In my experience, Justin is without a doubt one of the most brilliant coaches I've ever seen. I've been to a few of his workshops, and the details are illuminating.
@lordtains23 күн бұрын
No-gi harai ❤
@YimingCai24 күн бұрын
The instruction is gold as always🔥
@manuelmejia448124 күн бұрын
Great work
@chrisben32123 күн бұрын
This is gold
@Cb8519124 күн бұрын
Great channel this thanks.
@morpheus207223 күн бұрын
We call it the head and arm throw where I'm from
@counterkidnapping173723 күн бұрын
Pinch headlock
@jamesj953718 күн бұрын
‘Round these parts, fella
@verdiswomack900224 күн бұрын
I'm always trying to figure out if I should have people do Uchikomi before Nagikomi when Teaching throws at BJJ. It's so hard for me to translate footwork for throws in BJJ. A lot of it seems counter intuitive to most of the BJJ guys.
@merkins8712 күн бұрын
The problem is for the longest time in BJJ we have been taught "moves" without an understanding of the setup (ie the kuzushi (& sometimes even kumi kata) required to be able to pull off said move). We had been taught "do x and your opponent will fall/tap" without understanding the momentum we require to get the ball rolling, or the material conditions to successfully execute technique (they've fallen for the first move/they're off balance; not just "you have a massive strength & skill discrepancy over uke").
@tongahealingchannel187517 күн бұрын
No, his greatness didn't rub off on you :10
@SteveLukeakaSuti22 күн бұрын
Do you recommend doing a nogi harai goshi from an underhook?
@TheNEOverse19 күн бұрын
Not Justin. But many of those turn throws are super strong with underhook. In Judo, my strongest Harai Goshi came from when I could successfully pummel into underhook. But they're hard to get since you're actually fighting for it. Overhook is much easier, and not too bad actually. Perfectly useful even. Someone trying to get a back bodylock? Stop them with the overhook, and now you're in prime Harai Goshi position.
@MotherRabbits0918 күн бұрын
What is the name of the last throw? Starting at 8:20
@Zenfulmike14 күн бұрын
its a variant of kosoto gari. Instead of the typical close foot/leg for kosoto gari he goes for the far foot. Its still sweeping the back of foot/ankle, so kosoto gari, but it looks like he hits the far leg. The kodokan describes kosto gari as a sweep of the back of uke's heel, but it does not specify near or far leg. Therefore, I would call this kosoto gari far leg variation.
@KEPSAGAMER11 күн бұрын
Most people in car accidents get injured because they tense up... this is why drunk drivers usually don't get injured... take it as a life lesson... resistance to certain things may make a situation worse... just have the wisdom to know when it applies.