Really love your channel Kevin I learned something and get a good laugh out of every episode! And Aurelia is right all of this Judo seems to work on people of all sizes, I trained for a while at Team lockout and every move that we learned we would run against every person in the class from smallest to largest, it's absolutely amazing how big of an opponent you can throw when you keep coiled up properly and get your fulcrum in the right spot like Aurelia is showing here and I know these things might be easier or more efficient with a gi but they can all be modified fairly simply to be done without a gi as almost all of what i learned was no gi judo for the cage. It is my firm belief that every human on earth needs to have basic understanding of the gi and no gi versions of the outside reap and the hip toss for self defense at the very least. Thx again man!
“Judo is a study of techniques with which you may kill if you wish to kill, injure if you wish to injure, subdue if you wish to subdue, and, when attacked, defend yourself.” - Kano Jigoro
I always felt Judo was a very practical style to pick up especially when you kept it to the simple stuff. For when most street fights (assuming no weapons) often results in sloppy boxing and wrestling, it feels like knowing how to sieze control and toss a guy to the ground would be a vital mechanic to learn in a fight. Which is what judo is literally all about.
@@baldieman64 Lol, funny enough my ex training partner made the exact same joke when we were talking about Judo. (he ended up moving to another state, but oh well)
@@madmaxiemartialartsnerd485 I think that joke is mandatory wherever people practice throwing arts. I even found that someone had beaten me to it when I read further down the comments on this video. It's right up there with the joke for anyone showing some complex ground control technique from a throw... You repeat the same throw stand up and stop as hard as you can right next to uke's head, while uttering the immortal line: "moments to master"...
Judo is the most underrated martial art for self-defense. Judo, with just a little bit of punch avoidance, is the best for street defense. Almost every fight you see starts with some awkward punches, then, they grab each other. Even pro boxers do it! Thats where judo rules. And getting slammed down on concrete is a fight ender! Be careful with the head, or manslaughter.
True man on on street judo have a huge advantage over BJJ . Pull guard can be dangerous on the street but to trow a guy like crazy, can end a fight immediately!
It's true! Judo is underrated for self-defense, but I think Ju Jitsu is surely much better for self-defense. There are modern, bound to tradition Ju Jitsu schools, focused to self-defense, that are perfect for this object.
@@vittoriovedli4819 japanse jiu jitsu is great i want to pick up Hapkido in the future its a hybrid martial arts with strong roots in daito ryu aiki-jiu jitsu.
I trained martial arts all of my life: kung Fu (black belt), kempo (brown belt), Aikido, Tae Kwon Do, Bangau Putih (Indonesian silat), Merpati Putih (silat), Boxing, Muay Thai, BJJ. The last three months I trained Judo. I enjoy Judo so much though I'm 55 years old and will do my best to get my black belt in Judo maybe in the next 2 years
Dear my friend, I started with tarkwondo had my blackbelt. Kenpo, goju ryu karate I got yellow belt as my two teachers closed the school, kung fu of white brow 1 and haly years with sifu Joseph hung gar learnt basic. I regards I should learn karate or tangssodo instead of taekwondo. Aikido, judo or silat I am going to learn next. I did a bit kickboxing for the fitness of my taekwondo black belt test in 1997.
For noobs looking to try the taiotoshi/body drop at the start, make sure that the heel of the leg that you pull your partner over is facing away from you and your toes are pointing towards you. If your partner's weight falls onto your leg, you want it to fold - not break.
Glad someone has said the most important thing to remember in Tai Otoshi! My old sensei warned us about this very important point: he said if you get it wrong, you'll only make that mistake once....
You won't get it in a street fight. The fucker will have you in a choke before you get your hips under him. And...if the guy holds on to you as your moving in position, it's no go. No matter what kind of 'solid technique' you got on this leg throw, it won't work if the guy is not in a clinch and is flailing away before you get your weight under him. Too many variables to make Tai Otoshi to work properly in a street fight. BAD CHOICE. Keep it simple. O-goshi, O-soto gari. That's it.
@@steve00alt70 Adopt the position that you will be in at the end of the throw, but without a partner. If you imagine that you are throwing him over your right leg, almost all of your weight will be on the left leg, and the right leg will be extended out to your side. Now imagine everything going horribly wrong, and instead of a perfectly executed throw, the bad guy just drops onto your outstretched leg.... The foot position described will allow your leg to bend at the knee, so you avoid injury. Having the toes pointing forward or away from you win cause the knee to lock, and the bad guy's weight will break your leg. You don't want his wight to drop on your straight leg, it's like stomping on a twig that's propped up on a step.
Judo and Greco-Roman wrestling are particularly effective in self-defence situations, especially against heavy, lumbering opponents who fall like stones on asphalt or pavement.
Yeah if someone is big and heavy you need to be _exceptionally_ good at Judo or Greco to shift them. Weight classes exist for a reason. Also there was a recent vid of a 16 year old BJJ world champ doing a takedown on an attacker in a street fight. BJJ (he was called Alex) dude backs off after the take down, and the attacker, who is pretty heavy set, just bounces back up. When I was in university I worked in a bar. Some of our bouncers knew Judo and their take downs didn't end the fight necessarily. I think a take down can end a fight, but it's very dangerous to presume it will. Sometimes it just doesn't.
@@humann5682 You are right, weight classes do play a role, but in self-defense there are no rules. You can give someone one or two punches before throwing and then grab their collar, squeeze their air supply and slam them to the ground. You don't have to stay there and keep fighting with him, but you can throw him to the ground and flee. Remember it is not a competition and not a fight between teenagers a fight avoided is a fight won.
I grew up in the 80s and 90s when the prevailing wisdom was that striking always trumps grappling. So I did boxing and Taek to know how to look after myself and I simply did judo just from a sporting/fitness perspective in the belief that it wouldn't actually be very effective in a fight. Fast forward many years later, I got mugged for my camera while travelling, which turned into a fight which turned into the would be mugger getting f*cked up by an osoto-gari into cobblestones, in very short order. Six years after that I found myself in another street fight that quickly had a similar outcome only with a seoi nage this time. Both fights started with punches and kicks, and while I did a bit of damage with those, almost all of the stopping power in both fights came from throwing the other guy.
@@mikevaldez7684 lmao thats ignorant and you're dreaming lol. Any good grappler knows distance management. Once the clinch is established you're going to take flight and crash on the concrete
Great video,as usual! One thing that doesn’t get emphasized enough is grip strength. If you really want to throw someone in a self defense scenario, do a lot of grip strength exercise. I guarantee after 15 years of judo her grip is tremendous
Love this video. I love seeing Wing Chun guys doing grappling. For self defense consideration, a good training drill for the back-turning throws is can you get the throw off quickly, in one fluid motion, before the person being thrown can grab your hair. People fight so dirty and will always try to get a handle, it adds a big difficulty level and pressure to the practice
For tai otoshi, you should devide your weight with 50% of it on both legs. If you you put all or most of it on the right leg (turning left or left if you turning right) like she said, you’ll bend you body, lose the power of a strongly anchored foot to bar the ankle. Then you risk to fall with your oponent’s reaction. Just a technical precision :)
My husband when he was 18 had to compete provincially against his own brother for the title. He won and obviously his brother was second. Must have been the weirdest drive home for their mom. My husband is now an armed response officer in a very dangerous country. He uses Judo to apprehend and detain suspects. No fighting required, no jumping and jiving making you tired. It also helps that he has absolute brute strength. Never let him get hold of your thumbs! 🤣
This was one of my favourites. First I watched it at 1.5 speed, and that was pretty cool and a little scary on the 3rd throw (was worried about Kevin's head just like he said), but then I watched again at slower speed and it was really great to see the smoothness of the movements and the toque and power of the throws. Great, simple (hah! maybe after years of practice!), effective. Thanks Kevin and Aurelia! Now to the gym!
@Martijn Sure BJJ and a wrestler could beat Judo in most cases, but we are talking street fighting here. It's utter madness to be wrestling on the floor in a street fight. It just takes one of their friends to kick you or stomp your head or hit you with a chair or stab you
man i definitely want to learn judo now, 32 years of age, i just orry about these horror stories of injuries. did karate for 8 years in my mid teens, still feeling nimble.
Il n'est jamais trop tard. A 25 ans j'ai pratiqué le Tae kwon do, puis, après plus de 40 ans d'interruption, j'ai à 70 ans repris l'entrainement(2 par semaine). j'ai repassé les ceintures qui concrétise la progression et je suis en passe de passer au mois de juin la ceinture rouge à 75 ans après déjà 5 ans de reprise...Aucune blessure conséquente, les muscles ont de la mémoire. Bon courage à vous.
Judo is very safe to learn. The man who taught me taught at the university I went to for many years and only has one injury in class. Highly recommend it, it can be done very safely. I am 31 currently. Of course you will be sore some days, but we teach effective ways to break your falls to help prevent injuries.
@@F4t4l_5h0t im currently thinking about either sambo or judo as there is a martial arts centre in my city (London fight factory) that teaches boxing, bbj, and muay thai also. whereas the other has kyokushin karate and judo but no boxing. no gear for it either like bags etc. . only issue is i hear sambo doesnt have locks like judo. I hear arguments about judo not allowing leg locks/throws but this is purely competition. thank you though!
@@LutherTaylor If you want to train judo, be aware that many if not most clubs nowadays focus on the competitive, sport aspect of judo, which means they do all the throws but neglect the techniques that are illegal in competition. If you wish to learn the complete martial art of Judo including all of the locks and not just the competition stuff, you might want to research a few different clubs (or consider Japanese jujutsu, of which Judo is a variant).
True, judo is effective, throwing even too raw. And yes, I´ve have 1st dan. In Finland, a competitive judoka years ago was prosecuted and punished for throwing an attacker to the ground with an o-sotogari. He was injured and the court ruled that the throw was too dangerous in that situation. It was mentioned that the competitive judoka should have known when throwing that person that he might be injured.
I did a Ju-Jitsu system and there were half a dozen different reaps from the nearside ankle, all the way in to reaping both legs at the hips and I agree that Uchi mata is the key to understanding that they are all just applications of a single principle. Don't train it in hakama though. I got the double hip dislocation that says it's a bad idea.
@@killersalmon4359 Okay.. This was an Aikijutsu class, with myself and another instructor "sparring", with light strikes, throws, takedowns and joint locks available. We were going at about 30% intensity, so there was time to think about stuff. There was an exchange where he'd tried something, I'd countered and attacked with O-Goshi (Basic hip throw) on my weak side, which he sidestepped and countered with the reap. As you would expect, my reaped leg went up into the air, and got to the point where the other started to follow it - and then my trailing foot snagged in his hakama. My body continued to go up, my reaped leg continued its ark, and the momentum was enough to dislocate both hips in mid air. I came down with no control at all, landing on my head and shoulder. I split my shoulder, and tore up all the muscles in my neck and back. Fortunately, as I rolled over, the hips went back in, but both legs and most of my back were one huge bruise. I was limping for about 3 weeks after that. I haven't been able to run more than about a mile since, and I never wore the hakama from that day forward. It's a stupid convention anyway - why would you wear a garment designed to conceal a swordsman's footwork while teaching martial arts that rely on footwork?
25 years of judo im a man so actually had some street situations used judo to keep them off me while i kicked them in the balls or punched them on the jaw, dont get into a grapple if you can avoid it, had a black belt friend got attacked, threw one guy got his head cut open by a bottle from the guys buddy, did snap his arm tho and got to same ER so the guy was charged too.
She's so good, she makes it look easy... and she's literally throwing you ass over teakettle while also trying to be nice/not to kill you. If she went full speed, that would be some real pain.
Wow! She's so fast n beautiful n dangerous ⚡. But here in my tropical country in d Philippines we do FMA n Kali 🗡we dont usually wear jackets, only shirts n sando's, it's possible Master Kevin another video slowly step by step for w/o jackets. Thank U n God Bless 🙏
Good video. There's a point where someone needs to combine the different aspects of martial arts: striking, throwing, ground work, etc. They can only stay separate for so long, and it doesn't look good with their separation all of the time.
Not really, you only need to do that if you work in a dangerous job or want to do MMA. Otherwise it's likely just insecurity or marketing and too many Steven Seagal movies that make people think they "need to be well rounded".
Classical Kung Fu ( not speaking about competition Wushu ) uses any range of combat with strikes, locks and controls, throwing and weapons. As they are mainly war arts, they don't really consider ground fighting as this is a dangerous position to be.
Try getting swipped by one of these moves and hitting the pavement, you're not getting up. Although, the point of martial arts, specially ones like Judo and Aikido (which both I practice), is not to harm another person, but to stop an aggravated or aggressive person from hurting your or others, and ending the confrontation by submitting them. Jiu-jitsu, the mother of a lot of martial arts, was an actual combat martial art used in war time. But the point of martial arts overall, is not to hurt someone but to end the confrontation
Seems very useful. One thing I don't like are the moves in which you give your back to the oponent. If he drops his center of gravity amd attacks your legs you are in a pretty bad position. Other than that, seems fine.
3rd technique is tano otoshi if im right, sacrifice throw, not sure how effective it is if youre nor wearing a jacket, the 1st one, i think you can hold the shirt instead
Her judo is very good. French from her accent? French judo is top-notch, their elite players are world class and their judo programs get plenty of funding, all the way to grass roots. I've trained with guys and girls from Racing Club in Paris. They are excellent Judoka.
Judo is big in France. Outside of Japan, and Russia, a weirdly high percentage of people have done Judo at some point in their lives in France, usually when they were kids.
An important part of the organization of judo is that in France they are run using the club system and not the American open your own gym business model. In the latter, if owners quits or dies, it usually dissipates. In club system, you have a governing board, president, secretary, technical director, etc. One person leaving doesn't affect the club. Very often these clubs are associated with local towns for access to training facilities. Then, there is a well organized hierarchy for elite athletes with regional training centers as well as national training centers. Here in Quebec, the french club system was implemented...
When she grabs your jacket, your other hand is free to punch the face or the back of the head when she is about to hip throw u, which makes it more difficult to set up the throw
That was incredible, Aurelia is just amazing, those throws on an unsuspecting individual on the street, would be lethal, literally. I am in love, thank you Mr Lee.
My biggest problem with any of the Grappling arts when it comes to self defense in the street, is that you are rarely in a one on one situation. And whilst you may have taken your attacker down and tied him in knots, what's to say his mate isn't about to kick the Shit out of you when you're on the ground. Personally I like to stay on my feet, or get back up real quick.
there's no need to follow on the ground. once you take down your opponent you're safe to attack another one in the same way. Kodokan Judo has a lot of ground fighting techniques ( Ne Wasa ) but it doesn't relly on it as much as Brazillian Jiu Jitsu.
In Japanese Jujutsu (and therefore Judo by extension), ideally you avoid wrestling on the ground with the other person for precisely the reason you said, but ground techniques are included and practised just in case it's unavoidable. You would aim to disable or control your opponent by throwing or some kind of joint manipulation while remaining stable and having the option to quickly disengage and move away in case a second threat arrives. Of course, in reality it doesn't always work out, so if you also fall over you can attempt to control or disable them with ground work or quickly wiggle out and stand back up before their mate you didn't notice soccer kicks you in the head.
Thats amazing! I wonder if there are judo techniques' that do not require clothing. If for example you are on a beach and your aggressor is shirtless. Can you tell me something about it? Thanks 😊
Very interesting. If you ever come to Japan, hit me up. I know some sick places to train and it's heaven here when you want to talk quality/intensity of judo.
Usually fights start with heymakers and end in closing the distance and clinching, basically really shitty boxing leading to really shitty wrestling. And most dudes who haven't trained a day throw the most telegraphed punches EVER. They WILL always end up closing distance where judo can get to work, and if they don't, U close the distance ur self. Pretty easy against an untrained individual.
In my country Japan, sometimes it is reported that a woman or even a girl catches/holds a theft with her Judo techniques. It is good, but of course, I don't recommend doing so for everyone. Sometimes they'll use knives or other weapons. Should be case by case. But still, I do recommend doing Judo, because it'll give us one of the examples of a good mind, namely 精力善用・自他共栄
If someone grabs both of your wrists with malicious intent, kick them full power in the lower abdomen below the navel. If someone grabs your lapels with both hands, immediately place either your forearm or fist in front of your face to protect yourself from the very likely headbutt, then cup your other hand and slap them as hard as you can on the ear. Both of these are painful and possibly temporarily debilitating (especially if you manage to burst their eardrum), but unlikely to cause any significant long term harm. Of course, after you do either of these, as soon as they let go you start running to create some distance in case they manage to recover.
Il ne faut pas oublier la législation avec entre autre la proportionnalité de la réponse à une agression...sinon l'agresse peut devenir l'agresseur. De ce point de vue, une projection de judo n'est pas toujours adaptée à une saisie...
He will still get thrown by a decent Judoka. If he doesn't get knocked out by the throw then maybe he has a chance to use the BJJ. You haven't done much research on this exact topic, have you? 😉
@@mistermindahenziandalasnus3754 To be honest with you i have and that is why i start learning judo as well My favourites are double knee seoi nage and seoi nage for now.
3:33 Great technique 👌. Next, what is your technique to kill/silence your attacker after the throw?. The Art of War/Mars is of NO rules, Kill or be killed during a war environment.
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hahah the western girls are more powerfull than the western guys hahha that's true. femenism is power!
Thank you! This is what I'm looking for! I am looking for videos that explain self defense of Judo for newbies like me
@@art_means_artificial the f it is
Who is the girl in the video?
Really love your channel Kevin I learned something and get a good laugh out of every episode!
And Aurelia is right all of this Judo seems to work on people of all sizes, I trained for a while at Team lockout and every move that we learned we would run against every person in the class from smallest to largest, it's absolutely amazing how big of an opponent you can throw when you keep coiled up properly and get your fulcrum in the right spot like Aurelia is showing here and I know these things might be easier or more efficient with a gi but they can all be modified fairly simply to be done without a gi as almost all of what i learned was no gi judo for the cage.
It is my firm belief that every human on earth needs to have basic understanding of the gi and no gi versions of the outside reap and the hip toss for self defense at the very least.
Thx again man!
“Judo is a study of techniques with which you may kill if you wish to kill, injure if you wish to injure, subdue if you wish to subdue, and, when attacked, defend yourself.”
- Kano Jigoro
Pretty sure someone said something very similar about aikido lol
That's a big lie. (´д`)
@@SettG4aikido is useless, but judo is very good for grappling
@@HowToTouch 🤦🏻♂️
I always felt Judo was a very practical style to pick up especially when you kept it to the simple stuff. For when most street fights (assuming no weapons) often results in sloppy boxing and wrestling, it feels like knowing how to sieze control and toss a guy to the ground would be a vital mechanic to learn in a fight. Which is what judo is literally all about.
Hit the bad guy with the biggest object to hand - a planet.
@@baldieman64 Lol, funny enough my ex training partner made the exact same joke when we were talking about Judo. (he ended up moving to another state, but oh well)
@@madmaxiemartialartsnerd485 I think that joke is mandatory wherever people practice throwing arts.
I even found that someone had beaten me to it when I read further down the comments on this video.
It's right up there with the joke for anyone showing some complex ground control technique from a throw...
You repeat the same throw stand up and stop as hard as you can right next to uke's head, while uttering the immortal line: "moments to master"...
hahah the western girls are more powerfull than the western guys hahha that's true. femenism is power!
I believe osotogari also affective and use less power than tai otosi.Is good for older people. Thank you 🙏
Judo is the most underrated martial art for self-defense. Judo, with just a little bit of punch avoidance, is the best for street defense. Almost every fight you see starts with some awkward punches, then, they grab each other. Even pro boxers do it! Thats where judo rules. And getting slammed down on concrete is a fight ender! Be careful with the head, or manslaughter.
True man on on street judo have a huge advantage over BJJ . Pull guard can be dangerous on the street but to trow a guy like crazy, can end a fight immediately!
It's true! Judo is underrated for self-defense, but I think Ju Jitsu is surely much better for self-defense. There are modern, bound to tradition Ju Jitsu schools, focused to self-defense, that are perfect for this object.
@@vittoriovedli4819 you mean japanse jiu jitsu?
@@dylan_krishna_777 obviously! 🙂
@@vittoriovedli4819 japanse jiu jitsu is great i want to pick up Hapkido in the future its a hybrid martial arts with strong roots in daito ryu aiki-jiu jitsu.
I trained martial arts all of my life: kung Fu (black belt), kempo (brown belt), Aikido, Tae Kwon Do, Bangau Putih (Indonesian silat), Merpati Putih (silat), Boxing, Muay Thai, BJJ. The last three months I trained Judo. I enjoy Judo so much though I'm 55 years old and will do my best to get my black belt in Judo maybe in the next 2 years
Wow, you're an assassin. 🥷🏻
Do you think its too much to do Judo at an older age, Im 56 and I work full time ...am a bit put off by BJJ reports of injuries
I think so. As long as you learn to fall properly.
Wish you the best dude.
Life is not just a number. I'm sure you will do it.
Enjoy it and be one of the judo family💞
Dear my friend, I started with tarkwondo had my blackbelt. Kenpo, goju ryu karate I got yellow belt as my two teachers closed the school, kung fu of white brow 1 and haly years with sifu Joseph hung gar learnt basic. I regards I should learn karate or tangssodo instead of taekwondo. Aikido, judo or silat I am going to learn next. I did a bit kickboxing for the fitness of my taekwondo black belt test in 1997.
For noobs looking to try the taiotoshi/body drop at the start, make sure that the heel of the leg that you pull your partner over is facing away from you and your toes are pointing towards you.
If your partner's weight falls onto your leg, you want it to fold - not break.
Glad someone has said the most important thing to remember in Tai Otoshi! My old sensei warned us about this very important point: he said if you get it wrong, you'll only make that mistake once....
You won't get it in a street fight. The fucker will have you in a choke before you get your hips under him. And...if the guy holds on to you as your moving in position, it's no go. No matter what kind of 'solid technique' you got on this leg throw, it won't work if the guy is not in a clinch and is flailing away before you get your weight under him. Too many variables to make Tai Otoshi to work properly in a street fight. BAD CHOICE. Keep it simple. O-goshi, O-soto gari. That's it.
it'll fold either way ;)
I dont understand
@@steve00alt70 Adopt the position that you will be in at the end of the throw, but without a partner.
If you imagine that you are throwing him over your right leg, almost all of your weight will be on the left leg, and the right leg will be extended out to your side.
Now imagine everything going horribly wrong, and instead of a perfectly executed throw, the bad guy just drops onto your outstretched leg....
The foot position described will allow your leg to bend at the knee, so you avoid injury.
Having the toes pointing forward or away from you win cause the knee to lock, and the bad guy's weight will break your leg.
You don't want his wight to drop on your straight leg, it's like stomping on a twig that's propped up on a step.
And ladies and gentlemen, this is the happiest moment of Kevin
Can't blame him
Him: "So how close do you have to get"
Me: smooooth
@@okamadlalaKevin lee : OH nice....
Don't think so
He's a slow learner!🤣
Judo and Greco-Roman wrestling are particularly effective in self-defence situations, especially against heavy, lumbering opponents who fall like stones on asphalt or pavement.
Not untill someone shoots a single or double you'll realize you fucked up
Your information is wrong, Judo is a Japanese martial art.
@@CHECKMYPROFILE01 did i say the opposite? read it again please. (Greco-Roman) is a part of wrestling.
Yeah if someone is big and heavy you need to be _exceptionally_ good at Judo or Greco to shift them.
Weight classes exist for a reason.
Also there was a recent vid of a 16 year old BJJ world champ doing a takedown on an attacker in a street fight.
BJJ (he was called Alex) dude backs off after the take down, and the attacker, who is pretty heavy set, just bounces back up.
When I was in university I worked in a bar. Some of our bouncers knew Judo and their take downs didn't end the fight necessarily.
I think a take down can end a fight, but it's very dangerous to presume it will. Sometimes it just doesn't.
@@humann5682 You are right, weight classes do play a role, but in self-defense there are no rules.
You can give someone one or two punches before throwing and then grab their collar, squeeze their air supply and slam them to the ground.
You don't have to stay there and keep fighting with him, but you can throw him to the ground and flee.
Remember it is not a competition and not a fight between teenagers a fight avoided is a fight won.
I grew up in the 80s and 90s when the prevailing wisdom was that striking always trumps grappling. So I did boxing and Taek to know how to look after myself and I simply did judo just from a sporting/fitness perspective in the belief that it wouldn't actually be very effective in a fight. Fast forward many years later, I got mugged for my camera while travelling, which turned into a fight which turned into the would be mugger getting f*cked up by an osoto-gari into cobblestones, in very short order. Six years after that I found myself in another street fight that quickly had a similar outcome only with a seoi nage this time. Both fights started with punches and kicks, and while I did a bit of damage with those, almost all of the stopping power in both fights came from throwing the other guy.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
She's dangerous. Period. Amazing demonstration.
She is!! She has won many Judo and Kickboxing competitions!
@@KevinLeeVlog Aurelia 💛 she is Best female Fighter in the world. She Wolf
A gun should even up the odds...one blast to the head, and/or stomach should do the trick
@@mikevaldez7684 lmao thats ignorant and you're dreaming lol. Any good grappler knows distance management. Once the clinch is established you're going to take flight and crash on the concrete
@Martijn *BETWEEN SHE IA VERY BEAUTIFUL*
Great video,as usual! One thing that doesn’t get emphasized enough is grip strength. If you really want to throw someone in a self defense scenario, do a lot of grip strength exercise. I guarantee after 15 years of judo her grip is tremendous
Very true! Her grips are super strong.
now she is a keeper
In more ways than one 👍🏻
I could watch this for days. She’s so soft and sweet and he’s so cute and exited.
Great demo. Aurelia has really great technique and she is very strong. Thanks for sharing!
as Jigoro Kano says "Minimum effort but with Maximum efficiency" which defines the word practical
She's a knockout from looks alone.. and she's lethal (femme fatale) 😍😍😍🥋🥊🎯
this queen is awesome
Love this video. I love seeing Wing Chun guys doing grappling. For self defense consideration, a good training drill for the back-turning throws is can you get the throw off quickly, in one fluid motion, before the person being thrown can grab your hair. People fight so dirty and will always try to get a handle, it adds a big difficulty level and pressure to the practice
For tai otoshi, you should devide your weight with 50% of it on both legs.
If you you put all or most of it on the right leg (turning left or left if you turning right) like she said, you’ll bend you body, lose the power of a strongly anchored foot to bar the ankle.
Then you risk to fall with your oponent’s reaction. Just a technical precision :)
My husband when he was 18 had to compete provincially against his own brother for the title. He won and obviously his brother was second. Must have been the weirdest drive home for their mom. My husband is now an armed response officer in a very dangerous country. He uses Judo to apprehend and detain suspects. No fighting required, no jumping and jiving making you tired. It also helps that he has absolute brute strength. Never let him get hold of your thumbs! 🤣
Does he teach ?
@@f.dmcintyre4666 No, but he should. He showed me the basics.
@@landibear6509when he ever retires or decides to teach, please tell him to make a youtube channel, his knowledge must be incredible
I have a kick boxing background but i really wanna take some judo classes that's one of my main goals this year . 🤙🏻🖤
This was one of my favourites. First I watched it at 1.5 speed, and that was pretty cool and a little scary on the 3rd throw (was worried about Kevin's head just like he said), but then I watched again at slower speed and it was really great to see the smoothness of the movements and the toque and power of the throws. Great, simple (hah! maybe after years of practice!), effective. Thanks Kevin and Aurelia! Now to the gym!
And she is not even doing at full speed
I love Judo, one of the best art to learn..
I agree, it's why I chose it as my main martial arts and been practicing it for years. I just love the philosophy behind Judo and Aikido
She's the perfect Martial Artiste who mastered in so many Martial Arts....now she should start learning Muay Thai and Kalarippayattu
She hits em with the planet 🌎❤️
It feels like it 😂
Excellent!
Judo is very effective in a street defense scenario (experience).
@Martijn How long did you train in Judo?
@Martijn Sure BJJ and a wrestler could beat Judo in most cases, but we are talking street fighting here. It's utter madness to be wrestling on the floor in a street fight. It just takes one of their friends to kick you or stomp your head or hit you with a chair or stab you
Very informative! Judo is very adaptable and the throws look like they could be quite lethal to someone caught unaware.
That last sacrifice would be a KO for sure on hard ground, maybe death if uki hits his head hard , tani otoshi
man i definitely want to learn judo now, 32 years of age, i just orry about these horror stories of injuries. did karate for 8 years in my mid teens, still feeling nimble.
Il n'est jamais trop tard. A 25 ans j'ai pratiqué le Tae kwon do, puis, après plus de 40 ans d'interruption, j'ai à 70 ans repris l'entrainement(2 par semaine). j'ai repassé les ceintures qui concrétise la progression et je suis en passe de passer au mois de juin la ceinture rouge à 75 ans après déjà 5 ans de reprise...Aucune blessure conséquente, les muscles ont de la mémoire. Bon courage à vous.
Judo is very safe to learn. The man who taught me taught at the university I went to for many years and only has one injury in class. Highly recommend it, it can be done very safely. I am 31 currently.
Of course you will be sore some days, but we teach effective ways to break your falls to help prevent injuries.
@@joelrameau3220 merci!
@@F4t4l_5h0t im currently thinking about either sambo or judo as there is a martial arts centre in my city (London fight factory) that teaches boxing, bbj, and muay thai also. whereas the other has kyokushin karate and judo but no boxing. no gear for it either like bags etc. . only issue is i hear sambo doesnt have locks like judo. I hear arguments about judo not allowing leg locks/throws but this is purely competition. thank you though!
@@LutherTaylor If you want to train judo, be aware that many if not most clubs nowadays focus on the competitive, sport aspect of judo, which means they do all the throws but neglect the techniques that are illegal in competition. If you wish to learn the complete martial art of Judo including all of the locks and not just the competition stuff, you might want to research a few different clubs (or consider Japanese jujutsu, of which Judo is a variant).
She is amazing
True, judo is effective, throwing even too raw. And yes, I´ve have 1st dan. In Finland, a competitive judoka years ago was prosecuted and punished for throwing an attacker to the ground with an o-sotogari. He was injured and the court ruled that the throw was too dangerous in that situation. It was mentioned that the competitive judoka should have known when throwing that person that he might be injured.
Finland is terrible smh
boxing and judo combo is the best for street altercations. Throw in a little jiujitsu for fun.
Out of all moves in judo, Uchi mata is my favorite. Low center of gravity and great strength really help,too :)
I did a Ju-Jitsu system and there were half a dozen different reaps from the nearside ankle, all the way in to reaping both legs at the hips and I agree that Uchi mata is the key to understanding that they are all just applications of a single principle.
Don't train it in hakama though. I got the double hip dislocation that says it's a bad idea.
@@baldieman64 I'm almost afraid to ask (I'm squeamish), but how did wearing a hakama while doing uchi mata result in a double hip dislocation?
@@baldieman64 I used to practice that move in regular clothes. For real life application 😎
@@killersalmon4359 Okay.. This was an Aikijutsu class, with myself and another instructor "sparring", with light strikes, throws, takedowns and joint locks available. We were going at about 30% intensity, so there was time to think about stuff.
There was an exchange where he'd tried something, I'd countered and attacked with O-Goshi (Basic hip throw) on my weak side, which he sidestepped and countered with the reap.
As you would expect, my reaped leg went up into the air, and got to the point where the other started to follow it - and then my trailing foot snagged in his hakama.
My body continued to go up, my reaped leg continued its ark, and the momentum was enough to dislocate both hips in mid air. I came down with no control at all, landing on my head and shoulder.
I split my shoulder, and tore up all the muscles in my neck and back.
Fortunately, as I rolled over, the hips went back in, but both legs and most of my back were one huge bruise.
I was limping for about 3 weeks after that. I haven't been able to run more than about a mile since, and I never wore the hakama from that day forward. It's a stupid convention anyway - why would you wear a garment designed to conceal a swordsman's footwork while teaching martial arts that rely on footwork?
25 years of judo im a man so actually had some street situations used judo to keep them off me while i kicked them in the balls or punched them on the jaw, dont get into a grapple if you can avoid it, had a black belt friend got attacked, threw one guy got his head cut open by a bottle from the guys buddy, did snap his arm tho and got to same ER so the guy was charged too.
Great video! Those are more or less the throws I have used in self defense situations.
Imagine just how happy Kevin is at this moment 😂❤😊
Judo for self defense is a great start! Perfect your base and continue to expand. Train Hard and be safe💮🙏
Judo throws look awesome obvs on one on one and mixed with other fighting moves
She's so good, she makes it look easy... and she's literally throwing you ass over teakettle while also trying to be nice/not to kill you.
If she went full speed, that would be some real pain.
Wow! She's so fast n beautiful n dangerous ⚡. But here in my tropical country in d Philippines we do FMA n Kali 🗡we dont usually wear jackets, only shirts n sando's, it's possible Master Kevin another video slowly step by step for w/o jackets. Thank U n God Bless 🙏
You can do tai otoshi from an underhook, overhook or even headlock
Something like Greco-Roman, Sambo, no Gi Jiu-Jitsu
You can grapple without those kabayan. Some people grapple with 10 oz twins gloves.
Good video. There's a point where someone needs to combine the different aspects of martial arts: striking, throwing, ground work, etc. They can only stay separate for so long, and it doesn't look good with their separation all of the time.
MMA
@Popeye One would naturally think due to the name, but no. It automatically gravitates towards groundwork.
Not really, you only need to do that if you work in a dangerous job or want to do MMA.
Otherwise it's likely just insecurity or marketing and too many Steven Seagal movies that make people think they "need to be well rounded".
Classical Kung Fu ( not speaking about competition Wushu ) uses any range of combat with strikes, locks and controls, throwing and weapons. As they are mainly war arts, they don't really consider ground fighting as this is a dangerous position to be.
Try getting swipped by one of these moves and hitting the pavement, you're not getting up.
Although, the point of martial arts, specially ones like Judo and Aikido (which both I practice), is not to harm another person, but to stop an aggravated or aggressive person from hurting your or others, and ending the confrontation by submitting them.
Jiu-jitsu, the mother of a lot of martial arts, was an actual combat martial art used in war time. But the point of martial arts overall, is not to hurt someone but to end the confrontation
Damn, this lady looks like a Spartan! Look forward to seeing her work in the movies!
LINDÍSSIMA esta atleta.
Hi Kevin, what about no gi judo and short clothes, whan there are no sleeves to catch?
Judo practitioner here. Would be interesting to ask Aurelia about the effectiveness of all the martial arts she mastered
Great video, really skillfully done, nice
Seems very useful.
One thing I don't like are the moves in which you give your back to the oponent. If he drops his center of gravity amd attacks your legs you are in a pretty bad position.
Other than that, seems fine.
great episode, would like to see more content like this with Aurelia
Freaking awesome, thank you two, great stuff to practice…. 🥰👍
Thank you!!
hahah the western girls are more powerfull than the western guys hahha that's true. femenism is power!
Wow she is awesome
3rd technique is tano otoshi if im right, sacrifice throw, not sure how effective it is if youre nor wearing a jacket, the 1st one, i think you can hold the shirt instead
She's good. Excellent video.
She's awesome.
Her judo is very good. French from her accent? French judo is top-notch, their elite players are world class and their judo programs get plenty of funding, all the way to grass roots. I've trained with guys and girls from Racing Club in Paris. They are excellent Judoka.
Judo is big in France. Outside of Japan, and Russia, a weirdly high percentage of people have done Judo at some point in their lives in France, usually when they were kids.
@@killersalmon4359 I believe the sport is right up there with football for people who have at some stage participated in it!
@@ianarn there are more people registered in judo in France than registered hockey players in Canada. But soccer is still way higher in France.
An important part of the organization of judo is that in France they are run using the club system and not the American open your own gym business model. In the latter, if owners quits or dies, it usually dissipates. In club system, you have a governing board, president, secretary, technical director, etc. One person leaving doesn't affect the club. Very often these clubs are associated with local towns for access to training facilities. Then, there is a well organized hierarchy for elite athletes with regional training centers as well as national training centers.
Here in Quebec, the french club system was implemented...
I felt Kevin knows a lot about Judo. He knows it's Tai otoshi😉
When she grabs your jacket, your other hand is free to punch the face or the back of the head when she is about to hip throw u, which makes it more difficult to set up the throw
@Greecostyler; Ludo is kind of the japanese version of Greco-Roman t.b.h.
That was incredible, Aurelia is just amazing, those throws on an unsuspecting individual on the street, would be lethal, literally.
I am in love, thank you Mr Lee.
hahah the western girls are more powerfull than the western guys hahha that's true. femenism is power!
@@art_means_artificial how can you say that? What about,western guys are more powerful than western girls??
@@art_means_artificial far from true
My biggest problem with any of the Grappling arts when it comes to self defense in the street, is that you are rarely in a one on one situation. And whilst you may have taken your attacker down and tied him in knots, what's to say his mate isn't about to kick the Shit out of you when you're on the ground. Personally I like to stay on my feet, or get back up real quick.
there's no need to follow on the ground. once you take down your opponent you're safe to attack another one in the same way. Kodokan Judo has a lot of ground fighting techniques ( Ne Wasa ) but it doesn't relly on it as much as Brazillian Jiu Jitsu.
@@madjidchouarbi3921 Like I said, In the Street, "Stay on Your Feet" and if worse comes to worse, then you can at least run away.
@@pv6304 throw and go.
@@evanmcclure67 Hit & Run
In Japanese Jujutsu (and therefore Judo by extension), ideally you avoid wrestling on the ground with the other person for precisely the reason you said, but ground techniques are included and practised just in case it's unavoidable. You would aim to disable or control your opponent by throwing or some kind of joint manipulation while remaining stable and having the option to quickly disengage and move away in case a second threat arrives. Of course, in reality it doesn't always work out, so if you also fall over you can attempt to control or disable them with ground work or quickly wiggle out and stand back up before their mate you didn't notice soccer kicks you in the head.
Com uma professora dessa, fica fácil amar o judô 😄 muito boa, ela!
Ele e quem e o professor
I practiced kick boxing but I think sport is only for having good bady and concentrating mind and good spirit
Looks like you enjoyed the session dude 😁
Very beatiful.girl and efective move.thanks teacher for sharing those move
Good video. What is the channel of Aurelia ?
Amazing
Please throw me, Auriel.
She is amazing,so cool and relaxed movementes yet effective
I am in love ❤❤❤
Thats amazing! I wonder if there are judo techniques' that do not require clothing. If for example you are on a beach and your aggressor is shirtless. Can you tell me something about it? Thanks 😊
Very interesting. If you ever come to Japan, hit me up. I know some sick places to train and it's heaven here when you want to talk quality/intensity of judo.
wow what a woman! and that french accent too!
what are the names of the 3 judo techniques ???
What’s the finish move?
Beautiful and unassuming. ☺️
wow amazing throws!
Great info !!!
Wow. Aurelia gained a fan!
So good.
What if your opponent throws punches at your face or kicks at your knees instead of grappling your wrists?
Usually fights start with heymakers and end in closing the distance and clinching, basically really shitty boxing leading to really shitty wrestling. And most dudes who haven't trained a day throw the most telegraphed punches EVER. They WILL always end up closing distance where judo can get to work, and if they don't, U close the distance ur self. Pretty easy against an untrained individual.
Some of those throws are scary lol
For real!! She took me down so fast I barely had time to respond. 🤣🤣 I challenged her to a Judo fight for part 2.
SOME THROW WILL KILL PPL ON FLOOR
And that was slow, controlled, and no resistance. Imagine the whip from a full on throw with resistance... oof.
Bang on guys, awesome video
When she talked about her background, she karate contact does she mean kyokushin? she also mentioned american boxing, did she mean kickboxing?
Kevin, please bring her back.
Her last throw for each move is so hard.
Does Judo have any chopping. Austin Powers used the judo chop.
In my country Japan, sometimes it is reported that a woman or even a girl catches/holds a theft with her Judo techniques.
It is good, but of course, I don't recommend doing so for everyone. Sometimes they'll use knives or other weapons. Should be case by case.
But still, I do recommend doing Judo, because it'll give us one of the examples of a good mind, namely 精力善用・自他共栄
By the way, thank you very much for the nice video! Hope you were ok lol
If someone grabs both of your wrists with malicious intent, kick them full power in the lower abdomen below the navel. If someone grabs your lapels with both hands, immediately place either your forearm or fist in front of your face to protect yourself from the very likely headbutt, then cup your other hand and slap them as hard as you can on the ear. Both of these are painful and possibly temporarily debilitating (especially if you manage to burst their eardrum), but unlikely to cause any significant long term harm. Of course, after you do either of these, as soon as they let go you start running to create some distance in case they manage to recover.
I give the video two thumbs up one for her body and one for the video.
I need this trainer where can I find her ?
I wanna wrestle with Aurelia but i'm going to need a lot of remedial training like over and over again and then one more time.
I want her to do this on a 6'3 200 pound man.
Everyone I know who has kids, I tell them to stick their kids into Judo. It is the simplest, easiest to learn, most effective way to defend yourself
Передуха, бедро и спина , основа 👍🏻
Il ne faut pas oublier la législation avec entre autre la proportionnalité de la réponse à une agression...sinon l'agresse peut devenir l'agresseur. De ce point de vue, une projection de judo n'est pas toujours adaptée à une saisie...
Девчонка супер!!!
But what happens if the other guy has a blue belt or worse a purple belt in bjj?
He will still get thrown by a decent Judoka. If he doesn't get knocked out by the throw then maybe he has a chance to use the BJJ.
You haven't done much research on this exact topic, have you? 😉
@@mistermindahenziandalasnus3754 To be honest with you i have and that is why i start learning judo as well My favourites are double knee seoi nage and seoi nage for now.
How much strength are you using?
"I'm just turning my body.. Uwu"
Aww niiice😂😂😂
I need to brush up on my Judo. She looks like a good teacher!
kevin lee you look different from when you fought in the UFC
how tall is she?
3:33 Great technique 👌. Next, what is your technique to kill/silence your attacker after the throw?. The Art of War/Mars is of NO rules, Kill or be killed during a war environment.
Yea that's awesome, and scary.