Thanks for watching! If you want to support the channel and my students👇🏻 🚀 Buy me a coffee: www.buymeacoffee.com/sampsonjudo 📀 Check out my online course: sampsonjudo.thinkific.com/ ✈ Proceeds go towards international trips for my students.
@henryleonardocamposgarcia10404 жыл бұрын
We missed you SampsonJudo!
@joshboy04 жыл бұрын
Thanks for some inspiration. Being a newcomer it's really helped to get some suggestions for stretching! :)
@brunobahiense49003 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for all the lecyures and tips. Could you please make some video instructing us about some kind of competition warm up?
@josemariogaldamezcastillo17912 жыл бұрын
Calidad, muchas gracias.
@drutgat24 жыл бұрын
That was great. Thanks very much.
@战斗东哥4 жыл бұрын
老师是我,前几天去你们馆训练的北京人
@redclothgag4134 ай бұрын
Hi samson, why do some schools those very long exhausting drills as an warm up? Wilth running, jumping, rolling, shrimping, calistenics, burpees, floor drags and body flips? Its an complete workout and more exhausting then the training itself. I would do so much better in newaza and randori if i could skip those warm ups. What is your take on this?
@SampsonJudo3 ай бұрын
Warm ups are an important part of judo. If you are not correctly warmed up or conditioned, your body will fail you in randori/contest. Physical conditioning is an extremely important part of training, and I myself put a lot of emphasis on warm ups in my classes. That being said, the warm ups should correlate to judo. They cannot be conditioning for conditioning sake. My advice would be that if the warm ups are too difficult for you, it may highlight that you need to become more conditioned. Try to exercise outside of the dojo so that your body is more ready. However, there is always the possibility that your coach may be doing too much. A warm up/ pre session conditioning in my class is about 20-30mins long. If the conditioning is longer than that, perhaps it could be shortened.