scary.
Great how he didnt wanna use on him some crazy throw that he didnt learn how to fall yet as an orange belt. Could have ended his career. So he went with a simple but effective one. Great sportmanship
Basically the first throw you learn... but man landing on top of uke is a bit rough.
Could be worse though.
Oh noooo. You can tell the orange belt was setting himself up, just by looking at his stance. Right foot directly out and easily accessible😭 THE O SOTO GARI WAS GOOD THO❤❤
Before even looking at the belts, just by how each of them behaved and moved I could easily tell which one was the 14 years epxerienced one and which one was the 7 years experienced one.
Omg shut up no u can't how by their fukin haircut? Lmao
U definitely looked at the belt lmmfao
Are you sure you got 4 years and not 4 months.
what move is that called?
O Soto Gari
What move is that
nice of him to take you down quickly rather than try and use you for practice.
4 years of reading about judo maybe. Guys who do judo for 4 years don't move like this on during a match))
Maybe it's his first competition and he's jittery?)
4 days.
@@yera629 Agree. No way anyone does Judo for four years and is still orange belt or gets caught with an osotogari like that.
@@johnpauljones9310yeah plus he was teaching with his power hand instead of his weak hand which is why he got blasted with that Osoto. They teach you not to do this as a white belt. I don’t see how one can train for four years and make such a huge fundamental mistake like that. Reaching with your power hand in Judo is like a Boxer crossing their feet.
@@AusarisTV so you're just supposed to never reach with your power hand, got it lol
Beginner: Pfft, I can do that
Also Beginner: Why does my body hurt all of a sudden
"Well that sucked"
Is 22 too old to start judo, and what are specific places/organizations to look for to see if I can. I have a wrestling background back in middle and high school but I have always wanted to try judo.
Nope ...starting at 22 is fine.....depends what you want out of it .
Probably not going to the Olympics .....but you are still young enough to learn and enjoy as well as being able to compete .
your wrestling background will give you a great base .
guaranteed you will love it .....Nobody Teaches people to Fly, so many different ways, better than a Judoka
Good luck
did the black belt land with his elbow in the lower grades throat?
No competition for a black belt. Crazy
No one said it was. This is the difference between years in the sport. Orange belt should be applauded for having the guts to fight.
@@Jbutler.90 that guy is a fish and you're a monster why did you embarass him with that osoto gari.
@@youngkwak9931 Everyone I fight is treated equally. I won't hold back because of rank. By signing up for an open weight category, you should know what you're signing up for.
@@youngkwak9931 it’s an open weight category so you know what you’re signing up for if orange belt read that and was still clueless on wtf that meant then maybe he should pick a diff sport maybe instead of a gi he should pick up classes that helps with his third grade reading level cause learning to understand what he’s reading can save his life.. literally
@@Jbutler.90 👑
4 years of judo and he goes for right lapel as his first grip in RvR. More like 4 months
So did the other guy, whatever grip make a throw with it. My instructor always said fight waste effort fighting for a particular grip take what uki gives you and make a throw with it, he was first white guy to make black belt at the kodokan, MP during Vietnam.
You train in Denver bro ? I was gonna stop by and check out Denver Judo
Stop by!
Someone in my last tournament tore my shoulder, it’s been really hard to get back into competing cause I just don’t wanna get injured again
I want to learn judo? How do I start? I can’t find any gyms near me.
I used to be a basketball athlete/weightlifter so I feel like judo would be best for me
😂😂😂😂Old-fashioned trick 👍
Tip #1 when starting to compete or competing up. Focus on not getting beat. Here you were focused on getting your grip. In practice, that is good. In comps, that is wrong. Always have to be aware that the other guy is trying to catch you off guard. Always on guard then look for openings and try to execute.
Id hate to fall so quickly after 4 years of training
Keep going 💪
Second video I see off this Judoka.
I am already starting to suspect what his favorite technic is..😊
Honestly, I have many of Osoto but I wouldn't say it's my favorite. I really like Sode or tsuri goshi
@@Jbutler.90 Sorry my friend ...didn't realise this was you in the vid.
Don't think a lot of people on here realise that your Osoto on this Orange Belt was actually quite compassionate ....seeing as you could have ended this Match anyway you wanted ...... He gave you the opening, you took it , no messing ...Nicely done good sir .
Exactly how my first tournament went.
Glad to say that my teacher who teaches me judo has a career of 40 years of judo
Reaching right handed to their lapel when in a right handed stance is open to this and other throws
Aren’t there enough black belts in the Denver area?
Orange belt is not 4 years more like 1-2😂
Looked like 4 weeks of judo vs 4 years of judo
Good I'm a judoka tomorrow I Have a judomatch I'm so nervous 😓 😅😮
i just watched this 4 times over thinking they were different rounds and wondering how the guy on the left didnt learn how to defend the same takedown
Im 16yo and this year is my twelfth year of judo🥋 😊😊
4 months may be?
Jeeeez
4 years for that!
My man was seriously crying in the shower that night
That looked more like 4 weeks vs 14 years.
I don't get why people are so mad at the orange belt. He stepped in, got smashed onto the tatami, and owned his loss. It's Judo, you either win, or lose. This time he lost, and there's nothing wrong with that.
There is nothing wrong with that, you are right, just so long as he strives to get better and remove his mistakes.
@@sigmaoperator1688 Agreed.
Too many Keyboard Blackbelts ...that's the problem
Judo for takeodwn jiujitsu for submissions