You should try *catch wrestling!* *Mitsuyo Maeda,* the man who trained the Gracies, trained in catch wrestling and added it to his moves list. You'd be wise to do the same.
Man I miss Judo & Jujitsu sooo much. I never got my Black Belt (stuck at 3rd ° Brown) haven't been able to train in 14 years. Accident left me needing a hip replacement & a nasty testicular hernia. Now I'm 50yrs old & have stage 4 cancer. Roll on People! BTW Grappling Arts saved me in real situations more than once!
@@Atomic_Pinneaple That's a Bad Ass Handle! I'd try a few places if possible. So you can see what best fits your needs. I learned a lot of locks, holds & throws by watching & practicing w/a friend. Or from visiting other Dojo's. Good luck & Keep rolling!
@@vids595 A big throw wins you a judo match and you can't pull guard. Also the ground game is very fast paced, if you cannot quickly pin or submit your opponent, the ref just stands you up. Techniques are the same but the game is very different.
The instructors are obviously both extremely proficient with these techniques but they both did a great job of explaining them at a beginner level and making the basics accessible. Good video!
I bloody love Judo, when I get a Judo technique on someone it makes me so happy. Mainly because I suck at submissions... Great video guys, totally agree with your choice of techniques for NOGI. Thank you for the free content!
i'm glad i stumbled upon this, cause i'm terrible at takedowns but currently working on it. Something as simple as realizing that a left handed vs right handed situation filters out a lot of techniques to begin with was eye opening. Might be obvious to some, but it wasn't something my coaches mentioned ever ( since we assume most of us are right handed i suppose). This video was concise, so well explained with the xtra aussie humour, thank you so much. Seems i will circle back to this one quite often
Funny you should say that, because my teacher is left handed. I am right handed and wondered why I was always shit at takedowns. This video made me realise it was because I have forever been doing them with my wrong leg forward! Stupid I know, but now I can at least start from a solid base knowing how to do things correctly!
AMIGO TRATA DE PULIR ESTAS TECNICAS DE DERRIBOS AL 100% ..O SOTO GARI... O UCHI GARI ...KO SOTO GARI ...KO UCHI GARI... ENTIENDE DEL TODO ESTAS 4 TECNICAS Y ELLAS TE LLEVARAN A COMPLETAR COMBO CON PROYECCIONES...
Hi! I just subscribed! The edits are clean asf and the teachers are really clear with their teaching. As a subscriber, one thing I’d like to suggest is in future educational videos, would you guys be able to add time stamps on the moves taught so that when I’m in a time crunch, we can easily come back to a specific move as review? Thanks guys!
The first one is great its so easy to understand im a wrestler and i do bjj but im trying to use more no gi judo because judo has more sweeps and stuff which i wanna use more ive seen many bad tutorials for the first one but this one explained it so much better ty
I use to use the 1st move the osoto gari throughout late elementary and middle school without knowing what it was, all I knew is it worked almost every time play wrestling and in real fights. Now I see why..
Modern Judo practitioners are terribly over-reliant on lapel grips and far too traditional... when I took over my high school wrestling team I integrated a ton of Judo techniques with modified grips (of course) and was very successful in the process... many other wrestling coaches actually taught Judo techniques but didn't recognize them as JUDO thinking THEY more or less "invented" a technique and we're terribly interested when they found out the technique has a name, place and a ton of variations long since well understood, described and utilized by the sport of Judo!! It's really the incredible naming strategy that sets it apart from all other grappling sports but the lapel exclusive grips and rats nest of ever changing rules hold it back.
Dumb take. Judo is reliant on gi grips because Judo is a sport in of itself, and the gi is the equipment used in the sport. That's like saying football players are over-reliant on their pads compared to rugby players, or since pro skiers only use skis they're somehow inferior to snowboarders
@@BURGAWMMA as soon as the IJF banned 50% of the moves I'd say yes it became just a sport unfortunately. Can't even do standing strangles/armlocks anymore for sport safety.
Could you address injury hazards and how to avoid them for each throw, especially for BJJ practitioners without significant judo training? To wit, I was seriously injured (long before your videos) when I tried Tai Otoshi for the first time against an unsuspecting BJJ white belt. Instead of cooperating with the throw and rolling he just sat on my leg instead, snapping my ACL and MCL. I think Tai Otoshi can also go badly for the uke if the uke doesn't know to roll or if the thrower doesn’t assist the uke’s rotation with his downward pull. Thanks
Awesome video, guys - beautifully demonstrated. Haven't done much no-gi training yet (very traditional judo where I train) but I got some really good tips here for later on - thanks for posting 🦘🦘🦘
Nice selection of throws. Really solid technique on the ashi waza stuff and the uchimata (which is technically ashi waza i guess, lol). Really liked the uchi into ankle pick combo. I have a tip for you that would greatly improve a couple of these, and even make the seoinage higher percentage and harder to take your back. Rather than trying to use your right hand (in these examples) to make connection and effect kuzushi in the tai otoshi and seoinage (in the "elbow pit" and armpit, respectively) try using your forearm with your arm held at a 90 degree angle (or *slightly* wider). Drive in with it, and keep your lower arm extended and away from your body (don't let the frame collapse). You'll find a couple of things: 1) The connection is much more secure, particularly when you/your opponent are sweaty. 2) You have better (or at least more reliable) leverage, as it is much easier to secure a solid frame. 3) on the seoinage, because you have a solid frame, it is harder to sprawl as there is greater forward kuzushi faster. And, 4) As your opponent has to now beat your frame, it is much harder to secure a grip on your neck/upper body, even if they do manage to sprawl out of being thrown. You're still I a bad spot, which is why I agree with you that it may not be the best option. But it will make it easier to get to your guard or scramble out, which beats getting choked haha! This requires some minor tweaks to your footwork (will need to be ever so slightly closer, due to less reach) and gripping/direction of pull on the other arm/wrist, but honestly, give it a try. There's more details to making it work (isn't there always, lol), but if you play around with it, I am sure you'll find it works amazingly well. Not a critique at all guys. I enjoyed the video greatly. Just a tip I received years ago that really helped me land these in nogi sparring. Hope it helps you too! Cheers.
@saltymember1062 1) International Judo competitors... compete in the gi. This is nogi technique, and yes, I'm sure it did. 2) I'm a 3rd degree black belt in Jiujitsu, own my own school, and have been teaching gi and nogi grappling for more than 15 years. What are your accreditations, tough guy? Lemme guess... 4 stripe white belt in bjj, or say orange or green belt in Judo. Only person that a) wouldn't recognize good technique advice if they were smacked over the head with it, and b) still thinks that black belts and competitors don't have anything left to learn. Stick with it, son. One day you'll realize what a stupid comment this was and look back on it (and I'm sure the many others you've made online) with embarrassment. Ossu.
Uchimata - cutting the leg from inside If you cutting the left leg that’s - Haraigoshi, like you did last repetition.😜 Other vice nice executions! 👏😎💪🤙
that Tai Otoshi is very hard to land on a sweaty no-gi partner. It's my favorite takedown from Gi positions but in a no-gi it's very hard. they can just slip the arm out fairly easy.
the ippon seoi nage have many variations but most common is the stand seoi nage and drop seoi nage. It can be worse if used wrong but used right and your opponent doesn't even know what just happened.
One nice off-balancing technique is a wrist grap followed by a bicep/shoulder pop with the opposite palm while stepping and driving. Works nicely on the one arm reach-gi or no gi.
Coming from a Judo background, should mean that you realize Uchi Mata is an Ashi Waza, or leg technique, not a Koshi Waza. You’re confusing Harai Goshi, a hip lifting move with Uchi Mata where the back of the thigh is swing up through the Uke’s thigh.😊
I think better way to do Osoto for no gi is being RvL, having an over or under hook, and do a hopping/ knee Osoto variation. Like, inserting the leg quickly first and then hopping into position with the base leg. Finish by truly lifting your leg once calf to calf, overcoming the resistance. Straight up throwing someone with a collar tire Osoto can work, but it’s more a surprise tactic. just my 2 cents as a judo black belt.
A lot of people are taught with Competition in mind in Judo but remember that you can do things outside of competition rules for defense. For the same side throw for me closer to the shoulder is better. I don’t want to miss the driving hand. Also, if you’re Sensi is only teaching you based on your dominant hand with throws that’s bad, there should be no dominant or preference!! For me it doesn’t matter whether you are left or right handed, whether my left hand lands first or right hand, whether you are moving left or right and backwards or forwards. You should be able to smoothly throw someone regardless that is the standard, Gi or no Gi etc should not matter!!! Learning where your weight is and where your opponents weight is, should be your goal. Once you have mastered feeling that you will be able to throw. Another thing is often when Judoka that haven’t really had intense study and practice do is give up on a throw rather than adjust to the movement of weight yours and the opponent. Secret for you the gentle way is feeling more than the strength, the best throw is the throw the opponent does for you. No effort or minimal effort.
If you liked this, check out our latest No Gi Judo video! 🥋 🤼♂️
th-cam.com/video/VqryaY9afQU/w-d-xo.html
Please . Takedown defense please
You should try *catch wrestling!*
*Mitsuyo Maeda,* the man who trained the Gracies, trained in catch wrestling and added it to his moves list.
You'd be wise to do the same.
I really want to learn judo so that l be good at me ground game
Hello judo or werstlling for strit faghit.,?
It's called wrestling
Man I miss Judo & Jujitsu sooo much. I never got my Black Belt (stuck at 3rd ° Brown) haven't been able to train in 14 years. Accident left me needing a hip replacement & a nasty testicular hernia. Now I'm 50yrs old & have stage 4 cancer. Roll on People! BTW Grappling Arts saved me in real situations more than once!
Hey dude you should be happy that you got to that advance of a level at all some people will never reach those levels ur a bad ass with a good story
I wish u only the best. Make sure your diet is excellent it.l help you heal.
I'll try to get into grappling, wishing you the best
@@Atomic_Pinneaple That's a Bad Ass Handle! I'd try a few places if possible. So you can see what best fits your needs. I learned a lot of locks, holds & throws by watching & practicing w/a friend. Or from visiting other Dojo's. Good luck & Keep rolling!
@@jamesgorman351 Thanks Bro! When I was younger I was Tuff & Ruthless! As I got older I was more Ruff & toothless! Stay Safe!
NO GI JUDO SHOULD BE A THING NOWADAYS. GIVE US NO GI JUDO COMPETITIONS.
Bro I went to Judo class in No Gi yesterday 😂😂 Coaches said I was hopeless
Why? We already have no gi juijitsu that incorporates everything from Judo plus wrestling techniques.
It’s called Greco
@@vids595 A big throw wins you a judo match and you can't pull guard. Also the ground game is very fast paced, if you cannot quickly pin or submit your opponent, the ref just stands you up. Techniques are the same but the game is very different.
@@zaterranwraith7596 Leg trips and sweeping techniques are a big part of judo, which are illegal in greco.
The instructors are obviously both extremely proficient with these techniques but they both did a great job of explaining them at a beginner level and making the basics accessible. Good video!
These techniques are to difficult for beginners and bjj players.
@@mmongiello722 ez
@@tsezarshenderovych9267 an average wrestler could do it.
@@mmongiello722check out our recent video for some easier options!
@@grapmedia I know them well already.
I bloody love Judo, when I get a Judo technique on someone it makes me so happy. Mainly because I suck at submissions... Great video guys, totally agree with your choice of techniques for NOGI. Thank you for the free content!
Thanks Tom! Glad you liked it
Oh so THATS how you counter the Osoto... thanks for clearing that up for me its so obvious now.
This is really good to see an expert judoka. It takes me back to my times when I used to study Japanese jiu jitsu.
Great job illustrating the smaller details like where to push or pull their weight. I'm terrible at standup grappling, will definitly practice these!
I like the focus on breaking balance and where you were putting your weight. nice stuff!
Great stuff. Former judo guy here as well. I enjoy finding which throws translate and which ones don't. The ending was awesome, OSS!
i'm glad i stumbled upon this, cause i'm terrible at takedowns but currently working on it. Something as simple as realizing that a left handed vs right handed situation filters out a lot of techniques to begin with was eye opening. Might be obvious to some, but it wasn't something my coaches mentioned ever ( since we assume most of us are right handed i suppose). This video was concise, so well explained with the xtra aussie humour, thank you so much. Seems i will circle back to this one quite often
Funny you should say that, because my teacher is left handed. I am right handed and wondered why I was always shit at takedowns. This video made me realise it was because I have forever been doing them with my wrong leg forward! Stupid I know, but now I can at least start from a solid base knowing how to do things correctly!
AMIGO TRATA DE PULIR ESTAS TECNICAS DE DERRIBOS AL 100% ..O SOTO GARI... O UCHI GARI ...KO SOTO GARI ...KO UCHI GARI... ENTIENDE DEL TODO ESTAS 4 TECNICAS Y ELLAS TE LLEVARAN A COMPLETAR COMBO CON PROYECCIONES...
Great video! Been adding Judo in to my GJJ and Striking and LOVING it!!! So useful, especially for setting up submissions.
Osoto is so underrated in no gi! I hit it pretty much every single roll (when they don't pull guard). Definitely gonna try that osoto defense🤣
“Its quite easy to defend actually”
:Does a standing backflip
👁️👄👁️
youtube.com/@movizmaza
Timestamp?
@@matthias4748 12:22
This is such an excellent video, thanks so much for posting.
Hi! I just subscribed! The edits are clean asf and the teachers are really clear with their teaching. As a subscriber, one thing I’d like to suggest is in future educational videos, would you guys be able to add time stamps on the moves taught so that when I’m in a time crunch, we can easily come back to a specific move as review?
Thanks guys!
Hey Musashi, absolutely. We will add time stamps to all current and future videos!
Thanks for your feedback!
Excellent video
The first one is great its so easy to understand im a wrestler and i do bjj but im trying to use more no gi judo because judo has more sweeps and stuff which i wanna use more ive seen many bad tutorials for the first one but this one explained it so much better ty
I use to use the 1st move the osoto gari throughout late elementary and middle school without knowing what it was, all I knew is it worked almost every time play wrestling and in real fights. Now I see why..
Great video. 5 mins to learn, 5 years to be great at them though. Still we have to start somewhere
Got it. As a 150kg big guy, this is how im going to counter o soto from now on. Excellent thanks for the help!
this is neat. You teach how to throw immediately after establishing grips. Want to learn this as well, great example. thank you
This is sick 🔥
Thankyou! 🙏
thanks guys for demonstrating these, and esp explaining why certain techniques have higher risks of getting caught back take. cheers!
Modern Judo practitioners are terribly over-reliant on lapel grips and far too traditional... when I took over my high school wrestling team I integrated a ton of Judo techniques with modified grips (of course) and was very successful in the process... many other wrestling coaches actually taught Judo techniques but didn't recognize them as JUDO thinking THEY more or less "invented" a technique and we're terribly interested when they found out the technique has a name, place and a ton of variations long since well understood, described and utilized by the sport of Judo!! It's really the incredible naming strategy that sets it apart from all other grappling sports but the lapel exclusive grips and rats nest of ever changing rules hold it back.
Dumb take. Judo is reliant on gi grips because Judo is a sport in of itself, and the gi is the equipment used in the sport. That's like saying football players are over-reliant on their pads compared to rugby players, or since pro skiers only use skis they're somehow inferior to snowboarders
@@palmerphotojournal5403 so you say Judo is not a martial art?
Every throw you see in wrestling and judo can be found on thr walls if Egypt
@@palmerphotojournal5403 judo is a martial art
@@BURGAWMMA as soon as the IJF banned 50% of the moves I'd say yes it became just a sport unfortunately.
Can't even do standing strangles/armlocks anymore for sport safety.
Those are so
Cool I want to see how you teach these in the gi!!
We can do that!
That o soto defense has just made it to my tool bag.
Imma do this tomorrow.
Keep it on the down low..
Could you address injury hazards and how to avoid them for each throw, especially for BJJ practitioners without significant judo training? To wit, I was seriously injured (long before your videos) when I tried Tai Otoshi for the first time against an unsuspecting BJJ white belt. Instead of cooperating with the throw and rolling he just sat on my leg instead, snapping my ACL and MCL. I think Tai Otoshi can also go badly for the uke if the uke doesn't know to roll or if the thrower doesn’t assist the uke’s rotation with his downward pull. Thanks
Very solid foundation judo technique, nice
The very self-defense techniques I was looking for!!
Very nice, quality breakfalling too
Really nice video. Cant wait to try these.
That ending got me in hysterics - go Aussie Judo
Excellent video!
Thanks alot for posting!
Did not expect the first two to be my go to throws 🧐👌🏾
Amazing teachings and martial artists!
I really appreciate how you divided the video into chapters for each throw.
Awesome video, guys - beautifully demonstrated. Haven't done much no-gi training yet (very traditional judo where I train) but I got some really good tips here for later on - thanks for posting 🦘🦘🦘
Thanks guys, these were really great!
Glad you like them!
Thanks! Didnt know these, was useful for bbj and mma
A whole lotta heat right here 🔥🔥🔥
Beautiful explanation
The last defence reminds me of the Aikido master flipping and standing - not for mortals. Acrobatics is the 4th way to fight e.g. Taido or Kanpuera
This looks really fun
Nice selection of throws. Really solid technique on the ashi waza stuff and the uchimata (which is technically ashi waza i guess, lol). Really liked the uchi into ankle pick combo.
I have a tip for you that would greatly improve a couple of these, and even make the seoinage higher percentage and harder to take your back.
Rather than trying to use your right hand (in these examples) to make connection and effect kuzushi in the tai otoshi and seoinage (in the "elbow pit" and armpit, respectively) try using your forearm with your arm held at a 90 degree angle (or *slightly* wider). Drive in with it, and keep your lower arm extended and away from your body (don't let the frame collapse). You'll find a couple of things:
1) The connection is much more secure, particularly when you/your opponent are sweaty.
2) You have better (or at least more reliable) leverage, as it is much easier to secure a solid frame.
3) on the seoinage, because you have a solid frame, it is harder to sprawl as there is greater forward kuzushi faster. And,
4) As your opponent has to now beat your frame, it is much harder to secure a grip on your neck/upper body, even if they do manage to sprawl out of being thrown. You're still I a bad spot, which is why I agree with you that it may not be the best option. But it will make it easier to get to your guard or scramble out, which beats getting choked haha!
This requires some minor tweaks to your footwork (will need to be ever so slightly closer, due to less reach) and gripping/direction of pull on the other arm/wrist, but honestly, give it a try. There's more details to making it work (isn't there always, lol), but if you play around with it, I am sure you'll find it works amazingly well.
Not a critique at all guys. I enjoyed the video greatly. Just a tip I received years ago that really helped me land these in nogi sparring. Hope it helps you too! Cheers.
youtube.com/@movizmaza
@saltymember1062 1) International Judo competitors... compete in the gi. This is nogi technique, and yes, I'm sure it did. 2) I'm a 3rd degree black belt in Jiujitsu, own my own school, and have been teaching gi and nogi grappling for more than 15 years. What are your accreditations, tough guy?
Lemme guess... 4 stripe white belt in bjj, or say orange or green belt in Judo. Only person that a) wouldn't recognize good technique advice if they were smacked over the head with it, and b) still thinks that black belts and competitors don't have anything left to learn.
Stick with it, son. One day you'll realize what a stupid comment this was and look back on it (and I'm sure the many others you've made online) with embarrassment. Ossu.
Thanka for this simplified judo, i learn something ;)
Great details guys, thank you!
Nice tai toshi technique .easy to incorporate some that techniques
Los dos explican muy bien las tecnicas. Los felicito. Saludos desde Cordoba, Argentina. Oss !
Mi impresion es que no son judokas(competidores) ,asi que buen esfuerzo para explicar esas tecnicas
Fantastic video, thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Uchimata - cutting the leg from inside
If you cutting the left leg that’s - Haraigoshi, like you did last repetition.😜
Other vice nice executions! 👏😎💪🤙
Excellent demonstration of no gi judo, but an even better one of Aussie accent ;)
Fantastic vid
Thank you guys, I know it’s not fun getting slammed of the floor and especially several times in one go !
Thank you for making this video!
This was a great video.
NoGi Judo me parece lo más efectivo del Judo en la vida real, la ropa nunca es tan resistente como un Gi. Buen vídeo y mejor explicación
Combining a uchi mata with a harai goshi works beautifully
that Tai Otoshi is very hard to land on a sweaty no-gi partner. It's my favorite takedown from Gi positions but in a no-gi it's very hard. they can just slip the arm out fairly easy.
the ippon seoi nage have many variations but most common is the stand seoi nage and drop seoi nage. It can be worse if used wrong but used right and your opponent doesn't even know what just happened.
Thank you for the knowledge
Great video. Subscribed.
Thankyou ! 🙏
Which throw was your favourite? Have we missed any?
The Deashi seems like it come up the most and looks to be low risk
The last
Nice footage and love it 👍
Love your work gents!
One nice off-balancing technique is a wrist grap followed by a bicep/shoulder pop with the opposite palm while stepping and driving.
Works nicely on the one arm reach-gi or no gi.
The “sweaty almost impossible” one is great
Awesome....
I really like the songs when you transition to the next throw, does anyone know what the songs are called?
Yeah grappling education please let us know
Awesome stuff
awesome stuff, thanks a lot!
9:21 why does he lock his arms there? also for throws in general its backstep lift twist and then pull and then you go with the throw right?
😃😃😃
Today I can do it !!!
Second drop 😃😃😃
Thank u
4:44 that is a clean taio toshi 🎉
This was beautiful
Literally tried the Osoto this morning 😅
I need this Seminar at my Gym 🤌🏾
Coming from a Judo background, should mean that you realize Uchi Mata is an Ashi Waza, or leg technique, not a Koshi Waza. You’re confusing Harai Goshi, a hip lifting move with Uchi Mata where the back of the thigh is swing up through the Uke’s thigh.😊
I think better way to do Osoto for no gi is being RvL, having an over or under hook, and do a hopping/ knee Osoto variation. Like, inserting the leg quickly first and then hopping into position with the base leg. Finish by truly lifting your leg once calf to calf, overcoming the resistance. Straight up throwing someone with a collar tire Osoto can work, but it’s more a surprise tactic. just my 2 cents as a judo black belt.
Great technique 👏
Needed this!!
Now thats some fancy Osoto Gari counter!!! 🤣🤣🤣
Last one was sick! If only I was that athletic lol
Great video
That last Uchi mata was actually a Harai goshi
12:24 That's impressive!
The Taio is sick
When you put your hands on his shoulder... That was some good kuzushi
A lot of people are taught with Competition in mind in Judo but remember that you can do things outside of competition rules for defense. For the same side throw for me closer to the shoulder is better. I don’t want to miss the driving hand. Also, if you’re Sensi is only teaching you based on your dominant hand with throws that’s bad, there should be no dominant or preference!! For me it doesn’t matter whether you are left or right handed, whether my left hand lands first or right hand, whether you are moving left or right and backwards or forwards. You should be able to smoothly throw someone regardless that is the standard, Gi or no Gi etc should not matter!!! Learning where your weight is and where your opponents weight is, should be your goal. Once you have mastered feeling that you will be able to throw. Another thing is often when Judoka that haven’t really had intense study and practice do is give up on a throw rather than adjust to the movement of weight yours and the opponent. Secret for you the gentle way is feeling more than the strength, the best throw is the throw the opponent does for you. No effort or minimal effort.
This IS perfect
Amazing video. And nice end haha
Very crisp
very good
Thank you lot
Very nice
The best nogi takedowns are the best wrestling takedowns. Throws are super low percentage overall, regardless of ability.
Judo throw techniques judo skills i need to practice
thanks guys
Damn acrobatic the last 😂🔥
Yes I love judo ❤