Showing posts with label deashibarai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deashibarai. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2008

Good AM exertion

5AM judo/aiki with Rob

  • groundwork mobility cycle X2 as warmup
  • hizaguruma from the deashi bump
  • newaza randori. I got Rob twice in various positional things and he ran me to a draw the third time. Good sweaty exertional judo.
  • drilled legs-over escape from jujigatame. Rob brought up the point that omoplata might be a threat if you do legs-over from there. In judo you don't have to worry about that but it is something to think about.
  • switched to aiki for a cooldown. repped owaza #1-4 many times into a crashpad and then did a handful of reps of owaza 5-10.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Leg, hand, and hip throws

5AM judo with Rob and Rick
  • footsweep to control moving into the deashi bump
  • worked on deashi, kosoto, taiotoshi, and seoinage from the deashi bump. We did the seoinage as a hipthrow to illustrate the point in a simple way, but really it is classified as a hand throw.
  • deashi into ukigatame
  • ukigatame through half nelson into munegatame

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

AM judo

AM judo with Rob & Rick

  • warmup with some light-movement randori with Rob
  • footsweep to control drill with the idea of how do you make a reluctant or careful opponent attack so that it is easier for you to counter
  • deashi as a response to stiffarming
  • hizaguruma as a follow-up to deashi
  • groundwork mobility drill with emphasis on positional asphyxia in kesa, mune, ushiro kesa, and tate

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Y'all will be proud of me!


I've finally mastered the secret to a beautiful, effortless deashibarai! All you have to do is find an uke that is 1/8 your size and all of a sudden you are a shoe-in for perfect form!


Monday, March 31, 2008

Chad from Akari Judo

Judo with Chad, Whit, Knox, and Quin
  • Ukemi for about 30 minutes before class with me throwing/spotting Whit, Knox, and Quin. then the kids bailed out and Chad showed up.
  • We had Sensei Chad Morrison down from Akari Judo of Richmond VA, now teaching at McCoy MMA. Chad and I traded ancient oriental secrets, me showing him some of the kumikata material we've been working on lately, and him showing me several good groundwork tricks, including a cool sankaku entry from ukigatame. We spun off into several bouts of randori, spinning back into lessons every so often. Chad's positional control and ground mobility have improved a lot from rolling with the MMA dudes.
  • The things that Chad seemed to enjoy and he'll want to remember include: 1) the sweep-prop combination that makes uke feel so stupid, 2) the bump-and-sweep deashi/kosoto from the outside cross grip, 3) the footsweep-to-control drill that we start each class with, 4) treat uphill escape as a bridging technique with the emphasis on smashing uke's nose into the ground - you'll get more mileage from uphill escape and bridge&roll (downhill escape) will be easier when it occurs, and 5) Chad, you need to start a judo blog. Do it today.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Early AM judo increasingly strenuous

5 AM Judo with Rob
  • Warmup with ground mobility cycle and holding cycle
  • Drill: uki→kesa→mune→ushirokata (10 reps each)
  • Drill: uki→kesa→mune→udegarame→wakigatame (10 reps each)
  • Drill: uki→mune→kesa→wakigatame→udegarame (10 reps each)
  • nagekomi: R1/R3→outside cross grip→deashi/kosoto
  • nagekomi: R1/R3→outside cross grip→osotogari (with a crashpad)
  • nagekomi: R1/R3→outside cross grip→uranage (with a crashpad)

It was good to be back to a more vigorous judo practice after bruising/breaking (or otherwise busting) a rib a couple of months ago. I can tell I've lost (temporarily) some of my tolerance to having my chest crushed in groundwork. Well, now that I can play more vigorously again I'll get it back pretty quick.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Last night's judo

Kids' judo with Gavin, Whit, Mason, Knox, Emma, and Quin
  • warmup
  • ukemi - we're practicing their ukemi set (fwd roll to standing, face fall, left fall from plank, right fall from plank, backfall) in proper order in preparation to demo it to their parents at the end of the season. We also practiced sidefalls from deashi with me as spotter alternating with laterals across the mat.
  • osotogari uchikomi sets of three throwing on the third.
  • newaza transitions from kesa to mune to ushirokesa and from ushiro kesa to tate to ushirokesa on the other side.
  • crawling man randori
  • standing randori to the first fall with each player staying out until the entire class had done randori with him.
  • Somehow my students have gotten the idea that grabbing the opponent's legs is the thing to do, but they charge with their head down and often get smeared because of it(see the third iteration here), so we finished the class working on proper technique for shooting into a leg pick (level change, lunge, back knee touchdown and immediately back to feet, dumping the sprawled opponent off the side).

Thursday, March 06, 2008

5am training

Judo/aiki with Rob

  • footsweep to control deashi & kosoto from outside cross grip, normal grip, and 2-sleeves grip
  • releasing (R1 &R2) into cross grip into osoto or deashi or kosoto or wakigatame
  • Sankata tachiwaza empasizing that each technique can be treated just like a chain of checkpoints rather than a kata of specific steps. This makes the technique smoother, gentler, more flowing, and more robust.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Yesterday's classes

Kid's judo

  • warmup, ROM, ukemi (including deashi airfall with a spotter), hopping
  • osotogari left and right every time uke sticks a leg forward
  • newaza randori starting back-to-back. The little kids had to get the opponent's back on the ground. The older kids had to pin the opponent on their back long enough to say, "Persistence means keep on going!"
Aiki with Bryce and Kel
  • tegatana, hanasu emphasising 1,5, 6, and 8
  • newaza #1-5 (Kel's rank requirement)
  • Rokukata ryotemochi ukiotoshi (with good success)
  • Owaza jupon and Sankata #1-12 with Bryce
  • deashibarai and kosotogari with Bryce

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Miniature ABG

This weekend we had a miniature Aiki Buddies Gathering (The gathering was miniature, not the aiki buddies. We weren't kicking little people around the mat.;-) John was in from Florida and dragged Bryce with him and we had some new folks today.
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Aikido and Judo with John and Bryce
  • Judo standing randori
  • We worked through Karl's 'Creating the moment of attack' material, including the footsweep to control drill, deashi, stepping around the corner, kubinage, ashiguruma, and hizaguruma - all off the ki bump, or ping as I've been calling it lately. I was pleased that I was able to put some of this material into use in randori.
  • We moved into aikido, getting onto 'true' releases and crazyman randori.
Aikido with John, Bryce, Patrick M., Kel, Vincent, Gerolyn, and Cynthia
  • Tegatana, emphasizing tsugiashi and recovery step.
  • partner evasions emphasizing evasion, getting the hands up, brushing off, and brushing off into specific techniques. We worked shomenate and Sankata ushiroate from the brushoff.
  • wrist release #1 emphasizing evasion, getting the hands up, getting behind the arm, and moving with uke a few steps.
  • Crazyman randori.

Don't forget the Call for Submissions for Carnival #5. The theme for this month is related to non-violent resolution of conflict.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Kinds of sidedness in judo

In judo, the motions in different throws interact with our sidedness in different ways. In other words, there are different kinds of sidedness in judo.
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Universal Dominant Throws
There are a very few very versatile throws that are easily learnable with minimal training and are throwable with the dominant side whether the opponent is moving left or right, forward or backward. The only universal dominant-sided throw I have in my circle is osotogari. I can throw it right-sided whether the opponent moves forward, backward, left, or right. The opportunity for right-side osotogari literally happens on every step the opponent makes. That doesn’t mean that I can necessarily pull it off every time, but the opportunity is there.
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Universal Variant Throws
There is a larger set of throws that can still be thrown on every step forward, backward, left, or right – but different variations are required in different situations. For instance, I can throw deashibarai on any step the opponent takes, but if I catch it early in the cycle it happens with one leg and if I catch it late it happens with the other leg. Two variants of deashi that are equally effective but together they make deashi possible everywhere. Hiza is similar for me. I throw a left and a right variation of hiza as well as an early and a late variation, which makes hiza pretty much a universal throw for me.
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Ambidextrous Throws
There are other throws in which the motion is so simple that they are truly ambidextrous. For example, the drag-and-drop kosotogari that is so effective for me in randori is so simple in its action that my natural sidedness never comes into play. It is trivial for me to do left-sided, so I also have no problem right-sided.
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Special Situation Throws
There is a fourth class of throws that I can only do in special situations or on a particular side. These special-purpose throws seem to fill in tiny holes in the system where it may be easier to throw in this particular way than using one of the universal dominant or universal variant throws described above. Virtually all hip throws are this way for me – particularly the one-legged hip throws like haraigoshi.
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Overcoming Sidedness
Now, my premise in a previous post was that it is basically a waste of training time to obsess about overcoming sidedness. For instance, I listed haraigoshi as a special-purpose throw above. Obviously it is possible to learn to do it on both sides – you have to do both sides of it in Nagenokata. Junokata also gives good practice in left-sided hipthrows. But I still maintain that in training people to respond to general randori/shiai situations it is better to train the hipthrows predominantly on one side, whether it be arbitrarily chosen as right side or whether it be the player’s dominant side. In addition to taking immense amounts of training time to bring the off-side up to a satisfactory level of execution, it is just un-necessary because of the existence of the universal-dominant, universal-variant, and ambidextrous throws.
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Of course, the usual disclaimer applies. This is how my judo seems to work for me right now. There are lots of people who could beat me up in shiai and could out-teach me too. So, your mileage may vary.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Cuban Seoinage

Hot & humid class tonight. Roband I worked on groundwork cycle #1 and deashibarai as warmup, took a jaunt into some deashi variants and okuriashi and harai tsurikomiashi. For the cool techniques of the day we worked ukigoshi with emphasis on remaining neutral as possible during the kuzushi then hipswitching into position for the throw. from there we spun off into Gregor-nage (a seoinage variant from a wrong-side sleeve grip. Gregor-nage sparked a memory of Cuban seoinage, which we repped until the end of class. Cuban seoinage is a monster of a throw that is actually a nice, gentle sumiotoshi if uke is compliant but as soon as he tries to stand his ground or turn in to drape or choke it turns into an awful, assbusting seoinage. Needless to say, both o us are smart enough ukes to take it as a sumiotoshi and not fight our way into a head-plant.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Return to judo

Last night Cody returned to judo after being out for a while. We warmed up and spent some time making sure that his ukemi was still functional. He must've had a good instructor because those skills are still there! We reviewed the groundwork cycle and the happo no kuzushi then moved into kosotogari, deashibarai, and a deashi-kosoto combination that works wonders in randori and shiai.

Friday, May 18, 2007

Yeah, baby! Deashibarai!



If osotogari is the King of Throws then deashibarai can probably easily be considered the Queen of Throws, or the mother of all footsweeps. Above we see an excellent, classic deashi against a higher-ranked highly resistant opponent. Both of these guys had a lot of trouble once they ended up on the ground but the throw itself was superb. Below we see an unbelievable, superhuman counter (uranage) to osotogari, demonstrating that not even the King of Throws is foolproof.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Osotogari - the king of throws


The other day I published a list of what I consider to be the "Divine Nine"core throws in judo. Although this is an unordered list, osotogari is really the King of Throws due to its versitility. It can be taught and effectively thrown moving forward or backward, with otoshi or guruma timing, on the left or right side. It is one of only a few throws that is easily throwable with tori's power side no matter which direction uke is moving.

It is also scalable, in that beginners can safely and comfortably learn this throw while first learning to fall. Whenever several of us are stiff or sore, we tend to use osotogari (or deashi) as a continuation of warmup and ukemi practice to give us more time to loosen up and to more smoothly blend the ukemi practice into paired throwing practice (nagekomi). Onthe other end of the scalable nature of osotogari, tori can, if necessary put the extra oomph into it to make it extremely violent. In fact, I know of no other technique except perhaps ukigoshi with the potential for such a severe fall. I have been knocked senseless with a violent osoto and I've broken deep hip muscles with an ukigoshi fall.

Osotogari is also a very flexible technique. With minimal modification on tori's part, uke is threatened with haraigoshi or osoto makikomi. The harder uke resists osotogari the more trivial they make it for tori to switch to hizaguruma or deashibarai.

As the 'King of throws,' osotogari deserves your attention. If you study some other system and only take one thing from judo - take this one.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Deashi, keylock, and Moose choke

Tonight Gary and I worked on deashibarai again. We played several reps of the fundamental version then played with deashi as an early-late concept, worked on bumping the stuck deashi, and got into a deashi-kosotogari combination. That took up roughly 1/3 of the class, after which we did standing randori for about a third of the class then worked on groundwork for the last third of class. On the ground we got into a keylock turnover from a rear entry on an opponent that is turtling. The keylock led to kamishihogatame, munegatame, or jujigatame and we got to work on four methods to loosen up uke's resistane so that juji will work (lay on the head, arm entangle, a biceps crushing armbar, and striping the biceps). The choke of the night was a "Moose choke," a very cool variant of gyakujujijime.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Judo meatgrinder

Tonight at judo class we had Gary the Hattiesburger, Rob, and myself. We warmed up with a few reps of deashi and kosotogari trying to throw into ukigatame. From here we moved into the meatgrinder series, working on getting from the back mount to tateshiho and working on getting hadakajime, okurierijime, and the cool backwards meatgrinder choke. We also got to work on the wakigatame/udegarame part of the envelope series.

Friday, March 09, 2007

Run, doggies, run!

Tonight we did a lot of moving in kid's judo class. Warmed up with ROM and did laps of running, skipping, galloping, and laterals across the dojo. Worked on three standing techniques tonight - deashibarai, kouchigari, and a single leg takedown (I can't ever remember kuchikitaoshi and kibisugaeshi apart but it was one of them). The kids did great. On the ground we worked on kesagatame and the situp escape from kesa. Inerspersed in there was some kneeling knockdown randori - but not much. The last part of class was more laps and ukemi. I had them run laps across the dojo constantly with one of them dropping out each lap and doing a teguruma or deashi breakfall with me as the spotter. We cooled off with laps of dragging and/or carrying each oher across the mat. As they left with sweat flinging off their hair, a mom expressed her gratitude for wearing them out.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Kids judo class

"Judo is a kind of wrestling that was invented in Japan a long time ago by a guy named Jigoro Kano. Kano was a very good wrestler. The kind of wrestling that we do is the same kind that Kano did long ago."
That is the history that we reviewed tonight as the kids warmed up with skipping, galloping, and laterals and then moved on to logrolls, lowcrawl, inchworm, spiderwalk, crabwalk, and hipheist. These five year olds were doing hipheist great! Amazing what they pick up! We had a good, long session of kneeling knockdown (newaza randori) which led us into practicing a head-and-arm takedown (suwari kubinage) into a scarf hold (kesagatame). From here we moved into standing toestomp (tachi randori) which gave us an opporunity to work on snapdown as a response to someone fighting bent-over where you can't get to their feet. Everyone did great with snapdown and at the end of class they each took ten falls from deashibarai (front footsweep) with me sailing them and then letting them down into a proper back/side fall.
Of all that cool material they said that the backfalls from deashi were their favorite!

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Kid's class

WOW! Those little kids are doing GREAT in judo. I don't think I've ever had so much fun in Judo as when I'm working with those 4-6 year olds.
Today we warmed up with laterals and ROM and stretching then did logrolls, lowcrawl, inchworm, and shrimping. We worked on backfalls with spotters holding hands and cueing them to "put your booty down first." Then we had adult spotters do teguruma to the kids so that they could practice being turned over and slapping (cue: "slap the ground harder than it slaps you.").
For randori we did kneeling knockdown and standing toestomp randori. The techniques of the day were kneeling kubinage into kesagatame and standing deashi. The cues were "put your booty down first" for uke and "hold both hands till he's on the ground" for tori. The standing deashi was the most remarkable because with consistent cueing they got it PERFECT! Deashi harai done safely and consistently correct by 5 year olds!
They must have an awesome teacher or something ;-)

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Patrick Parker
Magnolia, MS, United States
Christian, husband, father, judo & aikido teacher, Cardiac Rehab Program Director, Ph.D.
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