This brother is so good. The way he teaches is so precise.
@den2043 жыл бұрын
So cool. I wish I could attend Roy's seminars
@twan55553 жыл бұрын
Dean Sensei- you are quite literally the best teacher I have ever seen. I am a 53-year old crap-grappler-- a Sankyu in Judo and a blue belt in BJJ. I love Judo SO much I cannot even tell you-- I began with it 6 years ago and then switched to BJJ because my Judo school was closed but my BJJ one wasn't. Anyway, long story short: I have a WONDERFUL, older Japanese Sensei in NYC who is a God to me; one of the most wonderful human beings I have ever encountered. The only problem? He teaches (or I should say "taught"- since, at almost 80 years old, he is hardly on the mats anymore) by showing MAYBE one move and explaining MAYBE one aspect of the throw- and that's if you're lucky. I KNOW that this is the Japanese way--"WATCH- don't 'listen'"-- but I cannot learn that way and never HAVE been able to. I am a teacher who teaches high school History to learning disabled kids and I am NOT being facetious/funny/absurd but rather being serious when I say that I am a learning-disabled grappler. I really need to have things explained orally- step-by-step- in a calm, slow, reinforced manner WHILE I watch it being demonstrated; i.e., precisely how you teach... Also- I am fully aware that- ironically- your Judo journey began in Japan-- where not only do the Judo teachers (USUALLY; I don't want to generalize about every Japanese Judo Sensei-- but for the most part) NOT explain things but rather just do them and expect the student to watch and absorb. Yet- despite the fact that I imagine (again: I could be wrong- but I lived there for a year in 1987 and [CRYING FREAKING SHAME] did NOT do Judo- yet I am familiar with the culture- but I digress...) that you likely were taught in that manner, you yourself adapted your instructionals (of which I happen to own 5, all of which are- and will forever remain- on my phone) to an American audience, in that you CLEARLY AND CAREFULLY both explain AND demonstrate various techniques to all watchers, including scrubs like me lol. Your "Blue belt Instructional" is literally among the best content I have EVER seen; it's worth its' weight in gold. To anyone reading this: BUY IT. It is PHENOMENAL- and SO exhaustive it's surreal. Oh and on a side-note Sensei: THANK YOU FOR SAYING "Kaysah-GAH-tahmay" (pronounced like "That movie was so sad- and the ending really GOT to me.") as opposed to the way ALL native English speakers mispronounce the term, saying instead "Kaysah-gahTOMMY"- which kills me every time I hear it because it's incorrect (yes, whomever happens to be reading this comment- I get it: it's NOT that big of a deal. Fine- it's not-- but just imagine if everywhere you went when you traveled every foreigner you came across ALWAYS immediately said- upon hearing where you were from: "Oh wow- I had no idea you were AY-Marry-KANE! Which part of the You-Knitted-STAH-TES are you from?" Again: picture EVERY SINGLE NON-native-English speaker with whom you connected ALL pronouncing these three words the SAME WAY- EVERY TIME; trust me, you get annoyed, too...!). It's "Got to me," NOT "Go Tommy!" Haha anyway just wanted to again thank you for being literally the ONLY American that ever pronounced those fundamental Japanese Judo pins correctly lol. Dean Sensei- one request: will you PLEASE put out an exhaustive JUDO DVD? I have your same body type (I'm 6'/180 lbs., big shoulders and skinny legs, so each time you demonstrate, say, Uchimata, I'm in heaven-- because for me it's like watching a version of a guy (just one who happens to be 1000X better than myself) teach a throw I want to learn. Maybe pick the top thirty throws or whatever and just give 'em the Roy Dean treatment: Gi and No-Gi, plus where you'll most likely end up post-throw- and what to do from there. Basically I'm asking you to do what you already do:just STRICTLY for throws. ESPECIALLY useful might be a section on "How to generate Kuzushi"- the most mysterious of all aspects of the sport/art of Judo... Anyway just a thought; I may not be good at Judo, but I love it more than life itself and would be over the moon to see a clearly laid out instructional from the master himself, from which I could utilize to work with my super-athletic 9-year-old son who does Judo once a week with his best friend, whose dad was a competitor who took second in the US Nationals when he was 16; he's 49 now so his competition days are over but he loves teaching our boys- PLUS another friend of mine has a dojo which he lets us use so we're golden; all we need is my man Roy to provide the teaching fundamentals... Anyway- Dean Sensei: thanks for existing.
@roydean3 жыл бұрын
I appreciate this thoughtful comment. All the best to you in your training!
@CortesKidd2 жыл бұрын
Nice! I wonder if this will transition to no gi somehow. Uchi mata is my favorite attack but I only know how to perform it with a whizzer hook on the opponent’s arm
@ItsDave763 жыл бұрын
Very clear and concise! Thank you.
@thomasswanson64053 жыл бұрын
Definitely not reinventing the wheel here..just showing such smooth transitions and combinations. I love that slick ankle pick off of the throw. Gonna keep that in my back pocket..
@medicineandbrazilianjiujit85113 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Professor!
@УчительиУченик3 жыл бұрын
Excellent demonstration!😉👍
@JPlynnio3 жыл бұрын
Roy teaching is aways amazing
@aniakasinska40363 жыл бұрын
Ty
@robertsunday84453 жыл бұрын
Love Judo fusion
@mr.monitor.3 жыл бұрын
Roy has great judo knowledge. His experience as a young man was very focused on Japanese Judo. I have a few dvds of his that actually have helped me in live training many times.
@jass95713 жыл бұрын
Soo good
@Sphynxs3 жыл бұрын
great
@outtastatexavie43683 жыл бұрын
So sick!!!
@叶清云3 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Professor!Oss!
@Apollo_Blaze3 ай бұрын
🔥🔥🔥
@gregorde2 жыл бұрын
Basic old fashioned judo force the most part
@brandonkeach33442 жыл бұрын
"It's not legal for everybody. It's FUN for everybody!" - @ROYDEAL
@ratamahatta13003 жыл бұрын
U doin heelhooks in gi?
@mr.monitor.3 жыл бұрын
Its ibjjf gi legal so I'd say for sure.
@bluetiger50643 жыл бұрын
The first time i see them stand up. They usually start from there knees
@khanmohammad15213 жыл бұрын
🙏👍🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
@bassamabuelreesh57033 жыл бұрын
from palestine gaza city i love you
@Onereelrider3 жыл бұрын
4:05 get off you're damm phone
@GuitarMusician993 жыл бұрын
If you're gonna step with your foot behind his, why not just go for the kouchi.. seems like a waste of time reaching his ankle with your hand
@mr.monitor.3 жыл бұрын
Because your opponent will expect that
@GrilledBaconStrips2 жыл бұрын
Alot of errors in this technique. He loses alot of effectiveness....
@McDojoLifeGermany2 жыл бұрын
Show us his errors please
@GrilledBaconStrips2 жыл бұрын
@@McDojoLifeGermany The problem is mainly the hands but his foot are very bad also. Almost everything about this technique is based on your partner offbalance created by pulling and rotating done your hands/arms. Remember, you must create an off balance to your partner by making sure that his weight is as much as possible on his right foot and ideally on his toes. This is done by pulling with your left hand, it is very important to keep your left arm high (about to the height of your head as if you were watching your watch). Now your right hand. You must keep you opponent close to you but at the same time, apply a rotating force to keep him off balance by making sure his left foot as no weight (ideally, doesnt touche the ground). Once your partner is completely off balance, the position of your foot is important for your balance and the power of the throw. Watch this: kzbin.info/www/bejne/hGrPoZp8gbCkrKc