She's a really good teacher. She's incredibly mobile and limber for someone in her age bracket. Impressive in a lot of different ways. Good, useful stuff here. Thx.
1st Degree BJJ Black Belt here. I’m a Shodan in Judo. I started Judo when I was already 15 years into BJJ - earned my Shodan in 2.5 years. Kathy is AWESOME. So I’m here to learn and see what she taught. In my experience, anybody in BJJ can learn good Judo. I think going into it with a White Belt’s enthusiasm, learning judo, then thinking about how to apply it to BJJ is a great way to do it.
Thank you to Kathy. That was such a clear explanation that even as a 50+ newish blue belt, who struggles with takedowns, I am REALLY enthusiastic to try out the Sloppy Seionagi
That's an interesting perspective on it. When I learned Japanese jiujitsu at a TJF club, they taught ippon seionage from a punch or a descending strike with a cosh or bottle, so the left arm is used first to block the incoming attack, and as such is *inside* Uke's right arm, goes over the top of it & pins it across Tori's body diagonally towards the hip. That way there's no RNC risk at all. It's perfect for such a strike because they've already started that momentum. If you're starting from an arm & lapel grip then of course this is the way, as Kathy describes. Love & respect to Kathy, heck of a good teacher.
I teach a yoko wakari for no gi and I teach to my middle school wrestlers where the opponent gets and underhook and you have a collar tie... I teach them to use a figure 4 arm lock/grip where my arm on the underhook side goes under his arm and I make a connection to my collar tie arm to form the figure 4 and then execute the yoko wakari. Great video!
You are so lovely lady... Kathy! OSSA They all cross over n work very fine in BJJ or JuDoka, even Aiki-do. I've been training all(BJJ incl No Gi, AikiDo, Judo, n Wrestling) your modified techniques help me a lot.
I remember learning this fifty years ago for my yellow belt , when my school decided to offer karate or Judo classes ... to counter (or capitalize on) the Bruce Lee craze. I opted for Judo. Never punched anyone in my life, but have swept and flipped and choked...mostly learned to diffuse conflict.
While this video was great and I don't want to push you away from this channel, @Shintaro Higashi (hopefully I spelled that right) has done a ton of "no gi judo" videos.
Coach what you demo as a typical judo sumi gaeshi is in fact a hikkikomi gaeshi (mae sutemi waza). The Judo sumi gaeshi (yoko sutemi waza) is perfectly suited for BJJ as well. Both are more effective with the georgian grip rolling into mount
@@danle3181when using belt grip it is called obi tori gaeshi. Explain how sumi gaeshi which involves by definition one to throw towards the rear corner and therefore having a angle on the throw, can be called masutemi waza
at 11:23 he should maybe counter by biting her pony tail, thus ensuring a brake for his landing. Then he should immediately wrap both his legs around her.
"Sloppy Seoi" looks like a pretty normal arm toss in wrestling haha. Actually, that exact method (minus the lapel) was the first their i was ever taught, by my dad, when i was 6 years old 😀 Now that I'm training judo, of course I'm trying to get nice standing seoi to work instead.
I really dont agree with the one dimensional locking in that arm hug prior to turning in. I know a lot of people teach it that way but it ruins the throw. explosive kuzushi pop and pull plus a high torque turn in while compressing the spring of your body, as shoulder and arm whips in to place and grip, body spring decompresses and releases torque into kake. more like this: ua-cam.com/video/1VqLKbHXkA0/v-deo.htmlsi=Hesa_TWM5ErYqgMl
BJJ is just a form of "gi wrestling" and would be better served focusing on basic wrestling takedowns, or even a bit of ne waza. They're more applicable for both gi and no-gi scenarios, as well as being more realistic to pull off in a competition. Of course, the competitions(rule sets) are ultimately the problem. They teach you to "game the game", rather than learning solid physical/martial arts practices. Many of the techniques she showing are rather dumb and dangerous in a fight and will get people hurt if they try to use them to defend themselves, which is the foundation of actual Judo(there were originally many disarming techniques taught by Kano), Jiu-Jitsu("soft" martial techniques), wrestling(Olympians would sometimes wrestle to the death). If all you're practicing is "sports" to "get points" you're in trouble and doing your students a great disservice. For the love of the gods, please learn to pronounce the names of these techniques properly. This was painful to listen to and a bit embarrassing for an "8 Times Masters World Champ", isn't it? ("c-oh naggy")
You make some good points but could have done in a way that fosters healthy discussion. But you just had to resort to using words such as “dumb” and picking on the pronunciation to attempt to inflate your own ego. For these reasons I am calling you out as an insecure, small minded, bullshido piece of sh*t
You make good points, and I would be the first one to recommend martial arts to anyone interested in self-defense. But in today's day and age, not only are the majority of people not interested in it, there are other more effective methods of self-defense. So the majority of people today resort to guns or other means of self-defense like pepper spray or tasers. Therefore the only major way for martial arts to stay alive is to become sports. At least that way if the individual wants to learn self-defense, it becomes a matter of adjusting the techniques and methods. Unlike others who just want to learn the self-defense aspect and never develop the physicality or athletic fitness development, i.e. they never get strong enough! P.S. that Japanese term "Ju" for soft or gentle is a bit confusing and untranslatable, its meaning is more of flexible or adaptable to be more precise...
@@wayofbjj. Holy crap! That really touch a nerve in you.... From personal experience, you are always going to come across this type of unabashed criticism. People really don't know how to control themselves when on the internet 😄 I used to get that type of criticism about correct pronunciation of Japanese words and terms.... to which my response was, I'm not Japanese so my japanese is the local american variant 😅 P.S. you Olympic judo people are really violent, and to think that in the old days they used to say that we the karate-ka were the violent ones 😅😅😅.
@@tatumergo3931 Wrong. You're much more likely to have to defend your self/others than to "sport gi-wrestle" someone and if you NEVER learn how to deal with strikes/kicks you're are toast. We have limited time and resources, so it's better to spend them on something universally beneficial. Self-defense techniques will help you in a competition far more than competition techniques will help you in the real world. Again, Judo used to have a complete repertoire of defense techniques prior to Kano's art being destroyed by defanged by the Olympics, et. al. Training to an arbitrary rule set/sport is waste of time and only teaches you how to beat those rule, not how to beat an opponent. Never mind the fact that in many places in the world you're aren't "allowed" to have tasers, spray, etc....all of which take time to deploy by which time you could already be knocked out. There's a reason you've NEVER seen a Judoka win any sort of professional "fighting" competition, because it's far to reliant on the gi, mats, rules, etc..... Judo has become an embarrassment and a shadow of its former self. At least Wrestling and Boxing are still just as practical as ever and there are many forms of martial arts that do not become sport and explicitly forbid it, such as Aikido. If you want to do sports, get a bat and ball. If you want to learn to fight, put on a gi. One has nothing to do with the other. If anything Judo/BJJ give people a false sense of security that they might actually be able to win a fight, which could get them even more hurt than going on instinct alone. "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing." You'll also not that Judo is and has been dying a very slow death for decades precisely because it's so "sportified" as to be a parody of itself. Kano is spinning in his grave. "Ju" : "柔 (ju): This character means “soft”, “gentle”, or “flexible”. In the context of martial arts, it refers to a style that emphasizes grappling and ground fighting, such as Jujutsu () or Judo (). In this sense, “ju” can be translated as “soft” or “flexible”."
Have you ever given it some thought that maybe just maybe, people sign up for martial arts to do the sport aspect of it? If your ego is so inflated that you have to think about what will work in a street fight because you can't seem to learn how to de-escalate a situation without your hands, there are other skills you need to work on. Especially if you do any martial arts, you should know what techniques will work in a "street fight" and what won't just by sparring and obtaining the knowledge over time. If you really want to learn just self-defense I can guarantee you any credible instructor can teach you only the throws/techniques that would be most applicable. But there is nothing wrong with someone enjoying martial arts as a sport.
"Yoko" = "Side"; "Wakare" = "Separation" (Yoko Wakare = Side Separation); "Otoshi" = "Drop/Fall" (a different set of techniques; e.g. "sumi otoshi"); "Uke" = "ooo-kay"(person receiving the technique) "Nage" = "nah-gay"("to throw", person performing the throw/technique upon their Uke who must perform "Ukemi"/act of controlled falling/rolling); Wakarimasu ka?.....Please, learn proper terminology and pronunciation. It does matter, especially for newer students who are already struggling with terminology. These same terms are fairly consistent and used in many other Japanese grappling systems like Sumo and Aikido, as well.
@@mercydocI’ve actually pronounced it that way since my first Sensei did this way… I actually speak almost fluent Japanese as I lived in Japan for a number of years after retirement from judo. Old habits die hard tho! Lol❤❤
Yeah I was a little peeved with her pronunciation at first. Then , when I saw how great her technique and instruction were, I realized I needed to lighten up 😂
I was thinking the same thing until she said “leeverage”. I think it’s just her accent. Granted, after I watched the whole thing I figure she can say it however she wants 😂
Certainly someone who has been training, competing at a high level and running a gym for 40 years has nothing to offer... cause you don't like her accent. 😢
@@wayofbjj Nope, that's not it because at some point, you should have been exposed to the proper pronunciation and went....hmm, I've been saying it wrong all this time and corrected yourself if you were such a good Judoka.
@@ronin2167 you are entitled to your opinion my friend. Personally I would rather actually be good at Judo and not know any of the names, vs pronouncing everything perfectly and can’t do a single throw. But thanks for watching and commenting in a respectful way!
It really doesn't matter what it is, in the end it's all one form of grappling or another. If on the other hand you want to argue that BJJ is in reality modified judo ne-waza or Japanese jujutsu ground techniques.... then Ok. There are only two methods known to human beings for bare handed fighting. One is grappling (wrestling) the other one is striking (boxing, pugilism). I haven't met someone yet, who has mastered the art of Octopus fighting! 😅
@@tatumergo3931 Wrong it does matter. Words are designed to give meaning and information. You give incorrect information means it is wrong. If I called you a piece of shit because you have a different opinion. Does that mean I'm a nice person? No, because the information I provided with my words means I'm not nice or kind. You can get butthurt if you want to but it doesn't change the fact. You can't put in a lock or a throw from judo or jujitsu and now it's boxing jujitsu. Its sad see this kind of ignorance.
@@OneLoneMan. Well yes you are right up to a certain point, but in the overall scheme of things. Grappling is just grappling and striking is just striking.... Besides I am not buthurt about it, I am just bored and this is a lot of fun arguing with you about semantics....
@@wayofbjj Thanks for answering. And I would highly recommend that you do not make assumptions about people you don't know. Let me tell you, that your assumption is also incorrect. Furthermore I would recommend (since we're at it) that you don't publish those nonsensical claims; they damage the channel's reputation. But sorry, it's your channel and these are your assumptions.
@@wayofbjj Your argument is a circular reasoning: I am wrong because I am wrong. This fits the video and, unfortunately, thereby also the channel. Unfortunately, no longer a recommendation.
its such a silly sport. if ur doing judo just quit and do bjj. much more value for your time. most of these take downs are complete garbage and useless as is the sport of judo
@@wayofbjj ah yes that must be why barely anyone uses them at all ever in any high level grappling competition or ufc! judo is so useful that no ones using it ur right!
@@wayofbjj you do realize saying i'm dumb does nothing to actually prove your point right? you dont seem to understand that. i gave you factual information on why what im saying is correct and like a 5 year old all you can do to prove its not true is say "you're duuuuuummbbb" silly little thing.
Lol, just started Judo and we've already started throwing each other from day one. Under control though. After three or four weeks we got to practice these throws for real. Grading in September October hopefully
She's a really good teacher. She's incredibly mobile and limber for someone in her age bracket. Impressive in a lot of different ways. Good, useful stuff here. Thx.
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@wayofbjj I would take some form of insult from the "for someone in her age group ", rather than someone who us half the height if everyone. 😁🌈
No teacher from my past in Judo has teached and explained so much like in here. Great teacher ! 😊😊
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1st Degree BJJ Black Belt here. I’m a Shodan in Judo. I started Judo when I was already 15 years into BJJ - earned my Shodan in 2.5 years. Kathy is AWESOME. So I’m here to learn and see what she taught. In my experience, anybody in BJJ can learn good Judo. I think going into it with a White Belt’s enthusiasm, learning judo, then thinking about how to apply it to BJJ is a great way to do it.
Great teacher and instruction. Her humbleness and enthusiasm even after years of practice is so awesome
her explanation is SOO good, it would be great to take lessons from her
Sensei Kathy is AWESOME
Thank you to Kathy.
That was such a clear explanation that even as a 50+ newish blue belt, who struggles with takedowns, I am REALLY enthusiastic to try out the Sloppy Seionagi
This was quality, she's a really good professor and able to explain things very well.
What a great teacher. Thank you
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This was a great training video. She is a fantastic professor and made things very clear. Thank you.
That's an interesting perspective on it. When I learned Japanese jiujitsu at a TJF club, they taught ippon seionage from a punch or a descending strike with a cosh or bottle, so the left arm is used first to block the incoming attack, and as such is *inside* Uke's right arm, goes over the top of it & pins it across Tori's body diagonally towards the hip. That way there's no RNC risk at all. It's perfect for such a strike because they've already started that momentum. If you're starting from an arm & lapel grip then of course this is the way, as Kathy describes. Love & respect to Kathy, heck of a good teacher.
Thanks for watching
I too learned TJF jitsu and this I agree with
Love this teacher's energy!
Agreed! She is amazing
Brilliant instruction and demonstration. Thanks for posting this!
👍👍👍
Awesome and useful, and really good teacher. People are sleeping on ladies technique
She's so good! 🔥 I would love a seminar with her and I've never trained Judo before, only BJJ.
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When I was training Judo this exact combo was one of my favorites to hit in randori. Such a cool video.
What do you mean by “I was”? Get back in there and train! 😘 Thanks for warning 👍🏽
Dang this was great, she’s an awesome coach
I teach a yoko wakari for no gi and I teach to my middle school wrestlers where the opponent gets and underhook and you have a collar tie... I teach them to use a figure 4 arm lock/grip where my arm on the underhook side goes under his arm and I make a connection to my collar tie arm to form the figure 4 and then execute the yoko wakari. Great video!
This lady is a beast!! 🥷
shes amazing!
thank you for the teaching❤
A good explainer!
These are amazing!!!
Awesome! Hopefully part 2 is coming? Thanks
Great high level teacher
Very impressive, Oss!
Love this!
You are so lovely lady... Kathy! OSSA
They all cross over n work very fine in
BJJ or JuDoka, even Aiki-do.
I've been training all(BJJ incl No Gi, AikiDo, Judo, n Wrestling)
your modified techniques help me a lot.
Great instruction.
I remember learning this fifty years ago for my yellow belt , when my school decided to offer karate or Judo classes ... to counter (or capitalize on) the Bruce Lee craze. I opted for Judo. Never punched anyone in my life, but have swept and flipped and choked...mostly learned to diffuse conflict.
This is bad ass. I would totally pay to train Judo for BJJ once a week. It should be a whole martial art by itself. I want to see nogi stuff too.
Awesome! Make sure to subscribe, NoGi stuff coming next week 🙏
While this video was great and I don't want to push you away from this channel, @Shintaro Higashi (hopefully I spelled that right) has done a ton of "no gi judo" videos.
@JD2jr. Shintaro is awesome! Everyone should go checkout his channel 👍🏽
Thanks for the instruction coach Kathy! If you are reading this, can you do a sloppy seoi nage in no-gi with a collar tie instead of a lapel grip?
I am wondering this also
Best bit of advice I’ve picked up learning Judo is there’s no such thing as a black belt throw just throws thrown to a black belt level
Wonderful teacher!!
Couldn’t agree more!
In Judo we follow up throws with pins also
Great instruction! Thank you!
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Chadi should interview you.
Her second technique is definitely in the Bunkia to Pinan Godan.
Shed a great communicator
For sure! Sensei Kathy knows her stuff
@@wayofbjj its the coachi g not the technical understanding thats obvious to me as I have coached several sports including ITF tkd and wrestling.
Jeff lawson is awesome at ippon seio nage to jujigatame
Amazing teacher!
I think, the first version seoi nage from Kathy for bjj is a diffrent princip. I think, this is seoi otoshi. But i like it👍, also the ko- uchi - gake.
Great take down. Thank you for sharing
Thanks for watching 🙏
@wayofbjj at 16:50 it looks more like a Ko-Uchi-Maki-Komi instead of a Ko-Uchi-Gari for me?!
It is a Ko-Uchi-maki-Komi. I just don’t get wrapped up in the nomenclature too much at a BJJ seminar❤
Incredible and amazing
Thank you for the kind words 🙏
@@wayofbjj you’re welcome so much 👍👍👌👌✌️✌️💪💪👊👊🥊🥊🥋🥋
Yeah it is amazing what they're doing to be able to re-sell the same old product. Well whatever is needed to keep it alive!
I would pay for a no Gi version of this. No joke
What if Nogi stuff is coming, and its free?
I’d love some.
@richarddangler7596 stay tuned and subscribe 👍🏽
@@wayofbjjdefinitely waiting for that
One of the things that should be taught in those 1st 3 months is the proper pronunciation of Japanese words.
Glad I wasn't the only one bothered by this.
Coach what you demo as a typical judo sumi gaeshi is in fact a hikkikomi gaeshi (mae sutemi waza). The Judo sumi gaeshi (yoko sutemi waza) is perfectly suited for BJJ as well. Both are more effective with the georgian grip rolling into mount
Sumi gaeshi (standard grip) and hikikomi gaeshi (belt grip) are both ma sutemi waza.
You might was to rewite that there bud.
Thanks for sharing!
@@danle3181when using belt grip it is called obi tori gaeshi. Explain how sumi gaeshi which involves by definition one to throw towards the rear corner and therefore having a angle on the throw, can be called masutemi waza
People it's really simple.... It is called sloppy judo for a reason.
So stop trying to make it correct !
Sheesh....!
7:34 what about the legs there .. ok wit the grip .. but you going flying if he moves
Can you pull an O uchi gari from the thigh rap?
Yes for sure! Unwind and put your body weight into other side as you o-Uchi! A great combo!
at 11:23 he should maybe counter by biting her pony tail, thus ensuring a brake for his landing. Then he should immediately wrap both his legs around her.
"Sloppy Seoi" looks like a pretty normal arm toss in wrestling haha.
Actually, that exact method (minus the lapel) was the first their i was ever taught, by my dad, when i was 6 years old 😀
Now that I'm training judo, of course I'm trying to get nice standing seoi to work instead.
I really dont agree with the one dimensional locking in that arm hug prior to turning in. I know a lot of people teach it that way but it ruins the throw. explosive kuzushi pop and pull plus a high torque turn in while compressing the spring of your body, as shoulder and arm whips in to place and grip, body spring decompresses and releases torque into kake. more like this: ua-cam.com/video/1VqLKbHXkA0/v-deo.htmlsi=Hesa_TWM5ErYqgMl
Hey, I know you.😂😂😂
Hey I know you too!!
BJJ is just a form of "gi wrestling" and would be better served focusing on basic wrestling takedowns, or even a bit of ne waza. They're more applicable for both gi and no-gi scenarios, as well as being more realistic to pull off in a competition. Of course, the competitions(rule sets) are ultimately the problem. They teach you to "game the game", rather than learning solid physical/martial arts practices. Many of the techniques she showing are rather dumb and dangerous in a fight and will get people hurt if they try to use them to defend themselves, which is the foundation of actual Judo(there were originally many disarming techniques taught by Kano), Jiu-Jitsu("soft" martial techniques), wrestling(Olympians would sometimes wrestle to the death). If all you're practicing is "sports" to "get points" you're in trouble and doing your students a great disservice.
For the love of the gods, please learn to pronounce the names of these techniques properly. This was painful to listen to and a bit embarrassing for an "8 Times Masters World Champ", isn't it? ("c-oh naggy")
You make some good points but could have done in a way that fosters healthy discussion. But you just had to resort to using words such as “dumb” and picking on the pronunciation to attempt to inflate your own ego. For these reasons I am calling you out as an insecure, small minded, bullshido piece of sh*t
You make good points, and I would be the first one to recommend martial arts to anyone interested in self-defense. But in today's day and age, not only are the majority of people not interested in it, there are other more effective methods of self-defense. So the majority of people today resort to guns or other means of self-defense like pepper spray or tasers.
Therefore the only major way for martial arts to stay alive is to become sports. At least that way if the individual wants to learn self-defense, it becomes a matter of adjusting the techniques and methods.
Unlike others who just want to learn the self-defense aspect and never develop the physicality or athletic fitness development, i.e. they never get strong enough!
P.S. that Japanese term "Ju" for soft or gentle is a bit confusing and untranslatable, its meaning is more of flexible or adaptable to be more precise...
@@wayofbjj. Holy crap! That really touch a nerve in you....
From personal experience, you are always going to come across this type of unabashed criticism. People really don't know how to control themselves when on the internet 😄
I used to get that type of criticism about correct pronunciation of Japanese words and terms.... to which my response was, I'm not Japanese so my japanese is the local american variant 😅
P.S. you Olympic judo people are really violent, and to think that in the old days they used to say that we the karate-ka were the violent ones 😅😅😅.
@@tatumergo3931 Wrong. You're much more likely to have to defend your self/others than to "sport gi-wrestle" someone and if you NEVER learn how to deal with strikes/kicks you're are toast.
We have limited time and resources, so it's better to spend them on something universally beneficial. Self-defense techniques will help you in a competition far more than competition techniques will help you in the real world. Again, Judo used to have a complete repertoire of defense techniques prior to Kano's art being destroyed by defanged by the Olympics, et. al. Training to an arbitrary rule set/sport is waste of time and only teaches you how to beat those rule, not how to beat an opponent.
Never mind the fact that in many places in the world you're aren't "allowed" to have tasers, spray, etc....all of which take time to deploy by which time you could already be knocked out. There's a reason you've NEVER seen a Judoka win any sort of professional "fighting" competition, because it's far to reliant on the gi, mats, rules, etc.....
Judo has become an embarrassment and a shadow of its former self. At least Wrestling and Boxing are still just as practical as ever and there are many forms of martial arts that do not become sport and explicitly forbid it, such as Aikido.
If you want to do sports, get a bat and ball. If you want to learn to fight, put on a gi. One has nothing to do with the other. If anything Judo/BJJ give people a false sense of security that they might actually be able to win a fight, which could get them even more hurt than going on instinct alone. "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing."
You'll also not that Judo is and has been dying a very slow death for decades precisely because it's so "sportified" as to be a parody of itself. Kano is spinning in his grave.
"Ju" : "柔 (ju): This character means “soft”, “gentle”, or “flexible”. In the context of martial arts, it refers to a style that emphasizes grappling and ground fighting, such as Jujutsu () or Judo (). In this sense, “ju” can be translated as “soft” or “flexible”."
Have you ever given it some thought that maybe just maybe, people sign up for martial arts to do the sport aspect of it? If your ego is so inflated that you have to think about what will work in a street fight because you can't seem to learn how to de-escalate a situation without your hands, there are other skills you need to work on. Especially if you do any martial arts, you should know what techniques will work in a "street fight" and what won't just by sparring and obtaining the knowledge over time. If you really want to learn just self-defense I can guarantee you any credible instructor can teach you only the throws/techniques that would be most applicable. But there is nothing wrong with someone enjoying martial arts as a sport.
Great teacher, aggressively canadian. lol
Are we pronouncing seoi nage sloppy? Isnt it nah geh not nay gee
correct
She's a great teacher, but it's hard not to cringe each time she says seoi nage...
sloppy seoi-OTOSHI...
I wish ny wife was like her. i should have married a MMA lady!
Variation of seio-otoshi
Thanks for watching 👍🏽
easy with falling dolls ...what when ppl really defend the move .. "everydody perfect" no they are not - they need really too much exercise and work
"Yoko" = "Side"; "Wakare" = "Separation" (Yoko Wakare = Side Separation); "Otoshi" = "Drop/Fall" (a different set of techniques; e.g. "sumi otoshi"); "Uke" = "ooo-kay"(person receiving the technique) "Nage" = "nah-gay"("to throw", person performing the throw/technique upon their Uke who must perform "Ukemi"/act of controlled falling/rolling); Wakarimasu ka?.....Please, learn proper terminology and pronunciation. It does matter, especially for newer students who are already struggling with terminology. These same terms are fairly consistent and used in many other Japanese grappling systems like Sumo and Aikido, as well.
See? You have kept your comment healthy and respectful here, now we can have a real discussion. How hard was that?
"seio nage" pronounced "say oh nah-gay" - not "See-Oh Nay-gee" I'm surprised no one has ever corrected her pronunciation of this!
@@mercydocI’ve actually pronounced it that way since my first Sensei did this way… I actually speak almost fluent Japanese as I lived in Japan for a number of years after retirement from judo.
Old habits die hard tho! Lol❤❤
Yeah I was a little peeved with her pronunciation at first. Then , when I saw how great her technique and instruction were, I realized I needed to lighten up 😂
@@frankinla Yes, great technique which makes the pronunciations all the more out of place. She clearly knows her stuff. That's for sure.
Seo NAH gae. For gods sake at least say it right.
I was thinking the same thing until she said “leeverage”. I think it’s just her accent. Granted, after I watched the whole thing I figure she can say it however she wants 😂
Its the Canadian in her lol. We can’t help ourselves 🤣
Is American Japanese language, stop trolling!
Certainly someone who has been training, competing at a high level and running a gym for 40 years has nothing to offer... cause you don't like her accent. 😢
@@zerosum789 . Ooohhh! It just got spicy....yeah!
How the hell did you get through so many years of Judo and not know the proper pronunciation of seoi nage?
Maybe by being good at Judo and winning 6 national championships by the age of 19?
@@wayofbjj Nope, that's not it because at some point, you should have been exposed to the proper pronunciation and went....hmm, I've been saying it wrong all this time and corrected yourself if you were such a good Judoka.
@@ronin2167 you are entitled to your opinion my friend. Personally I would rather actually be good at Judo and not know any of the names, vs pronouncing everything perfectly and can’t do a single throw. But thanks for watching and commenting in a respectful way!
@@wayofbjj It's the BJJ, I get it. They don't even know the names of their chokes and armbars let alone the Japanese pronunciation of them.
@@ronin2167 yup, I put my underwear on backwards most days 😝
BJJ is not jujitsu. Its brazilian wrestling.
BW instead of BJJ
It really doesn't matter what it is, in the end it's all one form of grappling or another. If on the other hand you want to argue that BJJ is in reality modified judo ne-waza or Japanese jujutsu ground techniques.... then Ok.
There are only two methods known to human beings for bare handed fighting. One is grappling (wrestling) the other one is striking (boxing, pugilism).
I haven't met someone yet, who has mastered the art of Octopus fighting! 😅
@@tatumergo3931 Wrong it does matter. Words are designed to give meaning and information. You give incorrect information means it is wrong. If I called you a piece of shit because you have a different opinion. Does that mean I'm a nice person? No, because the information I provided with my words means I'm not nice or kind. You can get butthurt if you want to but it doesn't change the fact. You can't put in a lock or a throw from judo or jujitsu and now it's boxing jujitsu. Its sad see this kind of ignorance.
@@OneLoneMan. Well yes you are right up to a certain point, but in the overall scheme of things. Grappling is just grappling and striking is just striking....
Besides I am not buthurt about it, I am just bored and this is a lot of fun arguing with you about semantics....
@@tatumergo3931 I mean if that's your jam. Go knockles down big guy.
"A 100lb girl can throw a 300lb man. I put him on his toes". Now: we don't need weight classes anymore. There's so much BS on YT.
Thanks for watching! I would highly recommend that you get off the couch and actually go train. You will be better for it.
@@wayofbjj Thanks for answering. And I would highly recommend that you do not make assumptions about people you don't know. Let me tell you, that your assumption is also incorrect. Furthermore I would recommend (since we're at it) that you don't publish those nonsensical claims; they damage the channel's reputation. But sorry, it's your channel and these are your assumptions.
I am not making assumptions. Your comment already exposed you. Please do yourself a favor, stop being a keyboard warrior and go train.
@@wayofbjj Your argument is a circular reasoning: I am wrong because I am wrong. This fits the video and, unfortunately, thereby also the channel. Unfortunately, no longer a recommendation.
@raiklaub975 I am not arguing. Just stating the obvious. Thanks for all the entertainment you have provided us.
its such a silly sport. if ur doing judo just quit and do bjj. much more value for your time. most of these take downs are complete garbage and useless as is the sport of judo
You are entitled to your opinion. Even though you are wrong, and sound dumb as f*ck
@@wayofbjj ah yes that must be why barely anyone uses them at all ever in any high level grappling competition or ufc! judo is so useful that no ones using it ur right!
@@teena-tz7lr the more you say the dumber you look. Please comment more, I am loving the engagement 😘
@@wayofbjj you do realize saying i'm dumb does nothing to actually prove your point right? you dont seem to understand that. i gave you factual information on why what im saying is correct and like a 5 year old all you can do to prove its not true is say "you're duuuuuummbbb" silly little thing.
@@teena-tz7lr thank you for another brilliant comment! Keep them coming.
Lol, just started Judo and we've already started throwing each other from day one. Under control though. After three or four weeks we got to practice these throws for real. Grading in September October hopefully