nah, tire is soft. u'd better use smth more solid, like stone or iron
@jamielovesmartialarts3 күн бұрын
@@fgrdn maybe even a giant battering ram like the armies of Mordor used to attack the walls of Gondor.
@nappyheaded19 күн бұрын
Also I think it's cool that you were performing a move that they only teach us in koryu kata.
@olegajitsu21 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing. Will play with this to see what I could incorporate in my game. I'll post videos when successful.
@Theokamisenpai24 күн бұрын
Congrats! I’ve been training sumo for about a year now, and have been loving it
@pierrewilliam711927 күн бұрын
I hadn't seen the submission ! I love it ; woud it work on the ground (idk if the lock is from Qin na or from Ja Mie Quan...) ? Most Qin na can be applied grounded and Jiu Jitsu's origins are to be found in Qin Na (Grappling from China ) ... Thx and have a nice day bro
@MP-db9swАй бұрын
Commenting for algorithm. Thanks for posting this.
@charlesowens6694Ай бұрын
I like it , releasing energy ✔️
@kuzushi_kevАй бұрын
🧼 squeaky clean
@MindBodyStormАй бұрын
🤔💭I've noticed a lot of Tai Chi moves that involve grabbing onto an opponent's punch or kick, and disrupting their balance, would make excellent points to transition into a throw and/or takedown‼️
@arahakentta7734Ай бұрын
This is very interesting to see! Do you think the aikikai style is any good? I'm a BJJ athlete and would like to try aikido to learn wrist locking
@jamielovesmartialartsАй бұрын
I think you can learn the mechanics and take inspiration from any style however it is going to take a lot of pressure testing to make it work. Tomiki style randori is ideal for this but learning some aikido and playing with it in BJJ class can work.
@keitheager6023Ай бұрын
Looks like kosoto gake
@jamielovesmartialartsАй бұрын
@@keitheager6023 that's right it does look like Kosoto Gake however what appears to be the Kosoto hook is actually just a way to drop to generate sutemi it's not actually hooking the leg. Kosoto gake is much better with other grips at a much closer distance.
@keitheager6023Ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts you phrasing is interesting, generate sutemi. Reframed the concept a bit for me.
@KobeWilson-xk5wfАй бұрын
That's kinda hard to escape it
@poeguru88Ай бұрын
Yup! I do the exact same thing I love this application 🤙
@goshuryuscАй бұрын
Nice job. I do the same. But I actually don’t think there is a distinction at the principle level between aikido and BJJ - they are the same to me. I practice both as in aikido there are rules, so it encompasses everything. So when you say I engaged in BJJ when going to the ground, I think it’s all aikido in many ways - it’s O’Sensei’s aikibudo before it softened after the War. 👍 great video!
@jamielovesmartialartsАй бұрын
@@goshuryusc thanks! I agree with you 100% I was trying to stick strictly to what I have learned in my Aikido training but from a Philosophical standpoint I think the principles of aikido are all encompassing.
@haffoc2 ай бұрын
very nice. fun to watch.
@ravdobikjarb932 ай бұрын
The “pins” aren’t something you missed. You performed them well and they open the person for devastating strikes. Which when watching your video you should see that many times your sparring partner was left open for devastating stomps and knee strikes to the head. Good coverage.
@KelvindeWolfe2 ай бұрын
The glove smakes it harder to aikido style pin. Your tenkan and tai sabaki are non existent.
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@KelvindeWolfe Thanks for commenting, maybe you can have someone strike at you and make a video showing how you would do it.
@KelvindeWolfe2 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts Probably. Or you can just add what’s missing so you don’t “run out of room” or have no power in your technique. 🤷🏻♀️ Btw shiho nage is a better choice if you want to pin them after putting them on the ground.
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@KelvindeWolfe I would love to see you do shihonage on a resistanting opponent. Please make a video
@KelvindeWolfe2 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts You don’t think it’s possible? You had many opportunities to n your video. You could have also changed your kotegaeshi into shiho as they fell.
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@KelvindeWolfe not saying it is impossible, just want you to show me. It really doesn't proove anything to write comments on youtube. You have suggestions, show me how it's done. Otherwise will have to relagate what you are saying to the category of those who talk without doing. You could be right but the burden of proof is on you.
@jorgerodriguezalvarez48802 ай бұрын
Hi!! A Shodokan Aikido practicioner from Spain here! I like your content, in fact I also practice mma and bjj in my free time, so let me share some thoughs with you. I really recommend you try more gyaku gamae ate after the opponent tries a jab. Just deflect the jab and go directly to the side of head, try to don't think about hit with the gyaku like a blow, think more about to "connect" and bend his head. I tried it during some mma sparrings and works really really well. Most of the people doesn't measure well the gyaku gamae ate distance, which is an advantage. In general, these are the Shodokan Aikido technics that I found useful for my self in mma sparring: -atemi waza: - gyaku gamae ate: after jab, as I mentioned before - ushiro ate: (randori variation, more from the side than from the back) after reach wrestling distance - hiji waza: - waki gatame: after neck grab attempt or stopping hand in the chest, (you have two options, go omote or ura, depending on the opponent week line) - oshi taoshi: from hiji mochi, as tool for breaking balance. In my opinion hiji mochi initial position for oshi taoshi is the strongest tool for randori in general. Is quite similar to what people call Russian tie. - tekubi waza: - kote gaeshi: for people that doesn't have too much experience. I wouldn't try it with an Aikido competitor or someone with a lot of experience in randori or grappling, should be very easy to defend. - tenkai kotegaeshi: but no in the randori no kata way. After breaking a wrist grip or after a sumi otoshi attempt there is a variant that I use in randori that comes from hojo waza (as far as I remember). Is absolutely frontal and is executed in a gedan level. It works pretty well, but I only recommend train it with a partner which knows the technic, it could be really painful and could be dangerous. - uki waza: - mae otoshi: as I said, start with oshi taoshi hiji moshi initial position, and then you can star to play pull and push, once you break the balance you can go mae otoshi omote or ura, both works really well. Even if you don't throw, you can end in positions where you can take the back or try waki gatame from there. - sumi otoshi: same starting point hiji mochi (russian tie), push and pull, break the balance, go to sumi otoshi. Always go for the standard randori no kata directions, and you can get an easy throw and maybe a half guard, (my bjj is rubish so is the what I could get) - hiki otoshi: In aigamae grip, break the grip, get a gyaku gamae junte dori kote gaeshi (sorry for the japanese terms but is how a learnt it) from the opponent hand, move to the weak line and apply hiki otoshi. It works well because when people start to notice the kote gaeshi you are already moving to the weak line and they are not really focus in the position, so you can pull for a deep hiki otshi and then go for a half guard or a full mount. (if your bjj is good not like mine) its really nice to see other people that like to tests things, that's the reason because randori and shiai (Competition) are so relevant in our aikido school, is the only way to keep the martial art alive. So thank you and keep going with the content!!
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the pointers will play around with it!
@kuzushi_kev2 ай бұрын
Another cool one. This one is in Muay Thai too, and in my lineage of aikido we call it Sayunage
@kuzushi_kev2 ай бұрын
Yes! Ikkyo ura… this is a tough one to pull off. Kudos
@kuzushi_kev2 ай бұрын
Kinda crazy how available the ude gatame is from the underhook
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@kuzushi_kev It works all the time. It is a true high percentage movment in all contexts for me.
@kuzushi_kev2 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts I’ve used it as a shoulder crunch sweep, but I never have tried to pull it off standing, I’m gunna try to work that in next time
@kuzushi_kev2 ай бұрын
Love your channel! It’s always refreshing to see people making aikido work for them. I’m starting to post my rolls where I’ve found many aikido techniques to be super useful. Kotegaeshi, sumi Otoshi are great for takedowns and sweeps, sankyo is a great rnc counter, Kokyunage, it’s all there!
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@kuzushi_kev 100% with a little pressure testing Aikido really can work quite well.
@deepfeelchannel73752 ай бұрын
Aikido requires some distance to perform the techniques. I love how you created that space even in grappling range. Very nice and shows that a traditional approach can be adapted and made to evolve while still maintaining its strong points. Awesome work!
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@deepfeelchannel7375 Thanks! Yes you are spot on the distance is very important in order to make things work.
@NYTomiki2 ай бұрын
Brilliant!
@nappyheaded2 ай бұрын
I know this isn’t an actual fight but you did very well. You fight using aikido differently than me which is totally fine. The techniques you did were very crisp.
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@nappyheaded Thanks. I was being very defensive here and was not striking so was kinda limited in what I was able to do.
@nappyheaded2 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts Actually I've never done anything like this before. I go to a MMA school so I have to do something like this one day. I've done simple things like ask people to drill things like oshi taoshi from an elbow or a wakigatame from a right cross. But actually the closest thing I've done to this is pulling off aikido moves in bjj or muay thai sparring.
@nappyheaded2 ай бұрын
Sorry for the bad English.
@grasslandgraphics2 ай бұрын
love it man
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@grasslandgraphics Thanks!!!
@Catgrandpa0012 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video! I have a suggestion-could you make the fighting screen larger and the explanation screen smaller?
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@Catgrandpa001 because of the orientation of the fighting video its not possible. Without cutting things off but next time will do.
@danilobellazzi96022 ай бұрын
complimenti per la volontà di esplorare il reale potenziale dell' Aikido nella pratica reale. bel video.
@martialgeeks2 ай бұрын
The Tenkai Kote Hineri of off the standing backpack is the coolest thing I've seen in a while! 👏, and yes I agree on the aikido pins, I find a lot of these standing techniques quite easily but I almost never get to sufficient pin control outside of jiu jitsu stuff, anyways amazing video!
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@martialgeeks Yeah thats been my experience as well with the pins.
@martialgeeks2 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts have you experimented using some of these techniques with striking, something interesting I found is that some of these(not all) aikido techniques work better after gaining some respect from the opponent from strikes, I find waki gatame variations as well as kotegaeshi to work so well when someone covers up, sometimes even easier than in pure grappling
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@martialgeeks will have to give that a shot next. Might be hard to find a willin victim lol.
@martialgeeks2 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts 👌🤣 for science!!
@poeguru88Ай бұрын
I agree! That Tenkai Kote Hineri was my favorite part, I get something similar when someone takes my back; I use a Sankyo grip on their seatbelt arm to spin out of the backmount; it’s my go to backmount escape.
@danielcarranza96992 ай бұрын
Excelente video, muchas felicidades!
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@danielcarranza9699 Thanks!
@elenchus2 ай бұрын
very interesting
@ryanrobles48322 ай бұрын
Great job!
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@ryanrobles4832 Thanks!
@Stan_in_Shelton_WA2 ай бұрын
What was the weight of the two combatants?
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@Stan_in_Shelton_WA I weigh about 190 not sure aboutnthe other guy maybe like 175, it's just sparring so we didn't exactly have a weigh in.
@solagratia16002 ай бұрын
wonderful, thanks for sharing the clip and experimentation. You mentioned Tenkai Koteniheri, is that like ikkyo, or elbow lock throw? With the pin, one that works fairly well but requires speed is when you do the udegatami or to me like kaitenage move into hammer figure lock. When they roll off and belly facing top, one knee pin the bicep, keep the arm 90 deg. angle and wrist lock the wrist. Putting the arm at 90 deg also causes pain for the uke when your knee weighted down on their bicep. Your other hand nearer to his body, can turn his face away or keep his body from turning into you while you execute the pin and wrist lock. But, this is not the most secure pin when it's done late, since they can turn into you.
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@solagratia1600 Thanks for the pointers. Tenkai Kote Hineri is roughly equivalent to sankyo.
@TheBoyscout0072 ай бұрын
Really enjoy your content man, thanks. 🙇
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@TheBoyscout007 Glad you enjoy! Let me know if there is specific stuff you want to see more of and I'll be happy to share.
@TheBoyscout0072 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts I'm currently training at a very good bjj gym, I have had some success with wristlocks etc to tap people but I've been pondering some appropriate Sankyo style application, I've had mixed results I've used one where I strip a grip go two on one and shoot in under the arm, you can drop for a leg at that point or try to continue and pass behind. Sorry if that's not clear, I've also been trying some stuff when they have my back and are looking to lock up a rear naked to go 2 on one and rotate the sankyo lock, some people are flexible and will not tap to that. I'd love to see something really effective, if you know anything that may work it'd be very cool!
@jashardwallington2 ай бұрын
Dope video ive been telling ppl about its just pressuing testing honestly id rather just do hapkido cus theres pressure testing an finding a good aikido school that does is alot of work
@patrickbedruz64752 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, was struggling to find the difference between harai goshi and hoochie mama.
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@patrickbedruz6475 😂
@chriscorrales63172 ай бұрын
Who was the Dagestani pulling that kind of stuff off!
@saberserpent11342 ай бұрын
We used that straight arm lock/drag as a takedown in Daito-ryu, A LOT. Great video, man!
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@saberserpent1134 Thanks man. It is a very well known technique in daito ryu. It is also often used by police to escort someone who is being arrested each officer holding an arm.
@saberserpent11342 ай бұрын
@@jamielovesmartialarts makes sense, as Daito-ryu's main focus was neutralization for LEO's and Military.
@GameleiraNoChao2 ай бұрын
Nice application!
@NabilAbdulrashidComedy2 ай бұрын
I randomly thought how amazing it would be if someone with wrestling and bjj combined it with aikido and then decided to search it up on KZbin finding this.. what an amazing channel
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@NabilAbdulrashidComedy Glad you enjoy the content!!!
@NabilAbdulrashidComedy2 ай бұрын
That was smooth
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@NabilAbdulrashidComedy Thanks!
@chrisprad83252 ай бұрын
You know about the leg lace and how it’s a freestyle wrestling move. Is there a way to implement that when your opponent goes to guard?
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@chrisprad8325 So you can use this grip to start passing right away when the opponent pulls guard. Will make a video on that at some point for you.
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@chrisprad8325 I misread your question, yeah you can attack leglock when your opponent plays guard. In my opinion the leg lace or cloverleaf is much stronger when you have some form of triangle locked around your opponents hips.
@chrisprad83252 ай бұрын
Would be great to see a no go shuai jiao instructional by you
@jamielovesmartialarts2 ай бұрын
@@chrisprad8325 haha once I get a little better at shuai jiao will go ahead and do that.
@JustSomeGuy694203 ай бұрын
Have you done much studying of Chin Na? I can't find much quality instruction on it outside of Yang Jwing Ming's stuff.
@JustSomeGuy694203 ай бұрын
Excellent video by the way.
@jamielovesmartialarts3 ай бұрын
@@JustSomeGuy69420 thank you. I learned a bunch of chin na from my tai chi & baguazhang teacher. Was never very satisfied with any other chin na that I came across. Will put some videos out on the stuff I use sometime soon.
@AK_UK_3 ай бұрын
What if the opponent has a clenched fist?
@jamielovesmartialarts3 ай бұрын
@@AK_UK_ the lock is still effective, you also can use the second hand on the forearm in that case if you are having trouble bending the wrist back.