Tatami Talk
Tatami Talk
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Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 112: Judo Pedagogy with Chris Round, (Eco Skill Acquisition Part 3)
On episode 112 of Tatami Talk, we talk to Chris Round about his approach to Judo Pedagogy and the ecological approach to judo. We talk about our separate experiences at the California State Games and Bay Area Judo championships. We also talk about our thoughts on peacocks coverage of Judo in the U.S.
Follow Chris on instagram: @chris__circle
Martial Arts for Social Transformation, Equity, and Rights (MASTERs): www.martialartsforsocialgood.org
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0:00 Intro / Bay area Judo Championships and California State Games
07:55 Thoughts on Peacocks coverage on Paris Olympic Judo
13:52 Interview with Chris Round
20:00 MASTERs program / Judo Pedagogy
01:27:31 Shapes of Judo
01:51:07 Uchikomis first vs later
01:53:11 approach to developing a gas tank
02:00:32 CLA with kids
02:03:55 Approach to Breakfalls
02:07:18 Grip fighting
02:26:40 Ecological Approach, Positional Sparring, Drilling, Affordances
02:46:49 Kuzushi
02:54:22 Half guard in Judo vs BJJ
03:08:45 Ecological Approach to Judo Newaza (turtle with threat of a pin)
03:10:22 Future Goals of Judo Program, BJJ athletes in LA 2028
03:18:39 Outro / Summary
-------------------------------------------
Email us: tatamitalk@gmail.com
Follow us on Instagram: @tatamitalk
Juan: @thegr8_juan
Anthony: @anthonythrows
Intro + Outro by Donald Rickert: @donaldrickert
Cover Art by Mas: @masproduce
Podcast Site: anchor.fm/tatamitalk
Also listen on Apple iTunes, Google podcasts, Google Play Music and Spotify
Переглядів: 225

Відео

Why Murao's uchimata against Bekauri was not a score
Переглядів 11621 день тому
Why Murao's uchimata against Bekauri was not a score
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 111: 2024 Paris Olympics Recap
Переглядів 23021 день тому
On episode 111 of Tatami Talk, we are joined by the head of Hollywood Judo dojo, former member of the Swedish national team and 6th Dan in Judo sensei Philippe Morotti. Sensei Philippe is on this episode of Tatami Talk to give his expert opinion on the recent 2024 Paris Olympics Judo tournament. We talk about some of the controversies, favorite matches, and our expectations and thoughts of the ...
Nagase vs Grigalashvili Breakdown
Переглядів 20928 днів тому
This is a breakdown of the 2024 Paris Olympic match between Nagase and Grigalashvili with Philippe Morotti requested by some people on reddit. Due to copyright reasons, there is no footage of the match and we have simply included a timestamp of the match clock if you would like to watch along. Philippe Morotti is the head instructor at Hollywood Judo. He was a former member of the Swedish Natio...
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 110: Competition Preparation
Переглядів 81Місяць тому
On episode 110 of Tatami Talk, we open up discussing the upcoming Olympic Games in Paris. Where at time of episode release will be the opening ceremonies day. Giving our thoughts on the upcoming Judo tournament and how we plan to watch it. We discuss how hopefully this year Peacock actually has all the Judo events as advertised. We then discussed preparing for a Judo competition. What you shoul...
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 109: Can we bridge the gap between competitive and recreational Judo?
Переглядів 180Місяць тому
On episode 109 of Tatami Talk, We review some listener feedback on the last couple of episodes. We then go into some international Judo new with 14 days till the Paris Olympics and our thoughts on the upcoming 2024 World Veterans Judo Championships happening in Las Vegas, USA. There has been some criticisms about the cost and mandatory stay at the tournament sponsored hotel. Our main topic of t...
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 108: Challenges of opening a dojo with Ajax Tadehara
Переглядів 1102 місяці тому
On episode 108 of Tatami Talk, we welcome back former guest and friend of the show, former US national team member and international competitor Ajax Tadehara. We catch up with him since the last time he was on a show back in episode 59. We talk about the closure of his dojo, how his life is going and what his future plans are. 0:00 - Intro 5:42 - Catching up with Ajax 16:56 - What happened with...
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 107: 2024 World Championships and USA Judo Nationals review
Переглядів 1182 місяці тому
On episode 107 of Tatami Talk, we open up with a short review of the 2024 Judo World Championships. We then go on to congratulate all six members of Team USA Judo that qualified for the Olympics and Paralympic this summer. We finished off the episode talking about Juan's experience coaching this year at the 2024 USA Judo National Championships here in Southern California. We give our thoughts o...
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 106: Pro Wrestling and Judo with Rossy Rascal
Переглядів 1243 місяці тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 106: Pro Wrestling and Judo with Rossy Rascal
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 105: Robert Eriksson, US National Training Center Head Coach
Переглядів 1883 місяці тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 105: Robert Eriksson, US National Training Center Head Coach
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 104: Reflections on our Judo classes over the last 2 years
Переглядів 1264 місяці тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 104: Reflections on our Judo classes over the last 2 years
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 103: Terminal Brown Belts
Переглядів 1624 місяці тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 103: Terminal Brown Belts
4/7/24 Hollywood, Sawtelle, Goltz Scrimmage
Переглядів 3014 місяці тому
4/7/24 Hollywood, Sawtelle, Goltz Scrimmage
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 102: Judo Strength and Conditioning ft. James de Lacey
Переглядів 3135 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 102: Judo Strength and Conditioning ft. James de Lacey
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 101: Insurance
Переглядів 905 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 101: Insurance
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 100: 3rd Anniversary Episode: How We Grew Our Dojo
Переглядів 1485 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 100: 3rd Anniversary Episode: How We Grew Our Dojo
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 099 - Sleeping after Judo class and Online Kata Certification
Переглядів 1606 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 099 - Sleeping after Judo class and Online Kata Certification
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 098 - Asking AI some Judo questions
Переглядів 946 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 098 - Asking AI some Judo questions
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 097 - Kohaku Tournament
Переглядів 907 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 097 - Kohaku Tournament
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 096 - 2024 New Year Themes
Переглядів 1177 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 096 - 2024 New Year Themes
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 095 - Worst Dojo in America
Переглядів 2338 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 095 - Worst Dojo in America
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 094 - Banning techniques at your dojo
Переглядів 1238 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 094 - Banning techniques at your dojo
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 093 - IJF 2023 Referee seminar review
Переглядів 1009 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 093 - IJF 2023 Referee seminar review
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 092 - Burnout, and whether training/teaching Judo is worth it
Переглядів 2079 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 092 - Burnout, and whether training/teaching Judo is worth it
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 091 - USJF Nationals
Переглядів 17110 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 091 - USJF Nationals
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 090 - Dealing with Injuries and Training
Переглядів 17110 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 090 - Dealing with Injuries and Training
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 089 - Elements of a Good Judo Dojo Website
Переглядів 11410 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 089 - Elements of a Good Judo Dojo Website
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 088 - Should we stop doing certain exercises?
Переглядів 24611 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 088 - Should we stop doing certain exercises?
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 087 - Can wrestling training benefit your judo?
Переглядів 17211 місяців тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 087 - Can wrestling training benefit your judo?
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 086 - Growing your Dojo and Running a Tournament with Jonah Ewell
Переглядів 228Рік тому
Tatami Talk Podcast Episode 086 - Growing your Dojo and Running a Tournament with Jonah Ewell

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @MrBluemanworld
    @MrBluemanworld 3 дні тому

    Very interesting

  • @optimusmaximus9646
    @optimusmaximus9646 12 днів тому

    It's like asking "how long is a piece of string?” It all depends on the individual. The problem with judo is that 99% of dojos teach only sport judo where everything is centred round competitions. I believe this is the main thing puts older people off. Most clubs have neither the inclination nor the time to offer other forms of judo like judo for self-defence as it requires a different approach altogether. Despite my age (60) and a litany of injuries after practicing martial arts (tae kwon do, boxing, wing chun, aikido, judo and kendo) for 40 odd years on and off, I am still super fit and fairly strong for my age. The most important thing is to look after yourself and know how to manage you injuries. The last thing you want is to get another injury, especially if it is avoidable. I have done judo before and absolutely love it but I need to find the right school where I can practice at a less intense pace and not with competition mindset. Or do I just go and do BJJ instead as the likelihood of injury at my age is much less?

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 12 днів тому

      we might revisit this topic since our dojo has grown a lot since this episode and larger variety of people have shown up... we had a lot of 40+ and few 60+ beginners sign up. I have a lot more to add now about my thoughts and challenges. Majority of what I said on this episode still holds true but a lot more context needs to be added now. Your points are very valid and definitely still a problem I believe inhibiting judos growth in America. - Anthony

    • @optimusmaximus9646
      @optimusmaximus9646 12 днів тому

      @@tatamitalk Thanks for responding to my comment - it is most kind of you.🙂You guys raised some really interesting points so a follow up will be great. And you are so right about the challenges facing judo today. Btw, I only just found your channel and looking forward to exploring the content. Cheers from Australia.

  • @JasonOni
    @JasonOni 12 днів тому

    Great observations when comparing BayArea Judo and SoCal judo styles. I would like to know/compare judo styles from different states like (Texas, Florida, Upper East Coast and etc) when local tournaments are held.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 12 днів тому

      Well I already lived in Texas before and started Judo there and did Judo at KBI before as a yellow belt but haven't been to a tournament. But that's not a bad idea... maybe I'll fly out to US Open and Liberty Bell next year, but I do have a lot of international travel coming up. Trade offs of not doing this and training full time like some other youtubers haha. -Anthony

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 12 днів тому

      also I want to add that given how long the episode was I didn't have much time to add enough context. I've only been to two tournaments in NorCal compared to the multitude I've been at in SoCal. And one of them I was competing and got injured so I missed most of it. The bayarea judo championships this years participant numbers are also a bit smaller than most of the tournaments down here in socal, so take what I said as just an observation with a grain of salt. -Anthony

  • @stringkiller550
    @stringkiller550 13 днів тому

    after hearing the other 2 parts i was waiting for this!

  • @SchwarzeKatter
    @SchwarzeKatter 13 днів тому

    I am interested in Judo, but I am not 32, skinny, and don't want to compete.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 13 днів тому

      just need to make sure to let your instructor know your goals and intentions and see if they align with the dojos training.

  • @kanucks9
    @kanucks9 26 днів тому

    I like the contrast of "They rotated 180 and put the opponent off balance, it's not a false attack" Followed by "I didn't watch every match - I got bored" I see a lot of people with these views, that the referees did a good job following the rules, but that the rules failed to penalize bad Judo.

  • @philippemorotti4575
    @philippemorotti4575 26 днів тому

    Thank you both for having me on your show, I enjoyed it a lot.

  • @Thomazbr
    @Thomazbr 27 днів тому

    My understanding of the Teddy's celebration is that it was happening around the time he was being swept by the Georgian. So if Teddy did it in response to that we don't know.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 24 дні тому

      if i recall correctly some of the camera angles had it happen right as he threw him

  • @digitaldaemon74
    @digitaldaemon74 Місяць тому

    I love what you guys said at approx. 40 min. in about relaxing and using technique. I am almost 50 and starting judo. I come from a Chinese martual art background, i used to wrestle and box many moons ago. I want to understand technique kuzushi and classical judo. Im ok fit so, I will try do some randori but controlled. I am sick of what CMA has devolved into. I want to explore under some pressure how to relax and off balance my opponent.

  • @mariorivas557
    @mariorivas557 Місяць тому

    I don't see a reason for different black belts for competitors and non-competitors. I've looked at different syllabi from about three organizations and they all promote competitors faster. You get 10 competition points every year you'll get a black belt in three years. No points, or you didn't compete it might be 10 years as a brown belt before you get Shodan. There was also a test for the black belt to cover a lot of techniques. Now I know some places just promote without tests based on performance. I don't see why anyone who participates regularly, does the warm ups, drills, and participates in randori should not be eligible for a Shodan even if they don't compete. Their knowledge and experience counts. So it will take longer. Of course, demonstration of techniques should be black belt quality. Ultimately, every black belt should be proficient in Kodokan Judo. I do agree competition should get you there faster. I personally found competition to be a multiplier for improvement and motivation. Competition definitely sharpens the sword. It is exciting the IJF Veterans is coming to the USA. Instead of considering some of the discussion on the previous podcast with Ajax as negative, I consider it constructive criticism and discussion of pitfalls and situations you can run into when opening a club and a real look at dynamics when operating a business when you have to deal with a business associate. No one is impartial and sometimes personal likes and dislikes can ruin it for others. I really wish Ajax he best and know he learned a lot from the experience and took notes for a future club should I ever go that route.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk Місяць тому

      it's not that we're suggesting we should give out different black belts officially, we're saying there it already exists different ways to get the black belts already. in this episode and in the past I'm all for letting the sensei decide what the standards for the individuals are and let the judoka's skill/ knowledge speak for itself. The NGB's system's are all giving heavy incentives for competitions, whether its refereeing, volunteering, coaching or competing.

  • @cesaralvesdemoraes3187
    @cesaralvesdemoraes3187 2 місяці тому

    That's an atrocious double leg

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      the context of the full video is that the other person doesn't know how to do a good double leg. ua-cam.com/video/i-UaTo-EACk/v-deo.html

  • @glenw-xm5zf
    @glenw-xm5zf 2 місяці тому

    If it works, they will ban it.

  • @mitchelhuott8484
    @mitchelhuott8484 2 місяці тому

    You need the nage on every judo page. It’s a staple of our community😂.

  • @sammiehilton3699
    @sammiehilton3699 2 місяці тому

    You'll never have that much time if a real wrestler attacks your legs.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      the context of the full video is that the other person doesn't know how to do a good double leg. ua-cam.com/video/i-UaTo-EACk/v-deo.html

  • @jordanburton4147
    @jordanburton4147 2 місяці тому

    Games. Which games have y’all came up with in a year? Bring Kristian back.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      I'm constrained to what techniques I'm allowed to teach in the beginners class. so the games I came up with is not something that I would recommend to someone who doesn't have the same constraints. Some of the common ones I've been using are pulling games with foot sweeps, and land mines. and pushing games partnered with turn throws, fighting for hip position games, and a few others that are more difficult to describe without showing it in video. -Anthony

  • @jordanburton4147
    @jordanburton4147 2 місяці тому

    Let’s do a Part 3.

  • @jordanburton4147
    @jordanburton4147 2 місяці тому

    I’m going to apply that game for Ippon Seoinage. I think it can be done for Koshi Guruma too - probably hold into the armpit instead of around the neck.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      hey thanks for listening! when we recorded this episode my understanding of ecological dynamics was very shallow, since then I've learned a lot more and continue to do so and have changed a lot of the constraints and the way I teach. I also now in hindsight believe this particular episode doesn't do a great job of explaining what ecological dynamics is, and looking at other content creators attempting to do the same thing it seems to be harder than it looks to explain this to people who have not consumed the literature. Maybe someday I will re visit this topic and attempt to explain it again. I believe part 2 does a better job than part 1. - Anthony

    • @jordanburton4147
      @jordanburton4147 2 місяці тому

      @@tatamitalk I listened to part two today. I clipped some things from it. I think the person to get with for another interview on this topic for a part 3 is Chris Round from High Noon Judo. Part 2 was a great episode too.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      @@jordanburton4147 yes I plan to ask him to come on the show soon

  • @mitchelhuott8484
    @mitchelhuott8484 2 місяці тому

    Is that dufflebag a normal seabag?

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      it's an army surplus duffelbag i believe -Anthony

  • @mariorivas557
    @mariorivas557 2 місяці тому

    I’m glad you did this follow up with him. I remember Podcast 59 when he first spoke about the behind the scenes stuff and his ideas on opening a judo club .

  • @mitchelhuott8484
    @mitchelhuott8484 2 місяці тому

    Y’all should cover the University of Florida judo club. They have a scrimmage every Fall that brings in tons of college judoka across the south. It’s been growing like crazy every year.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      do you know who is in charge of that program? we have few other guests lined up already but would love to eventually do an episode about this too. -Anthony

  • @MLi2154
    @MLi2154 2 місяці тому

    Thank you for the shout out! It was great talking to you at the tournament, keep on keeping it real and making quality content!

  • @510Judo
    @510Judo 2 місяці тому

    Sup guys.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      Hey! wish I got to see you at Nationals. -Anthony

    • @510Judo
      @510Judo 2 місяці тому

      @@tatamitalk I thought you weren't there? That's what Juan said

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 2 місяці тому

      @@510Judo i wasn't there, just saying i wish i was there haha

    • @510Judo
      @510Judo 2 місяці тому

      @@tatamitalk Oh I get it

  • @3YangBros
    @3YangBros 2 місяці тому

    👍👍👍 🙌🙌

  • @3YangBros
    @3YangBros 2 місяці тому

    👍👍👍💪💪💪 miss this training

  • @mariorivas557
    @mariorivas557 3 місяці тому

    I think the comment near the end about how many players attend the big tournaments is a good point . USA needs a bigger base of judoka . I also found the interesting way he describes education versus training .

  • @philippemorotti4575
    @philippemorotti4575 3 місяці тому

    A great interview with tons of information, much appreciated. And Erikson is such a great guy, humble and accomplished at the same time.

  • @adf2M
    @adf2M 3 місяці тому

    The most important part of Judo is the falls. Learning how to fall is super important

  • @user-mw2zh4ik9s
    @user-mw2zh4ik9s 3 місяці тому

    He should get a job at an airlines company I here thay pay good and he could throw baggage all day long.!¡

  • @sleepytwiggaming
    @sleepytwiggaming 3 місяці тому

    i'm 37 and I love Judo, switched up my training a bit over the years but it's always a blast.

  • @dalyb7555
    @dalyb7555 3 місяці тому

    My shoulder popped watchin this

  • @mariorivas557
    @mariorivas557 4 місяці тому

    In regards to belt promotions, does your dojo use a curriculum that anyone can access and start checking off their knowledge and skill acquisition ? I feel like that would be an important metric to have available. Sure there's paperwork for Dan grades, but i think there needs to be a paper trail for kyu grades also. Especially for older guys like me starting judo and have to focus our time on the requirements.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 4 місяці тому

      Yes, our dojo has the kyu belt requirements listed. The techniques are posted up on the wall and the requirements in detail are on paper accessible to anyone. The thing is we have to make sure people know that you have to be performing at that level (knowledge, technique, and/or competition) before we will even test you. It's more like a checkpoint after we believe you're there already. Some people believe they can just memorize the techniques and demonstrate it and that they are ready for the belt.

    • @mariorivas557
      @mariorivas557 3 місяці тому

      @@tatamitalk I was also wondering how the Gymdesk software works with tracking rank requirements and how its useful in general.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 3 місяці тому

      @@mariorivas557 It keeps track of belt ranks and only time as that rank.

  • @iaresimon
    @iaresimon 4 місяці тому

    Coming here because I also have been doing Mike Israetel/RP style training and muscles(quads, shoulders, back) are too smoked to grapple. Been doing 20 sets of Push, pull, or squats per workout. 4 sets per week per muscle group seems very easy

  • @mariorivas557
    @mariorivas557 5 місяців тому

    I loved the website episode and this one haha

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 5 місяців тому

      glad you enjoyed it !!! its definitely the episodes that don't do so well but I'm hoping months or years from now people will run into those problems and come back for a listen

  • @METAMORFOSIS36911
    @METAMORFOSIS36911 5 місяців тому

    First time I've seen uchimata from fruit-of-the-loom grip

  • @JovisHolm
    @JovisHolm 5 місяців тому

    So I see he didn't resist.

  • @hridoypatwary24
    @hridoypatwary24 5 місяців тому

    Good video. You can reach more subscribers ,views If you focus on your video SEO and optimize it properly, it will help you to reach more audiences and grow your channel. This time I see your SEO score is a totally of 29.7. So you need to use more tags, and related tags, and make titles and descriptions SEO-friendly to increase the SEO score. Then it will help you to get subscribers and views automatically. Hope this will help you or if you want I can help you. thanks

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 5 місяців тому

      thanks for the tips! the tags thing is mostly laziness on our part.. the description making it SEO friendly pretty much means making it very click baity which is something we want to avoid doing personally based on principles.

  • @lanastraea
    @lanastraea 6 місяців тому

    Happy 100th anniversary and congratulations!

  • @Howsoonisnow2009
    @Howsoonisnow2009 7 місяців тому

    Love this nogi series. Thank you!

  • @gajorg69
    @gajorg69 7 місяців тому

    Hi guys, Long time listener. I know you were looking to get more engagement. I'm not sure how best to reach you guys! But I figured I'd try here. I'm sankyu and love judo to death, but I'm a terrible insomniac and most judo classes get me home after 10pm and ruin my sleep especially on work nights. It would be awesome if you guys could discuss or dedicate part of an episode to post judo sleep/relaxation and maybe some strategies to help with that. It's the only thing I worry will make judo unsustainable to me so it's. A pretty big deal. Not sure if anyone else can relate, but I've considered switching to BJJ just for the earlier class times. Thanks guys!

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 7 місяців тому

      hey this, reddit and instagram are great ways to engage with us. This is actually a common issue people post on reddit pretty often and I've made replies on before, but I think it's common enough that I think we will probably make an episode about it especially since we're trying to make shorter episodes now it would be great content. - Anthony

    • @gajorg69
      @gajorg69 7 місяців тому

      @@tatamitalk thanks Anthony! No Instragram or Reddit for me I'm a dinosaur luddite.

  • @jamesthomas9005
    @jamesthomas9005 7 місяців тому

    Seeegurrrraa

  • @1987jock
    @1987jock 8 місяців тому

    good egg

  • @gajorg69
    @gajorg69 8 місяців тому

    Holy crap!

  • @JigoroKano888
    @JigoroKano888 8 місяців тому

    Happy Holidays and thanks for great content in 2023! Juan, wish you a speedy recovering and you should look into newaza tournaments here in Canada. They sound perfect for injury-adverse older judoka and maybe your competitive career can continue!

  • @chrisblanco2707
    @chrisblanco2707 8 місяців тому

    Aye guys feel better🎄 happy holidays and thanks for all the hard work y’all do to make judo better

  • @gajorg69
    @gajorg69 8 місяців тому

    Great episode guys. It didn't seem to upload properly to your Google podcasts FYi. It seemed to be a re-upload of the last episode.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 8 місяців тому

      thanks for letting me know. been a really long week... I just fixed it in the audio version.

    • @gajorg69
      @gajorg69 8 місяців тому

      @@tatamitalk no worries!

  • @510Judo
    @510Judo 10 місяців тому

    WOW! What a story about the USJF Nationals. Thanks to Juan for taking the bullet and getting in there. I guess it was worth it just for the story and the podcast episode! As Sensei Philippe commented, it just shows the decline of the USJF. It's a shame because there are plenty of smart and capable people in the USJF. I don't know what's going on with them.

  • @philippemorotti4575
    @philippemorotti4575 10 місяців тому

    Thank you for your fascinating story about USJF Nationals. . It's really telling of the decline and paralyzation of USJF that has been going on for years now. Hollywood Dojo used to be a 100% USJF club per tradition. Now, our members are 75% USJA and 25% USA JUDO. Simply because, although none of these organizations are perfect, at least we are getting things done.

  • @MLi2154
    @MLi2154 10 місяців тому

    Thank you for the video! Do you have any tips or advice on incorporating physical therapy exercises into your routine when you're already tired from training and everything else?

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 10 місяців тому

      you should be working with your physical therapist since everyone needs are different. In my case, I was able to incorporate a lot of things into my warmup and cool down routines such as forearm planks and side planks, Copenhagen holds etc. There are some other exercises such as assault bikes and RDL's that I was just able to incorporate into my regular workout sessions. - Anthony

    • @theeducatedwarrior8061
      @theeducatedwarrior8061 10 місяців тому

      You did not ask me, but Strenghten your core and lower back to protect your back, Strenghten your legs , and glutes to protect your hips and knees, Strengthen your neck and shoulders to protect your head. And make sure you havce solid ankle mobility and strengh because this will dictate wether your body ends up in the right position for a throw, counter, ect.... NOT MEDICAL ADVICE JUST STUFF IVE BEEN THROUGH AND LEARNED AFTER 15 YEARS, AND WISH I KNEW EARLIER.

  • @theeducatedwarrior8061
    @theeducatedwarrior8061 10 місяців тому

    Watch Danaher talk about catastrophic injuries. Uncontrolled jumping stunts is the main source of this.

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 10 місяців тому

      In BJJ definitely, but in a Judo context, especially more modern sport Judo falling with / on top your opponent is basically a requirement and is often encouraged very early on to beginners in many clubs. Having people try to finish throws standing especially for recreational and self defense focused practitioners makes a lot more sense and mitigates a lot of the chances of serious injuries occurring. Whether or not beginners with an intention of training for sport should start that way or not is up for debate imo. - Anthony

    • @theeducatedwarrior8061
      @theeducatedwarrior8061 10 місяців тому

      Just ban Tani Toshi and lookout for lazy judoka who use their weight to throw inexperienced practitioners @@tatamitalk

  • @theeducatedwarrior8061
    @theeducatedwarrior8061 10 місяців тому

    There should be a seminar for the severity of any kind of injury in this sport. Maybe get a medical pro to have a friendly and informative talk with all the participants. This may change people's experience and make the sport more likable. Also they might come back after an injury because they were oriented into recovery or where to go and how to do it : ) .

    • @tatamitalk
      @tatamitalk 10 місяців тому

      Agreed! But it's a two way street, whenever I talk about prehab or risk avoidance to beginners most people (especially the younger ones) don't take it seriously until it happens to them. It's just one of those human things to not worry about something until it happens to you. There's also the crowd that think injury is always a risk in the sport and they rather have a more open rule set and allow poor technique to be done if it means a score during practice. Then there's also the issue that there are a lot of licensed people out there that are not very good at what they do or give poor advice. I personally have gone through a lot of bad Physical Therapists before finding one that figured out what my problems were and helped me treat the root cause. -Anthony

    • @theeducatedwarrior8061
      @theeducatedwarrior8061 10 місяців тому

      Well said. Didn't think of this, everybody does have a different outlook and experience. Mine was unforeseen and impacted me horribly because it made me loose 6 months of work, and my mobility has been extremely limited and now have a high chance of terrible arthritis in my 40s. Thats life though in the martial arts: /@@tatamitalk