Originally posted by IPON
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Uchi Mata takedown
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Registered User
- Jul 2004
- 1865
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"a few User CP's that are pretty significant ones(like a BoarSpear or SamuraiGuy one). " - GracieHunter
I choke people, I dont poke people. -- Me
Were you born to resist or be abused? I swear I'll never give in, I refuse. -- Foo Fighters
I want a girl that spends more time on her back than Royce Gracie.
I'll knee you in the face like your name was Josh Koschek -- Me
Originally posted by JkD187 View PostThe gogoplata was amazing i saw it live on the web.Aoki does work best from the guard yes but he has his blackbelt in bolth Judo and bjj.The belt rank honestly doesnt matter much to me 7th degree or first...id rather learn from someone who actually pulls of his techniques at the highest levels of competition.Now im not saying those guys arent good its just that if aoki pulls the wrist down then obviously it works pretty good....besides he holds the wrist down to set up the barbo choke off the takedown.
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Originally posted by SamuraiGuy View PostWell the more than 40 Olympians he's trained would be the ones he has pulling it off at the highest level... but no matter....
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Registered User
- Jul 2004
- 1865
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"a few User CP's that are pretty significant ones(like a BoarSpear or SamuraiGuy one). " - GracieHunter
I choke people, I dont poke people. -- Me
Were you born to resist or be abused? I swear I'll never give in, I refuse. -- Foo Fighters
I want a girl that spends more time on her back than Royce Gracie.
I'll knee you in the face like your name was Josh Koschek -- Me
Originally posted by JkD187 View PostThats awesome sounds like a great coach...however like i said before in MMA its prob better to pull the hand down when punches are allowed it offers more control.
I dont see how it would offer more control in MMA though, your still controlling te wrist, and as your throwing them their not really punching you are they.. on the ground you'd still have control of the wrist, who knows.
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Originally posted by Uke View PostLMAO ... kuzushi was neither developed from randori or inherently from judo. Even the term judo was not created or coined by Kano.
The concept and term kuzushi came from a system of jujitsu which existed more than 200 years before Kano's birth. Randori was Kano's true contribution to the martial arts. Anyone who knows the art and its history could tell you that it would impossible for kuzushi to have been developed from randori because randori came more than 200+ years after the concept of kuzushi had been introduced to Japan from China.
Just like the last debate, some people just make things up as they go along to have something to say.
The concept of Kuzushi came far before even that style of jiu-jitsu... It was popularized by Judo. The concept of Kuzushi probably far predates even jiu-jitsu. But, the argument was it was the greatest contribution... i've never heard of that style of jiu-jitsu... nor have most people. What we have been affected by is Judo.
Maybe you should stop making things up as you go along just to contribute to the debate...
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Originally posted by J-LuckCorrection to above post:
Taking things out of their proper context to do what is percieved as contributing to the debate, but is really just trying to feed ones fragile ego.
Originally posted by J-LuckKuzushi was more of a concept that developed from randori, which would make it inherently from Judo.
Man up and stand by what you write.
Originally posted by J-Lucki've never heard of that style of jiu-jitsu... nor have most people. What we have been affected by is Judo.
Learn something before you post.
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Kuzushi is very often thought of as simply pushing or pulling. At more advanced levels however it is much more than that. For example, kuzushi can also be achieved by breaking the opponent's rhythm, fake attacks, strikes, changes of body position or grip, kiai (a shout), or a sudden change in speed or tempo. A critical element in kuzushi is that it should disrupt more than the body. Kuzushi is very much a mental thing. Kuzushi should always disrupt the opponent's concentration, resulting in a momentary opportunity for an attack. This is one of the reasons confidence is such an important factor in Judo. A strong and positive mental attitude can often dominate a weaker state of mind, resulting in effective kuzushi.
Regardless of the physical size and strength of the opponent, kuzushi will always make a throw work more efficiently. Of course the same principle applies to any technique, including grappling techniques such as chokes and joint locks. Jigoro Kano, the founder of Judo, made the principle of kuzushi one of the fundamental elements of Judo, distinguishing it from old schools of jujitsu. The principle of kuzushi is still considered to be one of his major contributions to the study of martial arts. Don't neglect it in your study of Judo
The Study of Kuzushi
or "I'm falling and I can't get up"
By Neil Ohlenkamp
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Originally posted by Tant01 View PostKuzushi is very often thought of as simply pushing or pulling. At more advanced levels however it is much more than that. For example, kuzushi can also be achieved by breaking the opponent's rhythm, fake attacks, strikes, changes of body position or grip, kiai (a shout), or a sudden change in speed or tempo. A critical element in kuzushi is that it should disrupt more than the body. Kuzushi is very much a mental thing. Kuzushi should always disrupt the opponent's concentration, resulting in a momentary opportunity for an attack. This is one of the reasons confidence is such an important factor in Judo. A strong and positive mental attitude can often dominate a weaker state of mind, resulting in effective kuzushi.
Regardless of the physical size and strength of the opponent, kuzushi will always make a throw work more efficiently. Of course the same principle applies to any technique, including grappling techniques such as chokes and joint locks. Jigoro Kano, the founder of Judo, made the principle of kuzushi one of the fundamental elements of Judo, distinguishing it from old schools of jujitsu. The principle of kuzushi is still considered to be one of his major contributions to the study of martial arts. Don't neglect it in your study of Judo
The Study of Kuzushi
or "I'm falling and I can't get up"
By Neil Ohlenkamp
The first system of Judo was founded by Seijun Inoue. Look it up and learn something.
Kuzushi was later taken from Kito Ryu Judo by Kano and used in his Kodokan Judo. Kito Ryu Judo had been established in 1714, 146 years before Kano was even born. Look it up.
This is the second time you tried to challenge me about jujitsu and judo's history. And this is the second serving of humble pie you'll be eating served by yours truly.
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Originally posted by Uke View PostThis is the second time you tried to challenge me about jujitsu and judo's history. And this is the second serving of humble pie you'll be eating served by yours truly.
Tant0 is a judo-silat-blade guy and loves nothing more than to participate in a discussion about one of his favorite arts.
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Originally posted by Tom Yum View PostI don't think it was a challenge, Uke.
Tant0 is a judo-silat-blade guy and loves nothing more than to participate in a discussion about one of his favorite arts.
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Originally posted by Uke View PostI haven't forgotten about you Tant01. I just got sidetracked by another more amusing debate. So let me give a clue and some homework to do.
The first system of Judo was founded by Seijun Inoue. Look it up and learn something.
Kuzushi was later taken from Kito Ryu Judo by Kano and used in his Kodokan Judo. Kito Ryu Judo had been established in 1714, 146 years before Kano was even born. Look it up.
This is the second time you tried to challenge me about jujitsu and judo's history. And this is the second serving of humble pie you'll be eating served by yours truly.
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about pulling the hand down, i think that works here because of the positioning and the fact that he has already closed the distance. in a normal uchimata you pull the wrist up both to help in the pulling/off balancing of the opponent toward you and to creat a space to get under and make your turn (though it's much less pronounced than anything like a seionage). That's the kuzushi and the "fit" (i'm so bad for not knowing the japanese names for "fit" and "execution"). for the execution you do pull the hand down.
This throw in some ways looks closer to the variation uchimata ken-ken, where you don't load the opponent up onto your hip as much but hop in a kinda spiralling motion to get him down. In the variation as in Aoki's demonstration, the throw is being executed from the side. Aoki even briefly demonstrates about half way through the video that he couldn't lift him up and over for a big hip throw, so pulling the hand up would do him no good.
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