Judo is not only a physical sport... apart from making you extremely fit and disciplined it develops your intelligence also (what technique to use, quickly switch over to another if that is countered - fast thinking within a few milliseconds). I love this sport.
@@GordaoSemFuturo Every sports got it cons and pros. You can't just favor one and thinking it's the best already. Dont take it from me? Go watch Khabib and see how many Judo's throws he's performed on his opponent. Martial arts are becoming more mixed only ignorances think one is enough to beat others
Yeah there is a savage twist for uke during airtime. Unprepared toris that lack control will slam incredibly hard unprepared ukes that do not know what to expect. Better start slow as you did, getting the control and lifting part right. This throw was much easier and less traumatic when leg grabs were legal, since you could lift with te-guruma and easily step across with your hips in uke's descending phase. As a pure hip throw in classic style it must have a very explosive lift phase to work in order to have a weightless uke in mid-air when you pass your hips across, very similar concept to a power clean in weight lifting. You launch the barbell and duck under it while it is still floating. Can't do it by force alone. Tori also must have good grip control in order to do not completely destroy uke as he impacts with the mat. Very useful tool against hip-throwers.
I just laughed out loud when you did that. Did your demonstration partner lose a bet to be in this video? Just kidding. This is awesome! Great vid as always!
@@rvssianvodka combat sports are still a thing. Why does everyone look at a sport and then go “…. But would that work in the streets??” Maybe. Maybe not. Why does it matter, you’re watching sports judo. If you want to see street fighting you’re on the wrong channel
@@rvssianvodka if you have a look at what he does, break it down, you will see that it can. The first "throw" by the yellow belt is clearly something that happens.... a mix btw attempting a headlock and a throw. A counter as shown and utsuri-goshi... on asphalt... a high probablility of game over. judoka will show techniques with the gi... but this works no-gi as well
When I joined a multi-martial art dojo in Philadelphia on Washington Ave I was asked to be in a school promotional video as the assailant. I was the only African American in the school. I'll let you figure it out.
I must have practiced this hundreds of times as a junior. The club I was a member of used to perform at various fetes and this was one of the techniques in our repertoire. My uke for these events was left handed so it suited me well. I just wish I’d learnt it both sides. And, yes, I had an occasional success in competition with it, too.
That is kinda not true. You sre supposed to break your opponent's posture before attacking. If they are stable when you attack, you'll either get a sloppy throw or fail (which could mean that you got countered or your technique was simply defended)
The part where he accelerates the Uki to the ground AFTER he successfully executed the technique was my favorite part. You can tell he loves it. That's the reward a good Judoka student deserves.
Woooooo wiiiiiiie, I love this technique. I have been thinking about trying to work this into my randori for a while now. This break down is going to come in very handy. Thank you for the awesome content as always.
With the old judo mats every throw hurts. Lol.......... I can still feel the shock waves over 20 years later. This is a bad one for sure. I got nailed with a taiotoshi(excuse spelling) and it felt like being hit by a truck.
Excellent presentation, well and simply described. Grappling and Throwing are combats processes as important as striking. This fact is unknown or ignored by many. It is often difficult to carry weapons in an urban area, and sometimes one cannot run away.
I used to do this throw quite a bit, it looks complicated, but for me it came so naturally, I would often counter with it and not know what I had done until someone would say nice utsuru goshi. To get the initial lift I would assist with my thigh by standing on one leg, then as I placed it back down this helped to switch the hip and use a hari goshi type motion. This worked for me anyway.
Adante took that like a champ! Sorry if I spelt the name wrong. Great presentation guys. I can totally see this working without a gi too, which always something worth keeping in mind.
I don't know how I only recently discovered this one. It's one of the "manlier" judo throws where you simply pick someone up, spin them and put them on their back. The partner fully knows they've been had and you outpowered them, manhandled them. I like the emphasis on it being a lift into ogoshi. That makes it seem much more controlled and easier for uke than just picking them up and slamming them down.
Grappling is generally less dangerous in comps, It's coz you tap out, n get thrown onto mats often in a fairly controlled way. That being said Ive had ligaments torn, tendons n muscles torn n ribs broken from judo nd bjj, nd I have a friend who broke his neck in wrestling... so still dangerous but you shudnt get CTE like in striking. Tho outside of comps on the street with no rules, instead of tapping out youre getting choked out=death or unconsciousness, youre limbs torn apart often in irreparable ways or slammed onto concrete, furniture, glass or even off a bridge etc etc... also often=death or serious damage, another friend has a part of his skull covered by a titanium plate coz a judoka threw him in the street... Imo if you have a choice youd rather take a good punch from a boxer in the street than a solid throw from a wrestler or judoka let alone a neck crank or rear naked choke! Grappling is no joke... just ask the samurai, spartans, knights nd steppe nomads!
It depends on what you mean by dangerous. Competing in a grappling martial art is a lot less dangerous than a striking martial art in terms of brain damage, although there are many other injuries that are more prevalent in grappling. If you're talking about how dangerous it is in a fight though, it depends again. I'd rather be taken down onto grass than receive a head kick, but I'd rather get punched really hard than get thrown on concrete with a throw like the one in the video full force. Danger =/= efficacy though, the best is to have a combination of both
@@liamsomeone6333 I completely agree with your comment, it's all relative nd each has its strengths n weaknesses depending on situation, environment and the people involved. You definitely need both or you have serious weak links in the chain.
Nice! I taught a similar technique in wrestling last Friday. I showed them how to block the hip throw with the forearm to maintain distance and stop the throw. Once the turn throw or hip toss is stopped you can easily move to the reverse throw or suplex depending on the angle you can get.
I'm still learning the names in Japanese 😅 would appreciate if you could type them as a response it's hard to understand how they're pronounce properly
Very cool. I'm a lifelong striker (mostly Okinawan karate although judo was my first martial art at 11) but with 3 years of BJJ. My overall knowledge of grappling is limited so I never realized that you can reverse an attempted throw. Thanks for this.
Schoolofgrappling is an awesome yt channel, if i dont remember wrong they have a video on reversals covering wrestling reversals, matreturns and counter throws. Really good channel
just to note the entrance - to lower the center of gravity. Is mentioned as bending the knees but could be a small step or a small drop when turning the hips.
My favorite throw! Often uke puts his leg around my leg in an o-uchi-gari fashion while he is loaded on my hip to prevent my hip switch to the o-goshi. In that case, just ura nage :)
I notice that in the initial throw (Ogoshi?), the hand is around the waist. However in the subsequent examples of Utsuri-goshi, Uke is putting his arm around the neck and back rather than beneath the arm and around the waste. Is there a practical difference there? Can Utsuri-goshi still be performed if the initial move has the attacker's arm beneath the counterer's arm?
It's mostly preference based on how tall you are relative to your opponent. For the counter move you can still use your right arm, though it might be less ideal for the initial lifting phase.
I had this done to me a while back. Very cool. Fortunately, he was nice and didn't complete the throw. My old bones thank him for that even still. Haha
Its all about acting fast with precision but in real life factors are always to make you react differently from the model you practiced, always be ready for any situation for any surprise move
Sensei shitaro Ia m trying to do this move in NO GI from an under hook as i l love my o goshi but it is so difficult to get to the right position to launch in no GI get my o goshi once every few moon , can i used this in no gi to unleash o goshi ??? no gi , please seNsei ITS TIME TO REUNIFIE JUDO AND BJJ
Awesome video! I would love to learn some technic to apply when your opponent is smaller than you (im having some difficulties against smaller opponents, everytime i had to switch my stance to the knees to compensate the difference). Thank you in advance.
I like tani otoshi with my feet perpendicular to my opponent’s and a body lock as my favorite counter. It’s been my most successful throw in bjj competition, but I’ve also used a single right hand on the lapel baiting a seonage and if they take it immediately counter with tani otoshi. It’s just unfortunate if done wrong it can lead to catastrophic injury which is common to happen. Our only 2 major injuries in the nearly 5 years I’ve trained were tani otoshi. One was a 5’4 brown belt who’s 70 years old and 135 pounds but ironically he caused the injury on a 6’2 230 pound man.
Let us give a minute of respect to all the judo brides and grooms we have lost, when their partners fogot to un-Utsurii-Goshi themselves during their weddings.
My favourite judo throw is the Tome-nage. It's like Ryu throw on Street Fighter, super flashy. However, I seldom tried it on my judo years due to the risk of becoming a kick in the nuts.
We do a drill at our Dojo for any sacrifice technique (Tomoe-Nage, variations of similar throws), we have the Uke just do the initial fall forward and the Tori just practices getting his foot placed horizontally on the pelvis. Once you’re used to getting the foot placement on the pelvis, it mixes in with the throw as a full motion so you avoid destroying your opponents nuts, it becomes muscle memory to avoid the balls, also sometimes you can do the same throw but place your shin on the pelvis and once their shoulders go past your eyes just kick your leg up and you launch them in sort of a catapult manner, it’s also a lot less risky for the family gems.
but what if he lowers his hips before the side throw,and so his hips are below yours,can he not just outwrestle you there using superior hip position and strenght alone?
Judo is not only a physical sport... apart from making you extremely fit and disciplined it develops your intelligence also (what technique to use, quickly switch over to another if that is countered - fast thinking within a few milliseconds). I love this sport.
Jiu Jitsu takes it a step further.
@@GordaoSemFuturo a step backwards you mean?
@@GordaoSemFuturo Every sports got it cons and pros. You can't just favor one and thinking it's the best already. Dont take it from me? Go watch Khabib and see how many Judo's throws he's performed on his opponent. Martial arts are becoming more mixed only ignorances think one is enough to beat others
@@GordaoSemFuturo Calm down there buddy
@@GordaoSemFuturoright that’s why all bjj boys get folded like a lawn chair their first go around with judo
I loved this throw ever since Tekken 5
Yeah there is a savage twist for uke during airtime. Unprepared toris that lack control will slam incredibly hard unprepared ukes that do not know what to expect.
Better start slow as you did, getting the control and lifting part right.
This throw was much easier and less traumatic when leg grabs were legal, since you could lift with te-guruma and easily step across with your hips in uke's descending phase.
As a pure hip throw in classic style it must have a very explosive lift phase to work in order to have a weightless uke in mid-air when you pass your hips across, very similar concept to a power clean in weight lifting. You launch the barbell and duck under it while it is still floating. Can't do it by force alone.
Tori also must have good grip control in order to do not completely destroy uke as he impacts with the mat.
Very useful tool against hip-throwers.
This fills in a gap I've had for a while. Thank you coach.
I just laughed out loud when you did that. Did your demonstration partner lose a bet to be in this video? Just kidding. This is awesome! Great vid as always!
Jajajajjaa good video, but... Its can used in street? We will se that...
@@rvssianvodka i mean not with the same sleeve and gi grips but you can modify it easily to use little to no clothing
@@rvssianvodka combat sports are still a thing. Why does everyone look at a sport and then go “…. But would that work in the streets??”
Maybe. Maybe not. Why does it matter, you’re watching sports judo. If you want to see street fighting you’re on the wrong channel
@@rvssianvodka if you have a look at what he does, break it down, you will see that it can.
The first "throw" by the yellow belt is clearly something that happens.... a mix btw attempting a headlock and a throw.
A counter as shown and utsuri-goshi... on asphalt... a high probablility of game over.
judoka will show techniques with the gi... but this works no-gi as well
When I joined a multi-martial art dojo in Philadelphia on Washington Ave I was asked to be in a school promotional video as the assailant. I was the only African American in the school. I'll let you figure it out.
The bit explaining how to practise it was 100% what I needed. Thank you for the upload
I must have practiced this hundreds of times as a junior. The club I was a member of used to perform at various fetes and this was one of the techniques in our repertoire. My uke for these events was left handed so it suited me well. I just wish I’d learnt it both sides. And, yes, I had an occasional success in competition with it, too.
Every throw has an equilibrium point where both individuals are neutral. Whoever gets the motion first, steals the opportunity.
That is kinda not true. You sre supposed to break your opponent's posture before attacking. If they are stable when you attack, you'll either get a sloppy throw or fail (which could mean that you got countered or your technique was simply defended)
that first example was frightening. what a throw.
The part where he accelerates the Uki to the ground AFTER he successfully executed the technique was my favorite part. You can tell he loves it. That's the reward a good Judoka student deserves.
Shintaro, you do not have to ask for likes and subs just keep making your beautiful judo available for us to watch!
That's no small guy! The power of positioning, leverage, and technique. Nice video.
Woooooo wiiiiiiie, I love this technique. I have been thinking about trying to work this into my randori for a while now. This break down is going to come in very handy. Thank you for the awesome content as always.
I hope no one does randori with you ever once you get this LOL
I think this is one of the most painful throws to be the uke, especially if the Tori throws you with force
The actual throw is still an o-goshi, so tori has a lot of control
Never throw with force. This shows bad technical skill.
With the old judo mats every throw hurts. Lol.......... I can still feel the shock waves over 20 years later. This is a bad one for sure. I got nailed with a taiotoshi(excuse spelling) and it felt like being hit by a truck.
More impact when add on a Makigomi...
@@cksong6131 I think this would just straight up break somebody's clavicle
Oh, my judo-days are so far ago - but that has been interesting. And fun to watch.
The uke has this "I'm just happy to be here" vibe going on. Dropping an "osu" every minute.
I come here to watch and learn judo throws. I then practice them at BJJ with a willing partner. Thank you for making these videos.
The best JUDO videos out there!
Excellent presentation, well and simply described. Grappling and Throwing are combats processes as important as striking. This fact is unknown or ignored by many. It is often difficult to carry weapons in an urban area, and sometimes one cannot run away.
Ooooooooh man.... NICE.
That looks like it would be a very solid hit to the ground. Wow.
Great Demo. 😎💙
Thank you both 🙏🏽
Judo is my favorite martial art. Love your channel!
I used to do this throw quite a bit, it looks complicated, but for me it came so naturally, I would often counter with it and not know what I had done until someone would say nice utsuru goshi.
To get the initial lift I would assist with my thigh by standing on one leg, then as I placed it back down this helped to switch the hip and use a hari goshi type motion.
This worked for me anyway.
Adante took that like a champ! Sorry if I spelt the name wrong. Great presentation guys. I can totally see this working without a gi too, which always something worth keeping in mind.
You make that look so smooth
I definitifely have to try this one during my next judo lesson. Thanks a lot 😊
One of my favorite channels. Love it.
A great demonstration. Thanks.
Splendid counter - thank you.
Excellent lesson Shintaro-sensei
Sensei Dudi showed me this technique last Monday during grip fighting rounds 🤘😎
Nice stuff, and kudos to Dante for being such a good Uke, those mats are HARD!!!
Holy cow, I was not expecting him to come down that hard. Awesome throw. Ill try to learn it
Nice demonstration🤙
I love this throw! Thanks for demonstrating 🙏🏾🇨🇦
Hey bro where you from in Canada? If you from Toronto would you recommend me some judo clubs.
@@biggiebiggie6430 So sorry to respond this late. I’m not from Toronto, I’m from Vancouver. Good luck
I don't know how I only recently discovered this one. It's one of the "manlier" judo throws where you simply pick someone up, spin them and put them on their back. The partner fully knows they've been had and you outpowered them, manhandled them.
I like the emphasis on it being a lift into ogoshi. That makes it seem much more controlled and easier for uke than just picking them up and slamming them down.
Sometimes I ask myself if martial arts attended to grappling are really less dangerous than striking ones
Grappling is generally less dangerous in comps, It's coz you tap out, n get thrown onto mats often in a fairly controlled way. That being said Ive had ligaments torn, tendons n muscles torn n ribs broken from judo nd bjj, nd I have a friend who broke his neck in wrestling... so still dangerous but you shudnt get CTE like in striking.
Tho outside of comps on the street with no rules, instead of tapping out youre getting choked out=death or unconsciousness, youre limbs torn apart often in irreparable ways or slammed onto concrete, furniture, glass or even off a bridge etc etc... also often=death or serious damage, another friend has a part of his skull covered by a titanium plate coz a judoka threw him in the street...
Imo if you have a choice youd rather take a good punch from a boxer in the street than a solid throw from a wrestler or judoka let alone a neck crank or rear naked choke!
Grappling is no joke... just ask the samurai, spartans, knights nd steppe nomads!
It depends on what you mean by dangerous. Competing in a grappling martial art is a lot less dangerous than a striking martial art in terms of brain damage, although there are many other injuries that are more prevalent in grappling. If you're talking about how dangerous it is in a fight though, it depends again. I'd rather be taken down onto grass than receive a head kick, but I'd rather get punched really hard than get thrown on concrete with a throw like the one in the video full force. Danger =/= efficacy though, the best is to have a combination of both
@@nammather4920 broke his neck? You mean fractured?
@@liamsomeone6333 I completely agree with your comment, it's all relative nd each has its strengths n weaknesses depending on situation, environment and the people involved. You definitely need both or you have serious weak links in the chain.
Yea a fracture, I'm not a doctor all I know is half his body was paralyzed for years...
love your show, sensai Shintaro
The coolest damn thing that I've seen in a long time.
Nice! I taught a similar technique in wrestling last Friday.
I showed them how to block the hip throw with the forearm to maintain distance and stop the throw. Once the turn throw or hip toss is stopped you can easily move to the reverse throw or suplex depending on the angle you can get.
I'm still learning the names in Japanese 😅 would appreciate if you could type them as a response it's hard to understand how they're pronounce properly
@@THIS---GUY utsuri goshi
@@THIS---GUY utsuri goshi = ooh-tsooh-ree goh-shee (spanish R)
Beautiful man, just beautiful 👏👏👏
oh man poor Dante haha. Thankyou for the details, this is one i have struggled with.
That was BEAUTIFUL!!!!
Love this! Higashi sensei, could you teach us how to practice to learn the ura nage safely? Thank you!
Dope, great counter…I have learned a lot from your videos
2:07 So nice of him to set you down lightly :D
I loved this video, thanks 🙏.
brilliant..either using ura nage or utsuri goshi..great
Cool. Judo is fun to watch.
I just did it! Worked perfectly!
But, my grandma isn't as durable as she used to be. You guys should give some sorta heads up on these things.
Great uki👍
This looks deadly!
Very cool. I'm a lifelong striker (mostly Okinawan karate although judo was my first martial art at 11) but with 3 years of BJJ. My overall knowledge of grappling is limited so I never realized that you can reverse an attempted throw. Thanks for this.
Schoolofgrappling is an awesome yt channel, if i dont remember wrong they have a video on reversals covering wrestling reversals, matreturns and counter throws. Really good channel
Listen, listen.... slow, slow.... yup, I see what you're doing there....
DAMN!
This yelow belt is very funy!!! thanks!
just to note the entrance - to lower the center of gravity. Is mentioned as bending the knees but could be a small step or a small drop when turning the hips.
wow that is a powerful throw
this is amazing!
Very well Done
It's okay Dante, being the sensei's favorite uke is an honor (at least that's what my Aikido sensei used to tell me 🤣)
Great 👍 video thanks 🙏
wow just when I thought I seen it all. I've been using this hip block to stop throws but never saw this additional technique. gorgeous
My favorite throw! Often uke puts his leg around my leg in an o-uchi-gari fashion while he is loaded on my hip to prevent my hip switch to the o-goshi. In that case, just ura nage :)
That first one was rough!😂🤙🏿
can tell that the blue guy is like; "god-damnit" - but he pops right back up every time
Oh man, that's a nice (and nasty) throw. :D
Legend says he keeps throwing the blue guy on the floor again and again...
Why have i not seen this one in a movie yet ? :')
thats a very cool move.
That is one powerful throw.
A hip thrust? Master Ken approves.
He's going to regret this in the morning!
I notice that in the initial throw (Ogoshi?), the hand is around the waist. However in the subsequent examples of Utsuri-goshi, Uke is putting his arm around the neck and back rather than beneath the arm and around the waste. Is there a practical difference there? Can Utsuri-goshi still be performed if the initial move has the attacker's arm beneath the counterer's arm?
It's mostly preference based on how tall you are relative to your opponent. For the counter move you can still use your right arm, though it might be less ideal for the initial lifting phase.
Like a greco-roman suplay (throwers front against uke's back) or suplex (face to face)?
Some nice big soft crash mats in the background there... but let's ignore them, and get some suffering in ... Glad I'm not uke here :-) Great throw!
I had this done to me a while back. Very cool. Fortunately, he was nice and didn't complete the throw. My old bones thank him for that even still. Haha
Duuuuuuuude!! Nice🤓🥳👍
Looks amazing. Looks like a throw that require a lot of strenght tough...
Its all about acting fast with precision but in real life factors are always to make you react differently from the model you practiced, always be ready for any situation for any surprise move
From Argentina, Biutifullllllll !!!!!
Muchas gracias
Will this work if your opponent gets your posture broken when the drives his hips through and brings you to a headlock?
Looks pretty sick, but i would imagine it's a little painful
whats a more powerful throw, a changing hip throw, or an osoto gari? please only answer if you have experience with both of these throws.
Sensei shitaro
Ia m trying to do this move in NO GI
from an under hook as i l love my o goshi but it is so difficult to get to the right position to launch in no GI
get my o goshi once every few moon , can i used this in no gi to unleash o goshi ???
no gi , please seNsei
ITS TIME TO REUNIFIE JUDO AND BJJ
Awesome video! I would love to learn some technic to apply when your opponent is smaller than you (im having some difficulties against smaller opponents, everytime i had to switch my stance to the knees to compensate the difference). Thank you in advance.
Wow what a beautiful throw. Dude gets thrown into the air and then caught in mid air and then gets hip thrown lol.
I like tani otoshi with my feet perpendicular to my opponent’s and a body lock as my favorite counter. It’s been my most successful throw in bjj competition, but I’ve also used a single right hand on the lapel baiting a seonage and if they take it immediately counter with tani otoshi. It’s just unfortunate if done wrong it can lead to catastrophic injury which is common to happen. Our only 2 major injuries in the nearly 5 years I’ve trained were tani otoshi. One was a 5’4 brown belt who’s 70 years old and 135 pounds but ironically he caused the injury on a 6’2 230 pound man.
bodylock to tani otoshi is great, one of my highest percent takedowns as well
Wish I was young again and was able train under someone like you. My bones would not like it now.
Let us give a minute of respect to all the judo brides and grooms we have lost,
when their partners fogot to un-Utsurii-Goshi themselves during their weddings.
I wonder whether we will ever do that in jujutsu sometime too....probably not
*back pain has entered the chat*
What’s the best way to counter sode
I still couldn't see it clearly, can you do it from all different angle at least 4 times? Thanks in advance.
I didn't catch that. Could you do it one more time?
My favourite judo throw is the Tome-nage. It's like Ryu throw on Street Fighter, super flashy. However, I seldom tried it on my judo years due to the risk of becoming a kick in the nuts.
We do a drill at our Dojo for any sacrifice technique (Tomoe-Nage, variations of similar throws), we have the Uke just do the initial fall forward and the Tori just practices getting his foot placed horizontally on the pelvis. Once you’re used to getting the foot placement on the pelvis, it mixes in with the throw as a full motion so you avoid destroying your opponents nuts, it becomes muscle memory to avoid the balls, also sometimes you can do the same throw but place your shin on the pelvis and once their shoulders go past your eyes just kick your leg up and you launch them in sort of a catapult manner, it’s also a lot less risky for the family gems.
Wear your cups kiddos 😆
but what if he lowers his hips before the side throw,and so his hips are below yours,can he not just outwrestle you there using superior hip position and strenght alone?
AWESOME!!!!
Sensei, how do you get such lift with this throw? How important is pulling the sleeve?
"We've got a patreon situation now so hit me up...." im hip to the times. Im Cool. Lol. Just busting your balls. Thanks for the great vids