Albyrak is also Georgian. He signed a contract with Turks couple of years ago and and took a Turkish sound surname...well, money talks.
@TheEpicPvPSkillz6 ай бұрын
Thank you for your videos
@luuknieboer19086 ай бұрын
This comment isnt per se directed at Grigalishvili performance, but this World Cup for me had been the perfect example with everything that is wrong with the current judo rules. Anti-judo is promoted through way too easy hansoku make decisions, which lead to a risk of every throw tori attempts, and way too easy given shidos for stepping out of the tatami or dropping to the ground. I really hope the IJF will change the judo rules drastically after the Olympics.
@The02lukas6 ай бұрын
Interesting, I feel that sometimes that I agree with you but sometimes I think they should be even harsher with the shidos espessially for the drops, there are so many drops that are so bad and only to get the other judoka passive so I would like to see more shidos for the bad drops to encourage a more positive judo where people want to throw.
@luuknieboer19086 ай бұрын
@@The02lukasI feel like if we are getting more strict with giving shidos, even more matches will be decided through judoka's not attempting throws, but attempting to get the other judoka to get shidos. I would like to see less penalties. The solutions I have in my head are either: going back to 4 shidos instead of 3, or also giving less shidos for passivity. In my opinion passivity shidos are also given to quick, which makes the judoka's do drop, because they panic for getting a pattivity shido.
@The02lukas6 ай бұрын
@@luuknieboer1908 Yes, you have a point, at the same time if we give them shidos when they do not have an attacking judo they should learn that it does not pay off to try and win on the shido game and the judoka with good attacks will win. But with the passivity penalty I agree that it is sometimes is given out to quickly. I would like the passivity penalty not to be given out if one person has only done attacks that are nowhere near to score. If a person has done two- to three attacks close to scoring where you can see clearly that this was a throw close to a score then the other person should get the shido.
@luuknieboer19086 ай бұрын
@@The02lukasyes I agree with this. For me this would indeed make the judoka's more focussed on scoring and less on winning through shidos.
@LeightonsLibrary6 ай бұрын
I really couldn't disagree more. This world cup was an absolute privilege to watch, probably the best single tournament in this Olympic cycle. And I think it did a great job of illustrating the strength of the current ruleset. There were 45 men's medal matches at this WC. Of those, 8 ended by hansokumake; of those, 3 were instant disqualifications (1 throw against the elbow, 1 head escape and 1 head dive). That leaves us with only 5 matches ending "by shido," with the other 40 ending by decisive score or foul. I would consider 5 aborted matches out of 45 to be an acceptable loss, because the threat of hansokumake motivated a LOT of attacks and scores. You could see the athletes' behavior change after receiving penalties, especially after receiving a second one. By way of comparison, watch this year's All Japan. I stopped watching sometime during the third round of matches. In all the matches I watched, there were very few penalties given and ZERO hansokumake, but only a third of the matches were won by a positive score... maybe less. The athletes were extremely defensive and hesitant to attack. They were happy to put in false or floppy attacks over and over, avoiding the risk of being countered, in hopes of winning a judges' decision. In my view, this is an unacceptable outcome. Of course, that's a judges' decision - what if we gave fewer shidos, but in the IJF golden score format? Well, in that case, what would stop an athlete from just stalling out regulation time? Referees already wait around 45-60 seconds to give a passivity shido (not a hard rule, just my observation). As it stands, it takes almost 3 minutes of straight stalling to be DQed, in a 4 minute match... and that's not including the extra time refs ALWAYS give for the last shido. If we extend that to 75-90 seconds, it is no longer possible to DQ someone for passivity within regulation time. What kind of incentive does that create? If one athlete is busting ass for four minutes trying to end the match within regulation time and the other one is just stalling and conserving energy, who does an infinite sudden-death overtime favor? Fast shidos are the way to go. They create strong incentives for athletes to perform positive judo. Positive judo results in more meaningful interactions and more scores. Yes, they mean that some matches will end by hansokumake, but that's part of the deal. If athletes don't believe hansokumake is a real threat, the incentive stops working and we go back to defensive, risk-averse judo. If the threat is consistently enforced, athletes begin to regulate themselves, and we get great tournaments like this one.
@scottwells85356 ай бұрын
Great videos as usual, I love catching up with the world of judo and you give us the best content! I'm oldschool judo so in my opinion, not a wazari for me in the semi final. If you can award that then you should award the score previously. Lucky I'm not a judge 😅
@barba52096 ай бұрын
“Casse, grigalashvili, lee… those guys are the top at 81” Nagase: *you didn’t have to cuuuut me oooff*
@JudoHighlights20156 ай бұрын
I dunno if he’s top 3 anymore
@username-iq1nt5 ай бұрын
Nagase is washed
@GeorgeHurt-tx9wr6 ай бұрын
🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪❤️❤️❤️❤️
@kiyoshi98076 ай бұрын
Do a video about Arbuzov,hes only 20yo and hes won the tbilisi gp. Its insane how good he is for his age
@Sam-hl9kl6 ай бұрын
I’ve really noticed a lot of counter wazaris at the world championships
@barba52096 ай бұрын
4:57 i wouldn’t have given wazari as well, lee doesn’t have a grip and grigalashivili went on his back voluntarily
@elzadasdemirova25676 ай бұрын
Gürcü xalqını bu təbrik edirəm.
@eshansonawane37606 ай бұрын
Who do you think will win if it was Hojo v/s Grigalashvili ?
@TibWave-zb4hy5 ай бұрын
Hojo for sure
@fredericomiranda53596 ай бұрын
Where is Sasaki ?
@пламендимитров-щ5л6 ай бұрын
See 7:40 how Arbuzov throws him. I think that’s a score.
@The02lukas6 ай бұрын
No scores, it comes up from Ne waza
@saitama69236 ай бұрын
Lee had no hands on Grigalashvili and that's why there was no score
@midlandsdruss60066 ай бұрын
Thx for this, I was genuinely curious why it didn't count but I missed that fact and now it makes sense.
@dmitriyivanov98546 ай бұрын
Lee was robbed, absolutely a score 4:38.
@mrburns21286 ай бұрын
The blue leg action was not a clear waza. Good decisione
@aqiria6 ай бұрын
That was Grigalashvili's direct sutemi waza, lee just hooked the leg on the way down and had no control with the hands (even stopped himself from going over with hands).
@7Alberto76 ай бұрын
Impressive stuff but the real winner is alwais the "anti judo"...change those stupid rules....