Hi everyone, This is a simple technique against clothes(sleeve) grabbing / grappling. Very useful and practical technique. Appreciate for your like, comment and sharing.
Good instructional. When someone grabs your sleeve and your lapel, you know he is a judo/yudo practitioner, so my advice would be to act as quickly as possible. If you hesitate even for more than a second, you be on the floor quicker than you can say "What the hell happened?" Pain compliance always works so before you try a fancy wrist lock which you have not yet fully mastered (and these take years to perfect against a resisting opponent), first attack the nerve centres in the arms to get them to release. An elbow to the inner bicep, hammer fist or knuckle punch to the upper forearm or even pinch under the tricep combined with a swift kick to the shin will do the trick. There are plenty of YT videos which show how to exploit these to your advantage when in close range of your opponent/assailant.
When a real Judo guy start shoulder throw(eri-seoi nage), they quickly bend the lapel arm and turning back to throw, that move would block your other arm and unable to roll his wrist. FYI: ua-cam.com/video/Uu5tW20Yy3I/v-deo.html
Agreed. I originally studied do tae kwon do (2nd dan) but then migrated to wing chun, then aikido and finally judo, which is now my main martial art. In my experience unless you know how to approach a judoka, once a skilled pracitioner gets a solid hold on you, you are pretty much cactus. You have to have lightning reflexes and act as soon as, or preferably before, they put their hands on you.
Hi everyone, This is a simple technique against clothes(sleeve) grabbing / grappling. Very useful and practical technique. Appreciate for your like, comment and sharing.
Thank you, master!
Good instructional. When someone grabs your sleeve and your lapel, you know he is a judo/yudo practitioner, so my advice would be to act as quickly as possible. If you hesitate even for more than a second, you be on the floor quicker than you can say "What the hell happened?" Pain compliance always works so before you try a fancy wrist lock which you have not yet fully mastered (and these take years to perfect against a resisting opponent), first attack the nerve centres in the arms to get them to release. An elbow to the inner bicep, hammer fist or knuckle punch to the upper forearm or even pinch under the tricep combined with a swift kick to the shin will do the trick. There are plenty of YT videos which show how to exploit these to your advantage when in close range of your opponent/assailant.
I practice hapkido techniques wrist techniques
Very nice master, thanks so much for sharing 👍🏼
Thank you for your teaching , hapki !
Good video, I liked the wrist lock technique. I am going to try to use it in my Jiu-Jitsu.
Thank you
Muchas gracias por explicar hasta el mínimo detalle, ya que el Hapkido no es fácil de aprender si no hay un buen maestro. Hapki.
Thank you
Tip for more views - Put the title as the first line of the description aswell
Thank you.
Nice :)
Keep going love from Bangladesh
Great! :F
영어 진짜 잘하시네 ㅎㅎ
Judo are going to have a lot of problems with grappling LMAO😂
When a real Judo guy start shoulder throw(eri-seoi nage), they quickly bend the lapel arm and turning back to throw, that move would block your other arm and unable to roll his wrist.
FYI:
ua-cam.com/video/Uu5tW20Yy3I/v-deo.html
I'm a Judo guy =P
Agreed. I originally studied do tae kwon do (2nd dan) but then migrated to wing chun, then aikido and finally judo, which is now my main martial art. In my experience unless you know how to approach a judoka, once a skilled pracitioner gets a solid hold on you, you are pretty much cactus. You have to have lightning reflexes and act as soon as, or preferably before, they put their hands on you.