Love it !!! Waki Gatame is my top 3 for tournaments. I learned it in aikido but modified it by securing the collar grab with 2 hands and then sticking my same-side foot into Uke's hip to stretch out Uke's arm out before doing a shift to do the elbow lock.
Thanks for leaving in the end part where the student tries the move. So many black belts never let anyone do the move on them but I think it's very instructive to see you guide the student through the movements since they could do something that you didn't expect and think to have to explain.
You can turn behind her with tenkan step and therefore she can’t pull her arm. But let’s say she did pull her arm back you can change your grip and go for sankyo I hope it helps you 👍🏻
Mate you are now my favourite channel. I have been training aikido (kenkyukai) since September. I did Machado BJJ three years ago but quit with a shoulder injury. As of this week I have gone back to BJJ, gingerly as a 50 year-old two stripe white belt. I have not quit aikido though. Event after one week back at BJJ I can see the synergies, particularly in the importance of maintaining connection. I discovered your channel yesterday and it really struck a chord. I’ll work through all your videos. Also, congratulations on the BJJ black belt. I know how much work that took.
Hi, been a fan for some time now, love your work and I wanted to ask if there'a a chance you'd be willing to do a livestream chat about aikido/aikijitsu, we share a similar passion with these arts and I'd love to chat about it, let me know, regardless thanks for what you do! ✌
I internal arts, there are concepts of opening the joints to use the full power of the surrounding regions of said joint, for example when you open the shoulder joint, you would feel all the tension gone and you connect better to your back, i noticed this is something that exists in aikijujitsu and aikido, where you creat a unified unit with your back in addition to circular motions, what is your opinion on this?
Thanks for the comment. I agree with the internal training process. Difficult to reshape the body, and even more difficult to apply during live training.
@@Aiki_and_Jiu Taiji is the hardest of the internal martial arts to both learn and to fight with, because it reshapes the body where every joint become a spring loaded with potential energy, through standing exercises and practicing the form, and then going to what is called tuishou(not the wrestling variant since it is fake but a training where both of our arms collide and turn and stick to each other in an effort to punch or unbalance the opponent and issue force),and then free fighting called san shou, and the most mysterious internal art is bagua, since no one really knows the fighting method in which it used, but the power generation methods are known, and the often simplified art is xingyiquan which appears simple since it doesn't contain a lot in it's syllabus, but beneath the surface, it's five punches are how the body should function in the internal martial art framework.
Love it !!! Waki Gatame is my top 3 for tournaments. I learned it in aikido but modified it by securing the collar grab with 2 hands and then sticking my same-side foot into Uke's hip to stretch out Uke's arm out before doing a shift to do the elbow lock.
Nice setup
Keren 👍👍
Thanks for leaving in the end part where the student tries the move. So many black belts never let anyone do the move on them but I think it's very instructive to see you guide the student through the movements since they could do something that you didn't expect and think to have to explain.
Thanks for the comment 🙏
I have a set up for this, off the russian arm tie.
Cool. I’ll have to try that 👍🏼
Big fan of your channel. Congrats on the black belt!
Thanks 🙏
You can turn behind her with tenkan step and therefore she can’t pull her arm. But let’s say she did pull her arm back you can change your grip and go for sankyo I hope it helps you 👍🏻
Yes, there are lots of options once you pull the arm and the opponent starts moving.
Mate you are now my favourite channel. I have been training aikido (kenkyukai) since September. I did Machado BJJ three years ago but quit with a shoulder injury. As of this week I have gone back to BJJ, gingerly as a 50 year-old two stripe white belt. I have not quit aikido though. Event after one week back at BJJ I can see the synergies, particularly in the importance of maintaining connection. I discovered your channel yesterday and it really struck a chord.
I’ll work through all your videos.
Also, congratulations on the BJJ black belt. I know how much work that took.
Thanks for the comment. Glad you are getting back into training.
What branch of Daito Ryu do you practice? Sorry if I missed it somewhere. Thank you!
Takumakai is the lineage, from Kawabe to my teacher.
Thank you
Hi, been a fan for some time now, love your work and I wanted to ask if there'a a chance you'd be willing to do a livestream chat about aikido/aikijitsu, we share a similar passion with these arts and I'd love to chat about it, let me know, regardless thanks for what you do! ✌
Would love to chat. Let me know when/how and we can coordinate.
@@Aiki_and_Jiu awesome! Thank you 🙏, what time zone are you in?
@@martialgeeks (GMT-4) Eastern time zone. You can message me on FB or Instagram.
Nice vídeo I know this technique call "Fujiwara armbar"
I internal arts, there are concepts of opening the joints to use the full power of the surrounding regions of said joint, for example when you open the shoulder joint, you would feel all the tension gone and you connect better to your back, i noticed this is something that exists in aikijujitsu and aikido, where you creat a unified unit with your back in addition to circular motions, what is your opinion on this?
Thanks for the comment. I agree with the internal training process. Difficult to reshape the body, and even more difficult to apply during live training.
@@Aiki_and_Jiu Taiji is the hardest of the internal martial arts to both learn and to fight with, because it reshapes the body where every joint become a spring loaded with potential energy, through standing exercises and practicing the form, and then going to what is called tuishou(not the wrestling variant since it is fake but a training where both of our arms collide and turn and stick to each other in an effort to punch or unbalance the opponent and issue force),and then free fighting called san shou, and the most mysterious internal art is bagua, since no one really knows the fighting method in which it used, but the power generation methods are known, and the often simplified art is xingyiquan which appears simple since it doesn't contain a lot in it's syllabus, but beneath the surface, it's five punches are how the body should function in the internal martial art framework.
Ah, very familiar 😂
Yes indeed!