I took judo for years, from preteen on. How to land, & how to roll were among the 1st elements. Balance is of upmost importance. This girl is very impressive. I too was taught to let your opponent come to you, then taken him down. Her method of going down & taling your opponent with you, using tour weight & theirs againgst them is classic. Akido(?) is very similar, only Akido focuses heavily on the Chi (aka Ki) your inner self or life force. Not many accomplish this to perfection, it takes years & years. Combining different techniques makes for a formidable defence. A good fighter doesn't look for a fight, but he's rather prepared to do battle if confronted. My aspect in Akido are the hand grabs & pressure points (what the Navy calls Shore Patrol tricks) If you know these tricks, they are the be defence next to avoidance. As I taught my kids, take the long way around & avoid a problem, but if your cornered & no avoidence is possible, fend them off if possible, if not, taken them down, & then walk on. Generally they leave you alone afterwards.
This is not uchi komi. It's a demonstration and it is randori, but they're not being overly competitive. . .They're offering enough resistance to make her earn every throw. It's a friendly randori demonstration . It's not a competition Judo match. And this is not uchi komi. Any Judoka would recognize what's happening in this video.
I'm with you, this seems more like kata. The gentleman is not resisting and is deliberate jumping into the throws to make them appear cleaner. I think the keyword is "demonstration" in "randori demonstration"
Only through hard work and dedication. Great demonstration. I was about to comment on how you should be faster paced, but then I remembered it was a demo lol.
The guys are being gentlemen, but the girl is taking advantage like a professional fighter. She is mean and deliberate. Beautiful, clean technique on her part.
I'm not a pro at the sport of Judo, or anything of the sort, but the observation and question I have is how is this applicable to a real fight, where the opponent tenses up too much and doesn't allow for anything of this to happen. Merely an observation question.
The more an adversary tenses up the easier it is to steal their structure and make them fall. To answer your question , Judo uses the tactic of Kuzushi to break the adversaries' posture, to steal an adversary's balance, in order to help them fall. To cultivate this Kuzushi Judoka must train many hours, many months, even years, of partner assisted Uchi Komi drills. Uchi Komi Drills cultivate the muscle memory, the sensitivity and the strength required to break an opponent's posture and steal their balance. The stiffer an adversary makes their body the easier it is to break their posture, steal their balance and make them fall. So non-Judokas will stiffen up, thus placing themselves in more danger, whereas a skilled Judoka will relax, sometimes sinking their weight to resist and sometimes floating their weight to ride the throw. But if a Judoka has enough experience very little can be done to prevent being thrown to the ground then having a limb broken or strangled unconscious. Some throws require a crash pad for practice because the impact on hard ground or flooring can collapse the lungs, break a hip or break the neck or skull. Some Judoka will fall upon an adversaries rib cage as the adversary impacts the ground from throws , in order to maximize injury, knock more air from the lungs, break rib cage, and then transition quickly into a crippling joint breaking technique or a strangle hold to render the adversary unconscious before they can recover from the trauma of the impact throw. The training partners in this demo do not tense up , to resist the throws too much, for their own safety as experienced Judoka. They are experienced enough to relax and avoid injury. But they do offer her enough resistance that she must work for the throw. What you see here is a friendly chess game where they try to throw without being thrown. But No one is out to injure their class mates.
Judo throws are used in competition and also MMA. In randori you don't use too much strength because you want to develop technique first and foremost, and you also want to give some leeway to your opponent if their skill level is not as good as yours so that he can improve. In competition you go 120%.
y'all know they're going easy on her right? Real sparring doesn't look like this; you can search for any Judo tournament including the Olympics and see the obvious differences. Though this style is more beautiful to watch.
Senior ranked Judoka always go easy on junior ranks and new black belts. Especially 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, Dan black belts will go easy on a 1st Dan, shodan , whose not as experienced as senior ranks. It's a demonstration and it is randori, but they're not being overly competitive. . .They're offering enough resistance to make her earn every throw. It's a friendly randori demonstration . It's not a competition Judo match. This is where the much learning happens and experience is cultivated under a controlled form of free sparring (randori) where the Judoka can spar using their full repertoire. . .But this isn't a highly competitive match.
This is NOT uchi komi. . .no Judoka would ever think that. . .This is a friendly randori. Senior Judoka offering enough resistance during randori to help the junior Judoka cultivate their judo without being smashed like in a competitive match. Any long time Judoka would understand this.
to be honest i did not like her Seoi nagis very Little back to chest contact looked more like a Hand throw Her Uki waza was truly legit though and very elegant
Uggh. If you had Ronda Rousey or Kalya show up and dominate the guys, okay. But calling it randori and having a much smaller woman dominate higher ranking, larger people is just silly. Sure, a smaller person can throw a larger person through superior technique, but this seems like some social justice statement instead of a "Judo Randori Demonstration" as it is titled. I love judo, please don't turn it into some political statement and divorce it from reality.
This is NOT uchi komi. . .no Judoka would ever think that. . .This is a friendly randori. Senior Judoka offering enough resistance during randori to help the junior Judoka cultivate their judo without being smashed like in a competitive match. Any long time Judoka would understand this.
I took judo for years, from preteen on. How to land, & how to roll were among the 1st elements. Balance is of upmost importance. This girl is very impressive. I too was taught to let your opponent come to you, then taken him down. Her method of going down & taling your opponent with you, using tour weight & theirs againgst them is classic. Akido(?) is very similar, only Akido focuses heavily on the Chi (aka Ki) your inner self or life force. Not many accomplish this to perfection, it takes years & years. Combining different techniques makes for a formidable defence. A good fighter doesn't look for a fight, but he's rather prepared to do battle if confronted. My aspect in Akido are the hand grabs & pressure points (what the Navy calls Shore Patrol tricks) If you know these tricks, they are the be defence next to avoidance. As I taught my kids, take the long way around & avoid a problem, but if your cornered & no avoidence is possible, fend them off if possible, if not, taken them down, & then walk on. Generally they leave you alone afterwards.
judo is excellent for women. excellent.
Nice. This Judo has the spirit of Aikido.
It’s a demonstration the guy is letting himself get thrown (like aikido) it’s not randori which is actual sparring (unlike aikido)
Beautiful
Its not a randori, its more like uchikomi or practicing, but it was very good
practicing. randori means free practicing.
This is not uchi komi.
It's a demonstration and it is randori, but they're not being overly competitive. . .They're offering enough resistance to make her earn every throw.
It's a friendly randori demonstration . It's not a competition Judo match.
And this is not uchi komi.
Any Judoka would recognize what's happening in this video.
I'm with you, this seems more like kata. The gentleman is not resisting and is deliberate jumping into the throws to make them appear cleaner. I think the keyword is "demonstration" in "randori demonstration"
Only through hard work and dedication. Great demonstration. I was about to comment on how you should be faster paced, but then I remembered it was a demo lol.
Very impressive! Someone who doesn't know how to fall would never survive her throws!
especially seo nage
What is her name?
The guys are being gentlemen, but the girl is taking advantage like a professional fighter. She is mean and deliberate. Beautiful, clean technique on her part.
Bravo
Good !!
Strong girl
Brava
well done, young lady
I'm in love
Randori is an ecercices also for the ego, but usually people don't understand that. Very good by the way
The name of the throw at 0:27?
Yoko otoshi
Yoko Otoshi
I'm not a pro at the sport of Judo, or anything of the sort, but the observation and question I have is how is this applicable to a real fight, where the opponent tenses up too much and doesn't allow for anything of this to happen. Merely an observation question.
É o que eu tento entender também.
The more an adversary tenses up the easier it is to steal their structure and make them fall.
To answer your question , Judo uses the tactic of Kuzushi to break the adversaries' posture, to steal an adversary's balance, in order to help them fall.
To cultivate this Kuzushi Judoka must train many hours, many months, even years, of partner assisted Uchi Komi drills.
Uchi Komi Drills cultivate the muscle memory, the sensitivity and the strength required to break an opponent's posture and steal their balance.
The stiffer an adversary makes their body the easier it is to break their posture, steal their balance and make them fall.
So non-Judokas will stiffen up, thus placing themselves in more danger, whereas a skilled Judoka will relax, sometimes sinking their weight to resist and sometimes floating their weight to ride the throw.
But if a Judoka has enough experience very little can be done to prevent being thrown to the ground then having a limb broken or strangled unconscious.
Some throws require a crash pad for practice because the impact on hard ground or flooring can collapse the lungs, break a hip or break the neck or skull.
Some Judoka will fall upon an adversaries rib cage as the adversary impacts the ground from throws , in order to maximize injury, knock more air from the lungs, break rib cage, and then transition quickly into a crippling joint breaking technique or a strangle hold to render the adversary unconscious before they can recover from the trauma of the impact throw.
The training partners in this demo do not tense up , to resist the throws too much, for their own safety as experienced Judoka. They are experienced enough to relax and avoid injury. But they do offer her enough resistance that she must work for the throw.
What you see here is a friendly chess game where they try to throw without being thrown. But No one is out to injure their class mates.
@@SoldierDrewWell said
Judo throws are used in competition and also MMA. In randori you don't use too much strength because you want to develop technique first and foremost, and you also want to give some leeway to your opponent if their skill level is not as good as yours so that he can improve. In competition you go 120%.
👍👍
Can someone identify the second throw for me? Thanks!
Morote seoi nage or seoi otoshi.
WHAT'S HER NAME?
Lol nice
4 years ago! Can I marry this girl now? 🤣
Also! Her technique: FLAWLESS victory
😎
she is magnificent
Los tipos se dejan
What is her name?
y'all know they're going easy on her right? Real sparring doesn't look like this; you can search for any Judo tournament including the Olympics and see the obvious differences. Though this style is more beautiful to watch.
Senior ranked Judoka always go easy on junior ranks and new black belts. Especially 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, Dan black belts will go easy on a 1st Dan, shodan , whose not as experienced as senior ranks.
It's a demonstration and it is randori, but they're not being overly competitive. . .They're offering enough resistance to make her earn every throw.
It's a friendly randori demonstration . It's not a competition Judo match.
This is where the much learning happens and experience is cultivated under a controlled form of free sparring (randori) where the Judoka can spar using their full repertoire. . .But this isn't a highly competitive match.
@@SoldierDrewDoes it get tiring to repeat this constantly? (also, agreed)
Worlds most awkward fight
Definitely uchikomi and the dudes are throwing themselves.
This is NOT uchi komi. . .no Judoka would ever think that. . .This is a friendly randori.
Senior Judoka offering enough resistance during randori to help the junior Judoka cultivate their judo without being smashed like in a competitive match.
Any long time Judoka would understand this.
to be honest i did not like her Seoi nagis
very Little back to chest contact looked more like a Hand throw
Her Uki waza was truly legit though and very elegant
Just funking get on with it
Uggh. If you had Ronda Rousey or Kalya show up and dominate the guys, okay. But calling it randori and having a much smaller woman dominate higher ranking, larger people is just silly. Sure, a smaller person can throw a larger person through superior technique, but this seems like some social justice statement instead of a "Judo Randori Demonstration" as it is titled. I love judo, please don't turn it into some political statement and divorce it from reality.
This is NOT uchi komi. . .no Judoka would ever think that. . .This is a friendly randori.
Senior Judoka offering enough resistance during randori to help the junior Judoka cultivate their judo without being smashed like in a competitive match.
Any long time Judoka would understand this.
ehh
demo lol
That was just fun. NotJudo!!
Terrible 😐😐