3 Japanese Jujutsu Wrist & Elbow Attacks For Modern Combat | Flow of Combat EP1

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  • Опубліковано 8 лип 2024
  • In the inaugural episode of the Flow of Combat, we're going to look at 3 Japanese Jujutsu Wrist and Elbow joint locks / attacks for modern sport and no-rules combat. The jiu jitsu techniques would be considered "Small Joint Manipulation" techniques; even though, they have a great effect on the overall structure of the body itself.
    The 3 small joint lock attacks are:
    00:37 - Kote Gaeshi - common wrist twist technique, learn ways to apply the Kote Gaeshi in self defense or grappling.
    08:34 - Waki Gatame - very powerful elbow lock using a "wing" action. Add a slide to it and it becomes a very "destructive" techniques.
    21:29 - Ude Gatame - a very versatile elbow / shoulder (for space/stabilization).
    For more information on the techniques and training used in the Flow of Combat, visit tritacmartialarts.com
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 171

  • @TheSaintberzerker
    @TheSaintberzerker Рік тому +39

    Very good stuff. People rarely learn the "original Jiu Jitsu" because of the popularity of BJJ. Japanese JJ is brutal and was meant for the battlefield and the street - not the gym. This is why it's so valuable.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  Рік тому +8

      Absolutely, couldn't agree more.

    • @markdaniels4178
      @markdaniels4178 10 місяців тому +1

      You're absolutely correct, I study judo and bjj but American jiu-jitsu is best to learn

    • @tjl4688
      @tjl4688 8 місяців тому

      @@markdaniels4178American jiujitsu is so removed from fighting it's not funny. Japanese and Gracie Jiujitsu have the right ideas.

    • @RK-um2bj
      @RK-um2bj 6 місяців тому

      ​@@tjl4688American everything outside of boxing and wrestling is removed from reality 😂

    • @markdaniels4178
      @markdaniels4178 6 місяців тому

      Exactly! I approve your message,that's why it's very important tp learn judo and the katas

  • @ibliskhan2527
    @ibliskhan2527 4 роки тому +84

    I love how you teach Japanese jiu jitsu because everyone shits on it because of brazlian jiu jitsu but I think they are a both deadly combo to learn and have

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +28

      I was very lucky to have a combat focused instructor in Japanese Jujutsu (Kobukai Jujitsu). After I got my black belt in Kobukai, then got my black belt in BJJ under Rafael "Formiga" Barbosa. The integration of the 2, along with wrestling, is a major part of what we teach in TRITAC.

    • @ibliskhan2527
      @ibliskhan2527 3 роки тому

      @@tritacacademy kobukai in South Windsor? If so I was going to sign up to that school because of it's old school training I've tried Japanese jiu jitsu or as he called it jukido at a place called house of jiu jitsu by Robert Robert learned some good stuff that I wish I knew back then. I also did bjj under Rick Torres phenomenal teacher had to stop due to financial reasons but will get back on it

    • @AikidoApplied
      @AikidoApplied 3 роки тому +11

      only fools shit on it. ignore them. find the best teachers you can and learn. forget haters.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +3

      @@ibliskhan2527 sorry I missed this response. Yes, the same Kobukai Jujitsu as South Windsor, but in Cromwell CT. We teach more than pure KJJ, such as BJJ, MMA, TRITAC, and Submission Wrestling

    • @vittoriovedli4819
      @vittoriovedli4819 Рік тому +5

      "Everyone shits on it", because they understand nothing! They never learned, japanese Ju Jitsu!

  • @darylfields
    @darylfields 3 роки тому +9

    Samurai jujutsu, judo, okinawan karate and boxing are my favorite styles

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +2

      Nice, we are influenced by similar systems

  • @smashonlamez
    @smashonlamez Рік тому +5

    Man tis is great, I feel like everyone is so focused on BJJ and ground stuff, that they forget standing locks/submissions like the ones you demonstrated.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  Рік тому +4

      Thanks!! If you can finish them standing, why go to the ground!

  • @jessiesineath7702
    @jessiesineath7702 3 роки тому +25

    If I could find a good Japanese Jujutsu school in my town I would be on it in a second..

    • @zackjames2381
      @zackjames2381 Рік тому

      US?

    • @jessiesineath7702
      @jessiesineath7702 Рік тому +1

      @@zackjames2381 yup

    • @zackjames2381
      @zackjames2381 Рік тому

      @@jessiesineath7702 ah ok sorry bud.. I know a few here in UK london

    • @markdaniels4178
      @markdaniels4178 11 місяців тому +2

      To be honest Japanese jiu-jitsu is real and practical, more so than Brazilian jiu-jitsu which is a sport

    • @markdaniels4178
      @markdaniels4178 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@zackjames2381 it's very hard to find a Japanese jiu-jitsu dojo in the United States but hard to find. However, in the United Kingdom and all over Europe you guys have good jiu-jitsu and judo

  • @liamcage7208
    @liamcage7208 3 роки тому +7

    I'm old school Hapkido for over 30 years. I love this video all the Aiki with a modern combative approach while maintaining the flow.

  • @stefanobio7045
    @stefanobio7045 3 роки тому +16

    "Old school Ju-Jutsu" fantastic, thanks for posting these excellent videos, your the best Ju-Jutsu instructor on UA-cam Matt...

  • @lewpearson9800
    @lewpearson9800 5 місяців тому +1

    Awesome channel. I took Aikido for 7 years then moved to something with more offense. I've learned more about locks on your channel than any other. One thing I see missing is that some techniques prevent the opponent from using their other hand or legs and some do not. Unless the technique is put on with speed you might have to deal with getting hit. I like the techniques which get me out of the way of the oppenents weapons (hands, elbows, knees, legs).

  • @solagratia1600
    @solagratia1600 4 роки тому +15

    Great to see how iriminage is being incorporated in the Russian tie, good to hear about your past training story too!

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +1

      The "Russian Tie" and almost all 2 on 1 controls give you so many options for grappling, MMA and combatives.

  • @olivier-stonembambe
    @olivier-stonembambe 3 роки тому +2

    Thanks master. I deeply appreciate your teaching.

  • @jarmaal
    @jarmaal 3 роки тому +1

    This was dope I love the joint locks

  • @Tigerblood90
    @Tigerblood90 3 місяці тому

    Big compliment! Because of my job I've already done a lot of courses and watched a lot of videos. You go into the most important points of the techniques very well so that they really work! Thank you very much for your effort and for sharing it publicly! Stay safe

  • @cesarag0723
    @cesarag0723 8 місяців тому

    As a cross training Aikidoka, I love seeing these jujutsu technique origins that are so very similar to Aikido kihon waza. Definitely love watching these applications. Thank you for sharing!

  • @antonioussameh2497
    @antonioussameh2497 3 роки тому +4

    Finally I find some one who know the real deal and the OG art

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +3

      :) thanks man, we try to make the old school Jujutsu applicable and approachable for all

  • @TheBeardedMadman
    @TheBeardedMadman Рік тому +1

    i love the way you're explaining this. Excellent.

  • @HMALDANA
    @HMALDANA 3 роки тому

    What a great teacher you are! Thanks for sharing!

  • @Caffeinescience
    @Caffeinescience 5 місяців тому

    Nicely explained and shown techniques. Thank you.

  • @TheRoninSith
    @TheRoninSith 3 роки тому +1

    Love your work Brother. Blending the oldschool with the modern is a passion of mine as well. 🙏🏼🤙🏼🙇

  • @letterenenspieren728
    @letterenenspieren728 3 роки тому

    Nice job teaching the art of fighting

  • @JesseStark26
    @JesseStark26 3 роки тому

    Great channel.

  • @alexcoutinho4193
    @alexcoutinho4193 4 роки тому +23

    I like the way you add the aikijutsu elements. This feels more applicable than what aikidio is normally practiced. Will you be adding more of them in your Tritac Jitsu?

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +4

      Thanks Alex! Yes, they are already in our TRITAC-Jitsu System

  • @kageryujujitsu9712
    @kageryujujitsu9712 4 роки тому +1

    Tight work sir.

  • @CodaCombatives
    @CodaCombatives 3 роки тому

    I really like these series of using JJJ blend with your tritac model. Keep up with these types of video!

  • @chriswilcox8977
    @chriswilcox8977 10 місяців тому

    Try kote gaeshi with no grips of the fingers into the palm and the curve of your own inner wrist onto the back of their hand. Then the direction of pressure is down, not back - traditionally wrist ‘locks’ were to turn the knife away from you. Pain is secondary to kuzushi. KG can also turn the elbow into the attackers chest to remove their ability to engage the lats and keep trying to stab or attack.
    Best non-Koryu teaching of these I’ve seen in a while.

  • @KungFuTweety1
    @KungFuTweety1 Рік тому

    Finally a channel that does good old Japanese jujitsu!

  • @milehighmaestro
    @milehighmaestro 3 роки тому +5

    I like to teach locks in 3 dimensions as in height, width, and depth. Really cool and awesome to see small circle! If you are new to any form of self defense or MMA pay attention cause you are getting first class Martial Arts right here! Dig the channel!

  • @torotaxi1
    @torotaxi1 3 роки тому +11

    Great video mate. We use those moves in Hapkido. Glad to see they can be used in modern combat. For the wrist lock we sometimes push the opponents hand a bit lower but otherwise it was identical. Other you tubers seem to rubbish these techniques but they hurt as hell.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks man, you'll see some similarity to some of the Japanese Jujutsu to Hapkido.

    • @disastergarage4261
      @disastergarage4261 11 місяців тому +1

      close on the identical. but far from original Hapkido/// hapkido has been changed and modernized to conform to tourney specs!!!

  • @MartialCoachJF
    @MartialCoachJF 4 місяці тому

    Bravo Sir 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 your school is pure Gold! Keep it up💪💪💪👏🏼👏🏼🥋🥊🙇‍♂️

  • @roundhouse6890
    @roundhouse6890 11 місяців тому

    I love using waki gatame in judo. I get a few high level judoka with that

  • @KevinWiley8
    @KevinWiley8 11 місяців тому

    One of the best training by video I have seen. New Subscriber

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  11 місяців тому

      Thank you!! Glad to have you!!!!

  • @timothylee8004
    @timothylee8004 Рік тому

    Sir you are an excellent instructor

  • @renshisensai5508
    @renshisensai5508 2 роки тому +1

    Its nice to see some JJJ classical work in a moden class....keep it up!!! not many of us around !!!

  • @pasteghost428
    @pasteghost428 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for your making these videos for us. This channel deserves support. Can you recommend books or other videos on the subject of studying the Japanese names of techniques? I'm hungry for content about that stuff. Aikijutsu , jiujutsu and other Samurai Budo information and research. Thanks again. Wish your gym was in my area.

  • @charleswilson5067
    @charleswilson5067 4 роки тому

    Every video produced on this channel is excellent. Have one of their dvds also it is excellent. Good flow drills to practice for sure.

    • @kettlebells-ez9xi
      @kettlebells-ez9xi 4 роки тому

      Just ordered some a week or so ago so look forward to it. Only problem is I'm in Australia so will probably take awhile to get here. Which one did you get

    • @charleswilson5067
      @charleswilson5067 4 роки тому

      kettlebells 123456 I got the combat jiu jitsu fundamentals. Lot of good flow drills and basic concepts. It will be worth the wait. Have a good day.

  • @user-yb7zf7yo4j
    @user-yb7zf7yo4j 7 місяців тому

    Very good master from the philippines

  • @joeholloway4558
    @joeholloway4558 3 роки тому

    Hi Matt,
    Nice breakdown of some of my favorite techniques! I have working on ways to defeat the leveraging arm used in a knife attack. I have seen you pressure test some knife techniques. I am curious about your thoughts on using waki gatame against a leveraging arm as they start an attack. Before they even get a chance to make the first knife thrust. It seems to me that it would move you to the outside, put them between you and the knife. It would also give you a chance to scan for other threats as you rotate. If there are no other threats you can take them to the ground. But if there are other attackers you can elbow bump them and push them to the side almost like a Kaitenage throw. That would give you a chance to run or face the next attacker.
    Thanks for the awesome video,
    Joe

  • @3liyyahu591
    @3liyyahu591 9 місяців тому

    If u can get the elbow to rotate more to where its pointing up in the waki gatame, u can go straight down instead of rotating into another technique to take him down

  • @DetroitThreatManagementCenter
    @DetroitThreatManagementCenter Рік тому +3

    Very good training on this channel by this instructor

  • @macaronimadman7160
    @macaronimadman7160 3 роки тому

    I’m a white belt and this helped a lot :D

  • @darthwolfX2
    @darthwolfX2 4 роки тому

    Thank you for the upload

  • @saltspringdesign
    @saltspringdesign Рік тому

    good lesson on kote gaeshi. One thing that you might mention; if one is up against a very strong person, there is an aspect of aikido that is very important; that is to trick the opponent into pushing by pulling them and into pulling by pushing them in the opposite direction. This is how we set the move using their own strength against them. I feel this is an often overlooked and very important aspect and nuance of many techniques in Aikido and Jujutsu. So, for example the action of pulling the arm and wrist into extended prior to applying kote gaeshi or ikkyo and sankyo or similar wrist lock. Also the important of feints. For example if i want the wrist and the person is a boxer or similar style, which most fighters are, or at least that is their first instinct in the case of untrained combatant i would feint towards the eyes, triggering reflex defensive block in the opponent and once that arm is up then i go for the wrist, my intention was not the eyes but to precipitate that block. Very few boxers will leave an arm out hanging there for you to just take the wrist, in heat of moment i have had long tall opponent do just that however, but he didn’t have a clue how to box he was just coasting on his height and reach advantage which made him over confident. He was at least half drunk also and i was sober. In aikido, hieght and reach are not so much an advantage as that just provides extra leverage to the aikikai and tall thin people tend to have much slower reflexes and strike speed compared to smaller individuals. There is a version of Ikkyo where one steps under the arm pit of an aggresor while turning whole body counter clockwise, for an attack upon the right arm/wrist or clockwise for an attack upon the left arm/wrist. I hope all of this makes sense to your viewers. I have been practicing aikido and judo since a child and have had some opportunity to use these techniques in real life, even against multiple opponents in a row in one case, such as the incident with the tall thin guy i mentioned. He was followed and joined by an older Irish boxer guy and a rather rotund latino dude. A bit of a long story but will save it for those who are interested another day. It’ started because the guy was harassing my girlfriend on Valentine’s Day about 10 years ago or more. That tall guy OD’s about a year later on some drug. It’s too bad because he was a very good guitarist, i kinda knew him from the hood. His issue was in getting drunk though and giving other’s guy’s girl’s the spray and being generally crude and disrespectful.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  Рік тому +1

      Thanks for all the info! Will take that into mind!

  • @cagedraptor
    @cagedraptor 3 роки тому +1

    love Kote, in fact I actual used this in a real knife fight, that knife went right across they guys throat, using kote.

  • @user-vt8jp7px9v
    @user-vt8jp7px9v 3 роки тому +1

    Last one's Hije Shime elbow wrap.

  • @kostasmeniothis283
    @kostasmeniothis283 10 місяців тому +1

    Ευχαριστω δασκαλε.

  • @johnpogany2444
    @johnpogany2444 11 місяців тому

    Joint locks are brutal

  • @germanshepherdlover2613
    @germanshepherdlover2613 Рік тому

    I am doing Japanese Ju-jitsu at the moment. I Haven't been doing it for very long (less than a year) It's a wonderful flowing art. But am getting repeated wrist strains from over zealous joint locks from some students. I am still a white belt and come from a background of striking (boxing and karate) so this is all new to me and I am taking a very long time to get the techniques right. In one instance a student ignore my tap and kept the wrist lock on which strained my wrist.....maybe this isn't for me. Love your videos very informative 😊

    • @bichoobhatti92
      @bichoobhatti92 11 місяців тому +1

      I also do Japanese JJ and its been an year - I do No-Gi so no belt... I agree with you, those wrist locks are no joke, they hurt. I personally do not enjoy drilling them. But at the same time it's good to know for live situations.

    • @germanshepherdlover2613
      @germanshepherdlover2613 11 місяців тому +1

      @@bichoobhatti92 l have been doing JJJ for over a year now. Still not very good at it. I did a lot better in boxing and Wing Chun. I find stretching the wrists before training really helps to prevent the wrist strains that follow training with over zealous partners. I really doubt that even a black belt could successfully get a wrist lock on a boxer with good hand speed. But the wrist locks are a good form of control before things get out of hand...eg.drunk cousin who is throwing everyone into the swimming pool in winter LOL.

  • @tichtran664
    @tichtran664 3 роки тому

    The last submission reminds me of the catch/pro wrestling move called the fujiwari armbar. And you look Josh Bartnett the catch/pro wrestler.

  • @76kamikazi
    @76kamikazi 3 роки тому +1

    The Gracies originally frowned on joint locks and leg locks.Now they are playing catch up.

  • @Projectdarksource
    @Projectdarksource 3 роки тому

    Honestly the only Bjj school I would train in, wish this teacher was closer to me here in Canada.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому

      Theres a lot of quality BJJ and Japanese Jujutsu schools out there, just gotta find one that fits YOU

    • @Projectdarksource
      @Projectdarksource 3 роки тому +2

      @@tritacacademy yeah I don't know many bjj schools that also teach traditional jujutsu. Its actually very nice to see, instead of bjj making fun of the old schools

  • @kin_geri
    @kin_geri 2 роки тому +1

    Great vid, from a swedish jujutsuka :)

  • @cristianherrerasalce
    @cristianherrerasalce 3 роки тому

    Hay una base y posición , mas pasos ....en japones kiba sashhi , shico o nekodashi , etc ... mykio o sankyo ...es lo que recuerdo del jujutsu , en karate , el judo ....soy un brazilian jiujitsu tambien ...saludos muy buen video😁😁😁

  • @DJGamesHD
    @DJGamesHD 2 роки тому

    Really interesting joint locks . Would you recommend learning this as well as BJJ ?

  • @taraxa287
    @taraxa287 6 місяців тому

    Hm, not so bad, but there is an easier explanation: first do a side step to evade his kicks and punches, then grab his opposing hand, put your thumb in between middle land ring finger and push his elbow into his torso, you can give it a twist by putting the other hand on top and give it an elbow slash into the face while lifting the shoulder up to protect your face for any potential threats.

  • @kungfujoe2136
    @kungfujoe2136 3 роки тому

    i always wander if there a no standing locks (/breaks) that can be used in mma
    i guess the gloves make it really hard but i also think that it's possible with a lot of training and a bit of adaptation

    • @scarred10
      @scarred10 2 роки тому

      They are trained fighters,you wont be doing standing locks on them in a match fight. Maybe in self defense these may work on a non fighter.

  • @michelleruss1
    @michelleruss1 Рік тому

    Oss. For fun try compound Gaeshi., hurts even more. Waki katami is good old kensetzu waza. Great demos, Domo. Owza Ryu Jujitsu 7yrs.

  • @FollowSteveJPN
    @FollowSteveJPN 3 роки тому

    I study brazilian jiu jit su.. should I add Ju Jut su? I am also an experienced striker in muy thai so I'm interested in takedown like Judo but there are no judo schools near me just ju jutsu

  • @TonyqTNT
    @TonyqTNT 3 роки тому

    With the gun defense technique would it be operationally viable to overhook with the left arm as opposed to underhooking with the left arm?

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому

      There are other options of course, the one we are highlighting is ude gatame which is with an underhook.

  • @RobertoBren
    @RobertoBren 3 роки тому +2

    Nice job walking through the Ju-Jutsu techniques. Well explained and easy to follow.👍🥋
    I don't use the phrase JJJ because it's called Ju-Jutsu / Ju-Jitsu.
    BJJ makes sense because it was altered from Judo which came from Ju-Jitsu and was developed in Brazil into its specialized ground grappling style.

  • @ryanhouk3560
    @ryanhouk3560 8 місяців тому

    People sleep on Japanese Jujutsu I feel like, largely it's because there's so little standard for curriculum, ranking, and training methods. Some Japanese Jujutsu places are realistic self defense. Some look so similar to a BJJ gym a layman wouldn't know the difference, some look like Aikido.
    So long as where your training offers resisting opponents during techniques and sparring, you'll learn to fight.

  • @jamesjean2652
    @jamesjean2652 4 роки тому

    Some classic Japanese ju jitsu moves applied and practical in modern situation, good on you although few of your students were slacking off in the background like leaning onto the wall if we did that it be 50 Push ups back in our days.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  4 роки тому +2

      Agreed. We blur that lines of modern/old. I would like to say that we do our best to keep the martial arts spirit alive in our gym. But, we train quite a diverse group at our gym and not as strict as some of our past "experiences" :) Thank you for your insights. Oss.

  • @AikidoApplied
    @AikidoApplied 10 місяців тому +1

    There is no "Japanese" Jiujutsu. There's only Jiujutsu (the roots and trunk of the tree) which originates from Japan (divided there into various "ryu-ha" or schools if you like: daito-ryu, kito ryu, yagyu-shingan ryu, etc. etc. ... you get the idea) and then jiujutsu's various branches/offshoots: judo, russian judo, BJJ (directly from kodokan judo), kawaishi jiujutsu, hapkido (a Korean interpretation of daito-ryu aikijiujutsu), aikido, sambo, etc. etc. etc. It's akin to saying "American" baseball. Good of you to be sharing these techniques and trying to expand awareness.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  10 місяців тому +1

      99% of martial artists don't understand the difference, hence why I specify when we're focusing on a certain area of study.

    • @AikidoApplied
      @AikidoApplied 10 місяців тому +1

      No they don't. 100% correct. Presumed, correctly, that you do. Keep on spreadin' the word! @@tritacacademy

  • @tadeasstavek2927
    @tadeasstavek2927 Місяць тому

    I don't know about you but our style of JJJ also has striking and kicking

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  19 днів тому

      Some Japanese Jujitsu styles have more than others, especially modern representations

  • @Aikibiker1
    @Aikibiker1 3 роки тому +1

    Could you hit the kote gaeshi off an arm drag?

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  3 роки тому +1

      The arm drag is meant to be a quick entry, so you could transition to a control, and then get the kote gaeshi.

  • @davesharpe2752
    @davesharpe2752 3 роки тому

    Keep elbows at your side and let your hips to all the work

  • @markfisher2683
    @markfisher2683 Рік тому

    Placing the palm flat on the floor.

  • @burakcakmak6476
    @burakcakmak6476 3 роки тому

    if we can do this technics correctly that means our oppanent never punch us or kick us in this pozition?

  • @burakcakmak6476
    @burakcakmak6476 3 роки тому

    İf your oppanent is stronger than you can you still do this technics so easly and succesfuly ?

  • @eliotquintana9802
    @eliotquintana9802 11 місяців тому +1

    Wrist lock techniques arm police spacial fores

  • @petereriksson6760
    @petereriksson6760 Рік тому

    I am from Stockholm Sweden. I trained Jujutsu there 95 to 01 and during the last two years I taught the kids group. I like the art. We never called it aiki-jutsu, just Jujutsu.
    It is clear that this is the original art from which Judo and Aikido developed. Judo took away the punches and the kicks and focused on the throws and floor wrestling (newaze, that later BJJ specialized on). Aikido removed everything but the wrist-locks and softened it up. Really sad that there are so few schools in most places. Where I now live, there are no Japanese Jujutsu schools. Japanese Jujutsu is hundreds of years old and you can see it as the original Japanese art, Karate is from Okinawa. Unclear if BJJ developed from Japanese jujutsu or from judo.

  • @J.M.Bracero88
    @J.M.Bracero88 5 місяців тому

    Catch wrestling and traditional ju jutsu should be tought together. "these techniques are banned from competition" techniques are the best.

  • @Victorsbzh
    @Victorsbzh 11 місяців тому +1

    Kote Gaeshi; Waki Gatame; Ude Gatame

  • @DanTheWolfman
    @DanTheWolfman 4 роки тому

    Hey, so you guys are a big group that should film & Accept the Street Jiu-jitsu Speed Grappling Challenge will you do it Tritacers? ua-cam.com/video/o9tXI3xl9FA/v-deo.html See if you can pull off any of these LIVE or followups to ground control?

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  4 роки тому

      Interesting, but not interested. Thanks!

  • @VincenzoLaSpesa
    @VincenzoLaSpesa 6 місяців тому

    Aiki footwork == Tae Sabaki? why do we westerners never manage to have a consistent naming? :D
    Speaking about cultural specific explanation, I remember one aikido master explaining the distance where is best to keep the hand during the rotation with "it's the same position you would use to unscrew a moka pot that is stuck" ( yes, I'm Italian)

  • @aymanabaza6475
    @aymanabaza6475 8 місяців тому

    It works better when you back step with your left leg.

  • @Phan-Xu
    @Phan-Xu 7 місяців тому

    Is there an difference
    Between
    Jujitsu vs
    Ju jitsu

  • @burakcakmak6476
    @burakcakmak6476 3 роки тому +1

    İf your oppanent is stronger than you can you still do this technics so easly and succesfuly *

  • @jasoncruz582
    @jasoncruz582 3 роки тому +5

    Japanes Jujitsu is more for selfdefence not sport.

    • @ELLENFISHER2008
      @ELLENFISHER2008 Рік тому

      Jujutsu is an art. It's definitely not a sport due to the immediate death without delicate control. It's not something that should be taught to just anyone.

  • @maintaintogrow
    @maintaintogrow 3 роки тому +1

    That last technique is a good way to get shot. But I get it. Maybe the thinking is at least try something.

  • @percival1137
    @percival1137 Рік тому

    When doing takedowns from the wrist, block the legs and other hand for strikes. This should be investigated thoroughly.

  • @andrewbennett6954
    @andrewbennett6954 Рік тому +3

    Ukraine 🇺🇦 military need Japanese jujutsu!

  • @Asoka-eb8ru
    @Asoka-eb8ru 4 місяці тому

    This looks more like Aikido

  • @hostnik777
    @hostnik777 5 місяців тому

    “If this is so great how come we don’t ever see it in the UFC?!?!!! 🤡🤡🤡🤡”

  • @jaimeezquerra2219
    @jaimeezquerra2219 25 днів тому

    You have to put a lot of work of basics, before mastering standing controls and locks. These techniques are preserved in the kata's( Japanese Jiu Jitsu) but only trained when you reached a high level black belt ua-cam.com/video/1-YAOozPQNU/v-deo.htmlsi=hP-3oWHu9pMOZtc3

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  2 дні тому

      I don’t get it, you linked to a video of two men kneeling in front of each other, with a wrist grab defense…. How is this even remotely applicable to what I was sharing?
      Also, we have a rule in my school - you start standing when training/sparring.
      Men kneeling down in front of each other is weird and one of the things I always hated about BJJ… no man should ever kneel in front of another man… unless it’s love lol

    • @jaimeezquerra2219
      @jaimeezquerra2219 День тому

      @@tritacacademy The series is composed of 8 techniques from a kneeling posture (idori waza), and 12 techniques from a standing position (tachi waza). Both sets of techniques contain defenses for both armed and empty-handed attacks. When starting from kneeling it serves as a sript for standing. When kneeling, we focus mainly in posture and balance. It is a progression for standing. It is very challenging and hard to ejecute and mantain correct posture. To the outsider it seems very basic. The posture is called "kyoshi no kamae" (high kneeling posture) and is equivalent - on the ground - to the standing "shizen hontai" (natural basic posture).It gives you maximum of balance, being centered, possibilities to move from your core (it also develops core) , attack and defend and you also focus in breath. Then the same techniques are practiced in the second part standing. You can also look at goshin jistsu no kata. It is ejecuted entirely from standing position.

    • @jaimeezquerra2219
      @jaimeezquerra2219 День тому

      @@tritacacademy The series is composed of 8 techniques from a kneeling posture (idori waza), and 12 techniques from a standing position (tachi waza). Both sets of techniques contain defenses for both armed and empty-handed attacks. First you start in the posture is called "kyoshi no kamae" (high kneeling posture) and is equivalent - on the ground - to the standing "shizen hontai" (natural basic posture). It gives you maximum of balance, being centered, possibilities to move (from your core , attack and defend and focus in breath. After, you progress an do the same technicques from standing stance.

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  День тому

      I understand the reasoning behind it, but I personally don’t believe in this method of training.
      I am not as committed to the older methods of training as others, and still do not agree with starting on your knees.
      We approach all of our training from a combative perspective, and the only time we’re on our knees is when we’re fighting to get back up to a neutral or dominant position.
      I do find Japanese Jujitsu very diverse and interesting, but I prefer to focus on a more well rounded approach.
      Thanks for the information though, very informative

    • @jaimeezquerra2219
      @jaimeezquerra2219 14 годин тому

      @@tritacacademy You're welcome

  • @AdixyaSf
    @AdixyaSf 2 роки тому +1

    Who is here after watching Anime?

  • @moepanetta9028
    @moepanetta9028 Рік тому

    Kote yash??? Ok.

  • @disastergarage4261
    @disastergarage4261 11 місяців тому

    kobra kai.... lmfao... ok i watched this twice... every technique used here either is an offshoot or a direct 2 many moves to Hapkido... Hapkido has far less movements for same technique and has only the main outcome of.... dislocation of said wrist elbow and shoulder... way easier, and less complicated/ and considerably way more deadly than jiu jitsu. ( except for ground moves and locks) i trained back in 1990 when only 2 true korean national guards defected to canada in 88/86? 1 set up shop in Vancouver and the other in Edmonton,, i trained in Edmonton. over 30 years ago,/ I trained in pure Hapkido form.. along with my previous training in kung fu and Shotokan.... im over 50 now...

    • @tritacacademy
      @tritacacademy  11 місяців тому +2

      Cool! Thanks for the comment!

  • @kylechu4115
    @kylechu4115 3 роки тому +1

    Did I hear Cobra Kai Jujutsu?

  • @jaimeezquerra2219
    @jaimeezquerra2219 25 днів тому

    Judo and jiu jitsu ua-cam.com/video/o8MlGidQY-4/v-deo.html

  • @andreasmartinessen5553
    @andreasmartinessen5553 2 роки тому

    Love Ju jitsu, im am dough pissed of because BJJ is taking over Ju jitsu, people Even think that Ju jutsu is the Japanese name, and Ju jitsu is bjj

  • @haagsebluff704
    @haagsebluff704 4 місяці тому

    "Jujutsu"?! i can not take this guy seriously.

  • @robvidalbjj
    @robvidalbjj 8 місяців тому

    Standing wrist locks almost never work and are not high percentage. If you are looking at self defense why would you focus on things that have such a low conversion rate. That’s what makes other styles more popular. It’s seen in street fights and cage fights that these things are never executed. If these worked so effectively wouldn’t we see videos of real fights and cage matches with these techniques being used?

    • @adamsmith577
      @adamsmith577 2 місяці тому

      These locks are illegal because there is no time to tap. There is just break.

    • @robvidalbjj
      @robvidalbjj 2 місяці тому

      @@adamsmith577 not the way they are applied here. I’ve seen wrist locks in Bjj that come on very quick but the way they show here is more like an aikido style. I’ve never seen one video of a real fight where they use it in this manner

    • @adamsmith577
      @adamsmith577 2 місяці тому

      @robvidalbjj Personally, I've pulled off kotegaeshi off a russian drag a few times , but people don't instinctively go backward to be thrown. They go forward and into the break as you turn back with their hand centered .The few times that I've got it , I've had to let go of the wrist because I could feel them going the wrong way, and I don't want to hurt my partner. This stuff can be used. The entries need to be modified for the modern world.

    • @adamsmith577
      @adamsmith577 2 місяці тому

      @robvidalbjj it's a jjj move called Kotegaeshi. By the way, Aikido picked up moves from jjj.

  • @deadmeat8754
    @deadmeat8754 Рік тому

    LoL...poor Blue Belt crash test dummy...😉

  • @joshuacimaroon3692
    @joshuacimaroon3692 8 місяців тому

    Brazilian jujitsu is modifiable Japanese Judo 🥋🤷🏾‍♂️🤦🏾‍♂️. I know I trained both and among others also Capoeira. Bjj is as ridiculous as American karate🙄 Gracie jujitsu is more accurate bc they modified Japanese judo into what is bjj. You can’t have Japanese capoeira or Australian mariachis or Latin or mexican cholo rap that’s bs rap is from blacks and giving by our grace to all people in the world it’s not Latin rap it’s a Latino rapping. My black ass can sing narcocorridos and then take the same thing add some English shit and call Afro American narcocorridos speaking Spanish doing the same shit🙄🤦🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️street fight Japanese jujitsu especially wyiu don’t know how many buddies he got. Drop one guy and grab and push the other in front of his buddy and bounce🤦🏾‍♂️🤷🏾‍♂️🙄