It's so helpful that you point out ways you may need to adjust the technique to better suit various body types! A lot of instructors, especially ones who were major competitors often don't do this or even see their exact flavor of the throw as the only correct way
@nairobi2037 ай бұрын
As usual. Top video. And after work let's go practicing.
@navidnourani58127 ай бұрын
Best sensei ever
@philiphm2827 ай бұрын
This is very useful, all the details really help. Thank you!
@YacIne-bm3pe7 ай бұрын
Salut messieurs un grand merci pour votre analyse félicitation à bientôt pour d'autres vidéos
@hodgsoncatalin32437 ай бұрын
Thank you !
@jasonrudolph4917 ай бұрын
Such great instruction!!!😎👍
@cvz88497 ай бұрын
Thank you Sensei
@devriestown7 ай бұрын
Very good
@andreisolomon28137 ай бұрын
Thank you sensei! I will practice with my son for his future contests in BJJ. My intimate belief is that a mix of judo and bjj could be very useful versus pure bjj curicullum.
@Yupppi6 ай бұрын
Judo + bjj will at least surely make him a more complete judoka. Many start skipping newaza as soon as they can, making them not confident in continuing their judo to the ground even when it was greatly advantageous. Bjj, despite having a different pace and slightly different rules, will teach a lot of skillsets to be confident in working on the ground. Just need to avoid the typical mistakes bjj players do in newaza due to different ruleset exposing them to some mistakes in context of judo. But having great grip fighting and throws in bjj can surely also do a lot, bjj players might start to hate him not giving them ground for free. If you hope for even more insights on judo + bjj to broaden your spectrum than just Sampson's great content, at least Travis Stevens and Shintaro Higashi also have the mixed content. And there's another young successful judoka and bjj player from the US who also has a youtube channel, but his brand's name escapes me for now (although Higashi interviewed him once on his channel). Have fun!