Beautiful serie of uchimata,fantastic...i am very excited when i doing uchimata and when i see a beatiful uchimata. Uchimata is the most beautiful technique of judo.
im getting some ideas from his technique... lefty against right, he always keeps his sleeve hand near his hips making not much need of up pulling strenght... his collar hand force the head down twisting the wrist. and they are basically two steps uchimatas. ill try these on trayning hehe
Yes its very efficient on strength. Long training sessions 3-4 hours a day for 8 years, and supplementary morning training help achieve this efficiency.
What should the tsurite be doing in this particular version of Uchi Mata? I see him do the high elbow here and there but i'm unsure what kuzushi it should be generating, should the tsurite be trying to pull the Uke onto your body so that they can be properly loaded onto your side?
can i do uchi mata/ harai goshi with classical tsurite upward pulling kuzushi? i see alot of people doing elbow up variations on these sweeping hip throws. please answer
everyone who passes through High School & University after 8 years of 3 hours judo mat training a day 6 or 7 days a week, and morning fitness etc has 2 or more belts like this. It is fantastic to visit and train a few months, loved my time there. JUDO HEAVEN
Thousands of uchi komis. To the point of reflex, to the point of relaxation then finally, minimum effort and maximum efficiency. Before all this careful analysis of the technique and thousands of drills.
Yes, Carolina, Really. This type of perfection is 80% drills and 20% Randori. Many entries to Uchimata. I wish I could post the UA-cam sites but it's like I have to work to find the best ones. This one ranks, if you study the kusuchi carefully among the top 10.
Le judo est une discipline qui est à mon avis la meilleure par rapport au x autres disciplines car c'est corps et cervelle qui travaille en même temps à la fraction de seconde sans que le judo est un sport complet
Whole dojo full of similar crazy good judoka. His floating hip taisabaki was special. He didn’t win the tournament, but beautiful movement. He lost to club mate from Tokyo.
what help/??? throws and holds study/revision can be done online. Actual training at the dojo can easily be helped by video of yourself, and put it beside the masters doing the same waza. Play spot the differences to improve.
Daaaaammmmmn!!! I wish I could do Uchi Matas like that!!! I would probably have to practice that move every day for two years just to get it like that. But it's kind of hard, I need someone to act as a dummy first. 😂
More like 5 to 10 years with tense judoka or 1-2 years in Japan training with relaxed judoka. I am sure Genta trained junior High, then High School and then University Judo clubs, that's 6 or 7 days a week for 3-4 to 6 hours a day for 8 years, and just few days off each year.
All about JUDO Ya I wish I could do that. I have the time, but just not the money to be going to two Dojos for 4 hours total a day. I gotta stick to one dojo for 2 hours a day.
Best use of energy! Key principal in judo, so working it relentlessly for 2 hours, and in a smart way (I call it judo smart) will achieve a much improved result
Yes and its not just about you, your partners too play a huge role in being relaxed and spending the hours training. Perhaps you can go early or get together with keen judoka and form a special small group At least do more uchikomi.
Please, don't take them too seriously. They obviously didn't explain it correctly to you. Let's breakdown what you need to know: 1. In judo, you have to be sure that you're trainning with an acknowledged teacher/coach/sensei;shihan/whatever. So you are able to trust that he knows what he's doing; 2. You will learn how to fall, so you won't hurt yourself along the fights; 3. If you can fall, you're 99% certain that you won't get hurt as soon as you hit the ground; 4. Learn how to throw. The falling proccess itself may not hurt you, but doing a really (really, really) bad projection of some throw may hurt your partner. He won't get hurt if you throw him correctly and if he knows how to fall; 5. The worst setting will happen if you're a high level athelete -or if you're workingn on to it -is that you may have some injures in your knees or fingers, for example. But this happens in every sport that requires too move movement; 6. Plus, even being a hihg level athelete, if you take really good care of yourself - going to doctors regularly - you are free to go. Conclusion, try judo and check these points for yourself. If someone tells you that a throw ''hurt a lot'' he/she is either lying OR being a bad judoka that is not able to to fall correctly. In judo you don't focus on strength, you focus on intelligence, technique, strategies. People who think that only muscles will win are terribly wrong. This ''pain builds strength'' thing is just being said to make it sound badass. What real atheletes need to know is: HARD WORK and DEDICATION will make you great at what you do.
Judo is pretty good can even work in karate and aikido Wing Chun and hapkido combining these type of martial arts you can become a very powerful force to be reckoned with so don't ever try to hurt you or beat you up wish I could have been doing this I feel like a total loser not taking it seriously it really does hurt not trying to do it I wish it could have been different I could have had made some new friends that could help me with this program so I can defend myself so I could be strong and more powerful and more faster most importantly to be something different this is a pretty good martial art I just hate the fact the way how I got beat up for no reason wish I could have shity timing hurted them harder so I can knock them down so I can make them hard what do you think about Mike homemade please leave a note or a liking to it I just wish I could have had taken it back and knock them hard on their backs and faces you gotta knock em hard and take him down 🥋💪😉👍🥋
One sentence! 😮💨 One paragraph too, learn judo and become more capable of self defence. You need a few years of judo first, before training other arts. Not too late to learn now
The difference between 3 or 4 sessions of 2 hrs a week (the teenage judoka from NZ) and every day training athlete for 5 to 6 hours a day for 12 years, though the teenage years. (Junior High, High School and University in serious athletic program of Budo style Judo clubs in Japan)
Not only his uchimata, his tomoenage and uranage are also beautiful, very powerful/skilled. I bounced 3 x after being thrown, incredibly hard in tomoenage.
Usually the throw would be more committed, he was just being careful to kids. 100% commitment on a good day, would see him smashing down competitor landing on top of them with considerably more force.
In Judo, randori (sparring) is split up into standing, and matwork. For standing, you try not to land on your opponent, to save them from wear, and tear. In a tournament, however, you would ride the other guy down, and land on top of them, and continue with matwork (if necessary). Some clubs will use a big crash pad (like 12+ inches of padding) to practice really drilling a throw, and landing on your opponent, but it's mainly done in drill form.
Of course it is not as beautiful as yours, done on Olympic and World class competitors. You, Sensei Kosei, Inoue have the dream Uchimata the whole World of Judoka admire... outstanding. No 1
Its not that, it is the way he moves and uses break balance and hip in the attack. Don't you see the skill in his relaxed style? I certainly see talent, in his gentle yielding judo. He smashed all the black belts there too, by the way. He did not perform brilliantly in the shiai we had, but honestly his randori was fantastic. He launched me into tomorrow with his tomoenage, I bounced 3 times on landing, sooo fast, and sublime uchimata was unstoppable, yet this guy hardly ever competed (his first low level International) and was just a club member, but on the club team for team fights etc.
yeaaa Kokushikan !!! wooooo.
Beautiful serie of uchimata,fantastic...i am very excited when i doing uchimata and when i see a beatiful uchimata.
Uchimata is the most beautiful technique of judo.
The most popular for sure. The most beautiful one is harai goshi. My opinion.
These are really the best uchimatas I've ever seen, hope to be as clean as he was with those throws.
looking through the comments Kosei Inoue even commented. (Olympic Gold medal, and sublime uchimata champion)
Very nice🤙I could watch Uchi Mata all day
One of the best throws with somebody with strong legs . Great technique to use left handed but requires much practice .
Absolutely
That's why judo drills are so repetitive...its the road to mastery
OG Loc would probably throw the adults as well..
im getting some ideas from his technique...
lefty against right, he always keeps his sleeve hand near his hips making not much need of up pulling strenght... his collar hand force the head down twisting the wrist.
and they are basically two steps uchimatas.
ill try these on trayning hehe
Yes its very efficient on strength. Long training sessions 3-4 hours a day for 8 years, and supplementary morning training help achieve this efficiency.
very nice, sets up the line very well.
So clean
What should the tsurite be doing in this particular version of Uchi Mata? I see him do the high elbow here and there but i'm unsure what kuzushi it should be generating, should the tsurite be trying to pull the Uke onto your body so that they can be properly loaded onto your side?
Yes exactly
It pulls in to your own chest to fix the connection (body seal 🦭) the hips fulcrum pendulum under.
@@JudoLife Thank you for the clarification!
kosei inoue would be proud
I bet I know what technique he is gonna do...
And you still can't stop it...thats the infuriating part.
can i do uchi mata/ harai goshi with classical tsurite upward pulling kuzushi? i see alot of people doing elbow up variations on these sweeping hip throws. please answer
Of course you can, the important aspect here is floating hip subtle entry
Pro Judo thank you for replying, i appreciate it alot
Most of his uke already have bent over. It is less efficient to pull them up again unless you are going for overkill.
His black belt's so worn it's almost white - if that isn't a good metaphor for judo progression I don't know what is.
everyone who passes through High School & University after 8 years of 3 hours judo mat training a day 6 or 7 days a week, and morning fitness etc has 2 or more belts like this. It is fantastic to visit and train a few months, loved my time there. JUDO HEAVEN
How does he do this?!
relaxed judo entry, minimum power in the arms, relaxed hips, explosive speed
Easy.
Thousands of uchi komis. To the point of reflex, to the point of relaxation then finally, minimum effort and maximum efficiency. Before all this careful analysis of the technique and thousands of drills.
elan really
Yes, Carolina, Really. This type of perfection is 80% drills and 20% Randori. Many entries to Uchimata. I wish I could post the UA-cam sites but it's like I have to work to find the best ones. This one ranks, if you study the kusuchi carefully among the top 10.
dammm that form is crazy...
Still very controlled. No malice behind the technique.
Exactly, its not personal, its just how we learn judo best, by getting thrown correctly and attempting best efforts at copying the actions.
hidari uchi mata. kenkaiyotsu. they way it should be done. :D
Le judo est une discipline qui est à mon avis la meilleure par rapport au x autres disciplines car c'est corps et cervelle qui travaille en même temps à la fraction de seconde sans que le judo est un sport complet
Le JJB est aussi bien ;)
Merci
Mastery. Absolutely ridiculous
Whole dojo full of similar crazy good judoka. His floating hip taisabaki was special. He didn’t win the tournament, but beautiful movement. He lost to club mate from Tokyo.
Beautiful
I need help ranking up in judo
what help/???
throws and holds study/revision can be done online. Actual training at the dojo can easily be helped by video of yourself, and put it beside the masters doing the same waza. Play spot the differences to improve.
@@JudoLife thank you'
Uchi-matas ALL DAY!
Why is everyone going for a high lapel grip on this guy, it's a complete gimme for the setup. Beautiful execution though :-)
Yes of course
Growing pains, for kumikata in their development. Such a pleasure to train with great young judoka, in New Caledonia
Genta is like "let's throw these mudansha"
Education about what is JUDO is valuable and cultural exchange like this is rewarding for learning Judo. IT WAS FANTASTIC.
@@JudoLife sure, genta was thinking that
very good teakdown but he is fichting lightweight KIDS
his movement... superb, he was also doing it to the advanced black belts.
Daaaaammmmmn!!! I wish I could do Uchi Matas like that!!! I would probably have to practice that move every day for two years just to get it like that. But it's kind of hard, I need someone to act as a dummy first. 😂
More like 5 to 10 years with tense judoka or 1-2 years in Japan training with relaxed judoka. I am sure Genta trained junior High, then High School and then University Judo clubs, that's 6 or 7 days a week for 3-4 to 6 hours a day for 8 years, and just few days off each year.
All about JUDO Ya I wish I could do that. I have the time, but just not the money to be going to two Dojos for 4 hours total a day. I gotta stick to one dojo for 2 hours a day.
Best use of energy! Key principal in judo, so working it relentlessly for 2 hours, and in a smart way (I call it judo smart) will achieve a much improved result
All about JUDO It's all I can do. I'm stuck with that type of schedule no matter what I do, unless the dojo I go to opens up two different hour slots.
Yes and its not just about you, your partners too play a huge role in being relaxed and spending the hours training. Perhaps you can go early or get together with keen judoka and form a special small group
At least do more uchikomi.
Oss.
Does judo hurt alot?
Yes of course. But you toughen your body and develop a higher pain tolerance quickly
SHYAN every throw hurts a lot. but through pain you build strength.
Please, don't take them too seriously. They obviously didn't explain it correctly to you.
Let's breakdown what you need to know:
1. In judo, you have to be sure that you're trainning with an acknowledged teacher/coach/sensei;shihan/whatever. So you are able to trust that he knows what he's doing;
2. You will learn how to fall, so you won't hurt yourself along the fights;
3. If you can fall, you're 99% certain that you won't get hurt as soon as you hit the ground;
4. Learn how to throw. The falling proccess itself may not hurt you, but doing a really (really, really) bad projection of some throw may hurt your partner. He won't get hurt if you throw him correctly and if he knows how to fall;
5. The worst setting will happen if you're a high level athelete -or if you're workingn on to it -is that you may have some injures in your knees or fingers, for example. But this happens in every sport that requires too move movement;
6. Plus, even being a hihg level athelete, if you take really good care of yourself - going to doctors regularly - you are free to go.
Conclusion, try judo and check these points for yourself.
If someone tells you that a throw ''hurt a lot'' he/she is either lying OR being a bad judoka that is not able to to fall correctly.
In judo you don't focus on strength, you focus on intelligence, technique, strategies. People who think that only muscles will win are terribly wrong.
This ''pain builds strength'' thing is just being said to make it sound badass.
What real atheletes need to know is: HARD WORK and DEDICATION will make you great at what you do.
Joao Martins Thank you very much!
My pleasure, I hope you feel engaged to practice it! Judo changes lives.
Judo is pretty good can even work in karate and aikido Wing Chun and hapkido combining these type of martial arts you can become a very powerful force to be reckoned with so don't ever try to hurt you or beat you up wish I could have been doing this I feel like a total loser not taking it seriously it really does hurt not trying to do it I wish it could have been different I could have had made some new friends that could help me with this program so I can defend myself so I could be strong and more powerful and more faster most importantly to be something different this is a pretty good martial art I just hate the fact the way how I got beat up for no reason wish I could have shity timing hurted them harder so I can knock them down so I can make them hard what do you think about Mike homemade please leave a note or a liking to it I just wish I could have had taken it back and knock them hard on their backs and faces you gotta knock em hard and take him down 🥋💪😉👍🥋
One sentence! 😮💨 One paragraph too, learn judo and become more capable of self defence.
You need a few years of judo first, before training other arts.
Not too late to learn now
Ouchi Grammar
You know that you are in big trouble when fighting a blackbelt and its belt is fading white
I fought this young man in randori, was thrown so hard with tomoenage that I bounced 3 times in my break fall. That’s very skilful and very hard.
@@JudoLife amazing, i just came back to judo after 2and a half years ❤️
@@israelcanada8969 keep at it, my answer is to not leave, 56 years training and enjoying. The first 15 years are the hardest.
@@JudoLife thanks, 🥋
Nice, played them like children.
The difference between 3 or 4 sessions of 2 hrs a week (the teenage judoka from NZ) and every day training athlete for 5 to 6 hours a day for 12 years, though the teenage years. (Junior High, High School and University in serious athletic program of Budo style Judo clubs in Japan)
I know, I'm just saying.
영하 잘한다
Good Judo
Who is he?
Genta Mikami, Last I heard he was coaching in Perth, 2 years ago, in their affiliate dojo there, he is old boy now, from Kokushikan University, Tokyo.
Not only his uchimata, his tomoenage and uranage are also beautiful, very powerful/skilled. I bounced 3 x after being thrown, incredibly hard in tomoenage.
は
0:04 lol
Damn, be nice to whitty.
Jartan y nada muerta
Its useless if he keeps rolling over the guy.
Usually the throw would be more committed, he was just being careful to kids. 100% commitment on a good day, would see him smashing down competitor landing on top of them with considerably more force.
David Parham dude he's training not fighting for the gold lmfao
All about JUDO You're probably right. I do jiu jitsu so I just like to see takedowns land on top. Of course my takedowns are horrible anyway.
Jay Ortiz you're right, you're right. Keep your training partners healthy!
In Judo, randori (sparring) is split up into standing, and matwork. For standing, you try not to land on your opponent, to save them from wear, and tear. In a tournament, however, you would ride the other guy down, and land on top of them, and continue with matwork (if necessary). Some clubs will use a big crash pad (like 12+ inches of padding) to practice really drilling a throw, and landing on your opponent, but it's mainly done in drill form.
most of the throw has been done against low level fighter
It is still a beautiful uchimata, his entry and efficiency of power, B E A U T I F U L, a pleasure to watch.
Of course it is not as beautiful as yours, done on Olympic and World class competitors. You, Sensei Kosei, Inoue have the dream Uchimata the whole World of Judoka admire... outstanding. No 1
I am pretty sure that is the real Kosei Inoue Sensei commenting. It was true. The level was developmental on this camp.
black belt +100kg vs green belt -66kg yep hes so good
Its not that, it is the way he moves and uses break balance and hip in the attack. Don't you see the skill in his relaxed style? I certainly see talent, in his gentle yielding judo. He smashed all the black belts there too, by the way.
He did not perform brilliantly in the shiai we had, but honestly his randori was fantastic. He launched me into tomorrow with his tomoenage, I bounced 3 times on landing, sooo fast, and sublime uchimata was unstoppable, yet this guy hardly ever competed (his first low level International) and was just a club member, but on the club team for team fights etc.
81kg
witbyy he was sparring with different guys. The first few guys were brown and black belts.