That smooth transition from Kote gaeshi to an omoplata is something I haven't seen before. I've always assumed it would be a easier to transition from an ikkyo ude osae ura into an omoplata. But this combination actually makes more sense as it uses the momentum and flow of movements far better. Pretty good.
@yondahime384 жыл бұрын
I had honnor to go an train at a seminar with shirakawa shihan. He is amazing and very kind. 🙏
@notlob19544 жыл бұрын
Great techniques. Trained at your fathers dojo in Sendai in November 2017 with two of my friends. Met GEN who took us on a guided tour of a monastery in Matsushima. We had a great time training and was made very welcome. 👍
That throw/roll into (what I call) Omoplata at 0:10 is just brilliant. I could watch it 1000 times !
@MOTOQUEIRO-i4w10 ай бұрын
NÃO funciona na rua
@BudoTraining4 жыл бұрын
フットワークは完璧です。すごく勉強になります。
@MegaPaul574 жыл бұрын
always impressed with these videos
@sidneyrobinson53444 жыл бұрын
Just amazes me how Uke just doesn’t break into a thousand pieces. The every day person being tossed like that will not know how to survive the throw. This is how critical and dangerous Aikido is. Just to be Uke requires years of training. And a birds eye view of how Aikido actually works. The essence of Nage is based in the Essence of Uke. To be Nage. One must be Uke. Love it.
@sanjitjashan4 жыл бұрын
That’s so true. It’s my guess that The Uke would have had some experience in Jiujitsu. There is a saying that if you are a good uke then surely you’ll be a good ste’
@Khaliljt4 жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t say it takes years of training to break fall like that I learned how to survive high amplitude throws in a matter of weeks from judo. Although of course you can perfect your technique over a span of years
@taichisuzuki12074 жыл бұрын
@@Khaliljt "I wouldn’t say it takes years of training to break fall like that I learned how to survive high amplitude throws in a matter of weeks from judo." -- This isn't judo you moron. The point is: those techniques you see are clearly NOT being done at full impact/full strength but instead very softly. You do not need to be a strong uke just to deal with these techniques. In jujutsu, aikido, hapkido etc.. techniques like these are done in moderation. You never use them against a training partner by applying actual force into them. Being a good uke in those styles is not really about being strong enough to take the full force of the throws (because often you don't have to) but in knowing how and when to breakfall correctly when they are done. In judo, because randori/sparring has you training at full intensity (not holding back), it does help to breakfall properly so that you can deal with the impact. Jujutsu and aikido training are different and don't work in the same situation as judo.
@taichisuzuki12074 жыл бұрын
"Just amazes me how Uke just doesn’t break into a thousand pieces. The every day person being tossed like that will not know how to survive the throw. This is how critical and dangerous Aikido is." -- You're assuming dumb shit that you clearly know nothing about. In aikido all training and techniques are done softly and with proper control and restraint. You never do them on your partner by applying full strength or intensity into them. For the sake of safety in practising the techniques: The uke does not resist the attack and the tori does not use them at full force against the uke. You make it seem as though in aikido training, everyone is pulling lethal throws on each other and that training is essentially critical and dangerous. It's not. You dumb shit.
@taichisuzuki12074 жыл бұрын
You are seriously a moron You can clearly see that the tori is NOT doing those techniques at full force and he's doing them softly/lightly. So no, he wouldn't break into a thousand pieces from techniques which are clearly done very gently. Stupid idiot He's demonstrating and throwing his opponent down very gently/softly - which is what happens in jujutsu, aikido and hapkido (among others) training. For the sake of safety and prevention of injury, you don't actually do those techniques in real time and with actual force, but you use restraint. You do not need to have years of training to be an uke except just to be familiar with the techniques so that you know which way to fall or how to roll out when your tori does them against you.
@schizoidboy4 жыл бұрын
I know there are detractors for this martial art, but the thing to remember watching these things the opponents are trained to react with a breakfall when thrown. Anyone else being thrown - without the luxury of a mat to fall on - is going to get hurt very badly when they hit the ground. To prove a martial art doesn't work you have to fight every martial artist trained in the style and I mean everyone if you want to prove your point.
@airon33484 жыл бұрын
I understand your point. Unfortunately, against a trained opponent, these techniques don't work at all. They may work for someone without preparation, but trying to apply them to a martial athlete or a fighter would be tantamount to suicide. This I say from experience: A good trained boxer or striker is never going to fall prey to these techniques. Before you can apply anything to them, they will land several blows to your face or low-kick your legs in less time before you now that you're hurt. Maybe you should see it differently. Nobody is interested in proving if Aikido is effective, since no Aikidoka has dared _first_ to demonstrate that his art is effective against people equally trained in other martial arts. It is simply a reciprocal situation. The only possible solution to the subject of _real_ effectiveness is cross training. working intensely on the physical principles that govern Aikido techniques at maximum resistance, power and speed against other martial techniques in a methodical way, step by step. That is, in short, sparring, sparring and lots of sparring until you puke blood, literally.
@joeridestrijcker4454 жыл бұрын
@@airon3348 I agree... but then again, every discipline has their own focal points; put a bokken in the hands of a trained boxer and maybe he won't know what to do with it... doesn't mean his boxing sucks, just that he has no experience fighting with swords; put the same boxer against a swordfighter with bokken... it's not certain the boxer will know how to defend against that either. As soon as Corona-madness is over, I'm going to have a 'play session' with a friend of mine and experiment a bit (no, it won't be a UFC championship match, just 2 morons acting like kids again)... with increasing rigidity and force...we'll see where we end up. If you never hear from me again, it's because he threw me through a wall or so ;)
@airon33484 жыл бұрын
@@joeridestrijcker445 Very good point and it is an excellent analogy for someone who has experience and years of training, however, for illustrative purposes, the comparison is somewhat dispar due to the fact that a person adept in the use of a bokuto (a weapon and therefore armed) and wields it, has advantage, when the boxer on the other hand, only has his fists. On a balanced ground, we speak of empty hands versus empty hands and saldly, an aikido practitioner has no tools against a medum-competent striker in a thousand years, not if he/she do not deepen their technique through lots of sparring and true cross-training. Further, it's important to train gradually with violence (speed and power with aggression) to adapt the body to adrenaline shocks. This is crucial to start to be able to defend yourself for _real_ . I say this because I was an amateur kick boxing fighter. Practice for about twenty five years. When I was young, aside from encounters on the ring, I was involved in several street fights (young stupidity) some of them quite unpleasant, where I experience in flesh many, many tricks to hurt efficiently. On the recommendation of a good friend, I started practicing aikido for some years now (not very regularly I must say). From the fighter's point of view, I can say for sure that most of the aikido techniques in themselves do not have an effective application in relation to a real encounter (lets say for _real_ : a very tough sparring) BUT the _phiysical and mechanical principles_ that govern these techniques *do work* and are effective. The point is: To _what extent_ one is capable of deepening their technique so that it acquires a palpable effectiveness against other disciplines. Unfortunately, I have not seen any aikido practitioner do it, most of them practice it for other reasons (it is very respectable). But what really bothers me is that some guys (like the ones in this video) try to "sell" you the aikido technique as something that is not (impact! hard!) more for the fact that in this video, Aite is not really attacking, with true commitment. Therefore, Tori is not applying *any technique at all* . Everything Tori does are acrobatic turns by himself in response to _absolutely nothing_ . Thus, there is no ukemi (ukemi is not "falling" by the way). Aite just calmly breaks like a child playing in the park. This, from my point of view, is a lie to Budo and an insult to those that really train hard. Just my Two Cents. Cheers.
@drno33913 жыл бұрын
@@airon3348 I totally agree with you. After 10 years of aikikai I took 2 years of krav maga. At first I though I could merge some technics but it simply didnt work. Past the knife techniques such as kotegaishi or a good old sankyo when the opponent tries to grab you by the neck no other technics really were applicable. This is probably due to the adrenaline surge in real situations and to the fact that a guy trained in boxing wont run at you with full speed but mostly stay static in front of you, trying to use every opening to send you to sleep asap. The fall technics in aikido are far superior, provided you are not taken by surprise (hence the situational awareness).
@airon33483 жыл бұрын
@@drno3391 In a real situation, against a prepared attacker who really wants to kill you, your fine motor functions are going to be disabled due to the adrenaline rush. No martial technique will be effective except those that do not use this resource as its base (fine motor functions) and even with these, you will most likely end up half dead. In front of a knife, 99% of people end up slaughtered, there is no defense in any art or method unless you are a gifted guy with an innate talent for exercising more violence than the average person. And that is the point. To learn to *really fight* , to really learn how to destroy an attacker requires more than a wide repertoire of techniques, it fundamentally requires one thing: violence. Breathing violence, eating violence, dreaming violence and living in violence, combined with sparring at maximum speed, strength and resistance from dawn to dusk until puke blood without losing your mind in the process. That's the unpleasant truth that few dares to admit, not suitable for the vast majority of people. To control adrenaline and true aggression one must be trained in violence, nothing more. Everything else is sport, fantasy or self-deception. The real fighter is one who has survived violence without going crazy. No matter how strong you are or how good an athlete you may be, if your mind is weak your encounter with death will be 100% your downfall. If we talk about reality, experience has taught me that this is the truth. Cheers.
@АлександрСабанин-т1х4 жыл бұрын
Спасибо большое вам спасибо!
@Assassinish4 жыл бұрын
можно тренироваться Айкидо 700 лет...но когда подойдёт обычный россиянский алкоголик, оно почему-то не поможет СНОВА...и снова...и снова...
@PaulSith9 ай бұрын
@@Assassinish ну так ... айкидо - танцы с элементами акробатики ... и алкоголики об этом не знают ... для них мужик в смешной юбке ... источник денег и алкоголя не более)
@shevetlevi28212 жыл бұрын
Both excellent and the sensei in the hakama makes it look so easy. I'd like to have an orthopedic practice on the same block as their dojo.
@adamgledhill47524 жыл бұрын
Beautiful ukemi
@illgreco16794 жыл бұрын
Beautiful
@fernandogarro39954 жыл бұрын
The best martial art from the world... congratulations...ser you from Brazil
@anomalimatter4 жыл бұрын
We can't say best but I prefer called beautiful material art
Impressive. Looks like a lot of fun. I miss aikido. I love the movements the flow and the philosophy, your movements and speed are on the top.
@bryanludens5180 Жыл бұрын
Like others said, really impressive flow. I would like to see how it translates to opponents who are resisting or don't know how they're supposed to react. I did thoroughly enjoy it though.
@jaggtepes1997 Жыл бұрын
Then look for Dan the Wolfman videos, the guy have used aikido in actual MMA fights.
I would have loved being part of your teaching, Such a humble yet powerful example of the Founders methods.
@sanjitjashan4 жыл бұрын
Amazing stuff. I started BJJ a year to compliment my aikido. I love the way you have blended the two. I hope to be your student one day.
@Ahrone158611 ай бұрын
u literally 2 iq
@titotata57804 жыл бұрын
Fantastic 👏👏👏
@abdoulhakimoumouri1919Ай бұрын
J'adore cette art martiaux merci Tanaka Suzuki de m'avoir appris L'aïkido
@麗月響華3 жыл бұрын
合気道と極真空手を嗜む開業医です。 白川先生は、とても気品があります。
@GibNR_4 жыл бұрын
Не ну вообще зачёт! Айкидо оказывается очень даже интересное боевое искусство
@cody16614 жыл бұрын
The best aikido master!
@letsfun53334 жыл бұрын
Look at Saito.
@airon33484 жыл бұрын
@@letsfun5333 There is no comparison. Saito Sensei taught O Sensei's Aikido. The Aikido in this video is just coordinated dance.
@jb63688 ай бұрын
I could watch that on loop 24/7 👏
@MSFPlayer-qu4ub4 жыл бұрын
I took aikido for 5 years. Long enough to see its brutal power. Not every single part in my opinion are useful. Mostly entrance techniques and body movement. But what aikido does well, it does REALLY well.
@senseigk14 жыл бұрын
Nice & clean. Good technique cooperation -- essential to minimize chances of injury.
@ScottMoranda-jl9kw7 ай бұрын
Very amazing technique. Well done. Thank you for sharing!!! Sensei
@ВладимирВолошин-р8ю4 жыл бұрын
Люблю Айкидо! 💖💖💖
@小宮山新大4 жыл бұрын
受け身だけでヘトヘトになりそう。 凄いアクロバティックですね!
@Bellg4 жыл бұрын
I don't know how effective it is but it is certainly beautiful
@airon33484 жыл бұрын
Its effectiveness is very limited. Most Aikido techniques do not offer an answer to a true confrontation.
@boi28053 жыл бұрын
Why does it need to be effective.. You don't have to fight
@LastBeacon-qn2gy2 ай бұрын
@@airon3348untrue, as a bouncer for years I can tel you that aikido could work. I don’t know any aikido but I can tel you when drunk idiots attack anything will fo
@bloodhyena4 жыл бұрын
outstanding as always ,great flow on both sides ,and great ideas for self defense methods ,very inspiring !
They so love Shibukawa Goki so they made Akido in to a real thing
@elijah_godslayer99044 жыл бұрын
Thas the same thing i was thinking lmao
@catharsis773 жыл бұрын
@@elijah_godslayer9904 Except we were doing some of those things 20 years ago when I was taking it.
@leopoldsamsonite17504 жыл бұрын
Outstanding. Great demo
@blademan121213 жыл бұрын
Fantastic 👌💪💪👌
@yangshen55404 жыл бұрын
Aikido: Awesome solutions to attacks that never occur in the real world. Wish I could have seen Ueshiba's version.
@SPECTROID4 жыл бұрын
Ueshiba could even throw his opponents without touching them. He was a proper bullshido master.
@AndreiH16054 жыл бұрын
@@SPECTROID Not exactly. The man had some solid credentials, was actually in the military and fought in a war (unlike the average McDojo guys), used to do sumo and a bunch of other stuff as a young man, and even founded a freakin town. He was also a hardcore Shinto believer, though, which had a lot of influence on what he was doing post-WW2. If you look at his videos before and after WW2, you'll see a HUGE difference. Basically he gave up the hard techniques and went full esoteric - which is not necessarily a problem when you're an accomplished fighter already (which almost all of his direct students were), but if you start like that as a fresh young kid and then expect for your techniques to work... yeah that's not gonna happen.
@SPECTROID4 жыл бұрын
@@AndreiH1605 when I see a martial artist throwing his students on the ground without touching them, completely contactless, I know that it is a 100% bullshit. And this master is a bullshdo master. It is as simple as that. It doesnt matter at all if he fought in a war before or not. I can share a link where Ueshiba demonstrates his non-contact talant.
@AndreiH16054 жыл бұрын
@@SPECTROID please do, I've seen whatever videos of him doing interesting stuff, but I don't think I've seen him go full George Dillman.
Super ce cours d aïkido made in Japon.. avec un bon tatamis allez les gars se promener par trois aïkido c est bon pour le moral dans les grandes villes....
@nikolaizetrov6174 жыл бұрын
Love the dislocation of the arm while going full speed to slam the attackers body to the floor which might result to dislocated or fractured hip and shoulder bone much worst hitting the ground face first talk about a lot of damage in one swift calculated movement.
@igormusubi4 жыл бұрын
надо быть офигенно расслабленным!
@tartarughe-hermanni2 жыл бұрын
Wow! Powerfull! Amazing!💪💯
@foxyrage43044 жыл бұрын
Excellent
@omarscandola54164 жыл бұрын
wow,dopo quel attore di Hollywood,pensavo fosse una tecnica priva di capacitá,ma dopo questa rappresentazione ,é qualcosa di cui devo prendere i segreti
@eliotquintana9802 Жыл бұрын
From steven seagal techniques throw wrist lock
@ВалерийСемёнов-б4м4 жыл бұрын
You BEST OF THE BEST GOOD LUCK !!!
@khozemaattari98004 жыл бұрын
WONDERFUL AND AMAZING
@damirlatorre32313 жыл бұрын
impressive strenght 's demonstration 👏👏👏
@pierre-yvesmarliot45473 жыл бұрын
super
@tasnymmahmoud-gj9zi2 ай бұрын
J'adore cette art martiaux
@giosalvolong3603 Жыл бұрын
j'aime ce style d'aikido, c'est hard , mais, c'est efficace ....sa manque énormément en Belgique.
Need to learn more about this, to humiliate opponents. 😅
@davarmafhoumi423 Жыл бұрын
Thank you❤
@BarrosgestioninmobiliariaАй бұрын
Un minuto de silencio por el tipo que se desploma constantemente. Un rey sin corona.
@towag9 ай бұрын
I would like to see this teacher go and compete in a Tomiki aikido competition in tanto randori or toshu randori shiai.... I'm sure he would do well in the kata and enbu events, but wouldn't look anywhere near as flash in the randori shiai.... 😉😏
@conorcrawford83112 жыл бұрын
It's so crazy people think this would actually work in any type of fighting situation you can visibility see him put no effort into stopping himself from being flung and if anything he is flinging himself on purpose
@samahzeghal19714 жыл бұрын
السلام عليكم تحية. للشيخ من الجزائر
@jorachim3 жыл бұрын
That is an Aikido dojo where a wrestler was invited to show his techniques, the aikidoka is only an uke.
@橋本希美-t4m4 жыл бұрын
もはや神業!
@claudiovalerio37114 жыл бұрын
Gosto da maneira de aplicar a técnica.👍
@paseropierre6864 Жыл бұрын
Bravo maître 🙏🥷🏼🇯🇵🇨🇵🇬🇷
@mraffabilityGB4 жыл бұрын
As always, an excellent advertisement for Aikido. While not all of us have youth and opportunity on our side (Still can't practice in Dojo), Aikido is worth taking up at almost any level. Even if you cannot see yourself doing such athletic moves, the practice of Aikido can be regarded as a health strategy because there are so many ways in which it trains body and mind. I do not think that most people doing Aikido seek conflict, or are even overly concerned with defending themselves, but as you can see, should the need arise Aikido movements, far less complex than those shown will be effective in most cases. So when the pan(dem)ic is over and relative sanity returns, why not join a Dojo?
@scottzappa93142 жыл бұрын
Far less complex techniques are also infinitely more practical and realistic. Especially for the older crowd such as myself. Different people have different goals, but spiritual aspirations should always be high on the list. (IMO) Personally, I'm also into self-defense, better to have it and not need it... Fortunately, my Aikido sensei is pretty progressive in his curriculum.
@rocksoutt277911 ай бұрын
How many migraines have you had? The guy in the black pants: Yes
@rubensanmaurodelbosqur19504 жыл бұрын
Excelente video 👍.
@hayleynewman89514 жыл бұрын
Superb movement and skill. Appreciate that you are creating something new & dynamic. Are there effective old school pressure points in your style of Aikido? Understand that O Sensei used them all the time.
@mraffabilityGB4 жыл бұрын
Yes, but they don't need to be practised specifically in isolation. If you perform techniques correctly you will find the points. In Yonkyo for instance students mess around trying to inflict pain looking for the points, whereas if you perform the technique as a flowing movement you will be on the points most of the time.
@hayleynewman89514 жыл бұрын
Mr Affability In proper jujutsu the points are practiced properly without B.S. so they are far more effective. then the proper flow with accuracy develops.
@rayherron6603 Жыл бұрын
Shoulder circles in Aikido,Love it
@marcoscamargoferreira65184 жыл бұрын
O bichinho é fera no tatame. Parabéns 🙏
@roefish14 жыл бұрын
amazing technique!
@ВладимирВолошин-р8ю4 жыл бұрын
Молодцы, ребята камикадзе!
@theognostosyios93434 жыл бұрын
"The soft overcomes the hard; the gentle overcomes the rigid. Everyone knows this is true, but few can put it into practice."
@anne-marieandjerry58504 жыл бұрын
Excellent!!
@ВладимирВолошин-р8ю4 жыл бұрын
AIKIDO - THE BEST!!! ⛩
@dashnorduraku11583 жыл бұрын
Well done 👍 brilliant 👍 but do you have any practices slowly moving technic
@steeljhonny20814 жыл бұрын
Increíble
@gordonarthur63654 жыл бұрын
Magnifique !
@alexanderchapa53794 жыл бұрын
Que técnica tan depurada sensei
@karimalir77584 жыл бұрын
良い先生
@histriamagna10143 жыл бұрын
Nice to see, healthy to perform, dance like moves. In street fight ??? NO WAY.
To all who dislike: go practice and become better if is possible.
@dickvancalsteren25394 жыл бұрын
Practice REAL attacks first :,-)
@m5a1stuart834 жыл бұрын
@@dickvancalsteren2539 And that makes what? BJJ can go againts Judo in IJF Ruleset? No?
@silafuyang86754 жыл бұрын
@@dickvancalsteren2539 I practice real attacks for like 17 years. What about you?
@jehutymortis66034 жыл бұрын
@@silafuyang8675 You don't have the Same definition of "real attacks".
@silafuyang86754 жыл бұрын
@@jehutymortis6603 Who told you that aikido is my main? When you do demonstration of technique level, there is no such thing as real attack. You strive to do the technique as clean as you can. You need the support of uke. If you want to keep it real, it will not be good-looking or complicated. You simply do not understand.
@Anterax874 жыл бұрын
So fluid. You make it look so easy 😅
@koomky4 жыл бұрын
beautifull
@Talentaire9 ай бұрын
Kudos to the student, omg^^
@neoleonor71403 ай бұрын
Bro the way the opponent moves its like they are so ragdoll😂😂
I liked this video. very nice. creative. I would like to make a request for future video: show some stand-alone atemi.
@YungJayDaRBL4 жыл бұрын
Man I need to perfect some techniques to add to my Jeet Kune Do!!!
@pausetapest.v83023 жыл бұрын
Not bad at all very interesting indeed
@implct26354 жыл бұрын
"Why I'm still here? Just to suffer"
@blockmasterscott4 жыл бұрын
Good Lord. I can imagine someone getting their shoulder dislocated before hitting a concrete sidewalk or tile floor if they didn't have the training to go with the technique.
@axiom.ai.obviousbattletank71393 жыл бұрын
Crazy, I've seen a man get stabbed after grabbing another person.. No imagination needed
@josetavares95733 жыл бұрын
Harmonizing Soft with Hard The enemy will fall on his own energy You will be at peace within yourself internally.