Jujinage arm lock - TenShin Aikido
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- čas přidán 29. 01. 2017
- In this aikido lesson, Lenny Sly sensei shows how to do jujinage. Sensei demonstrates this particular technique from Ryo kata dori (double shoulder grab). He shows you how to do the TenShin aikido version of jujinage and goes into detail on how to cross the attackers arms to be able to apply this powerful throw.
Enjoyed! love the fact that Sensei basically admits he's not a infallible. Great demo..
The way aikido should be taught. Great video!
Expression of style is the gift endowed to each of us by the CREATOR. 👍👍Rogue Warriors Aikido.
Juji is the character ten in Japanese, which looks like a cross ( 十字投げ). The technique was named from the shape the arms form during application. Thank you for the video. As always, it was very interesting.
This series of videos are very informative. As a non practitioner, I love these videos that break down and explain the techniques.
Jyuji means "letter 10"
Ten is written like a plus sign or a cross
Uke's arms cross and draws the Kanji letter "10"
I only just posted on your previous video about wanting to see a juji garami (or nage as you call it). another informative video and some great points. I believe the name relates to the arms making a similar shape to the symbol for number 10.
keep the videos coming 🙂
Excellent, love this move, thanks for the breakdown.
Great video! It's awesome seeing the differences between Iwama and TenShin. Similar but different and the ukemi is awesome how you receive it.
Great video!! Thanks for producing Them.
Good. I have found it useful for less-experienced students to have uke hold onto the upper hand when executing the throw. This provides them with a fulcrum when turning into the break-fall.
You sure are on fire,sensei Lenny.Thanks for the education.
Great vid Sly Sensei
very nice video!! thank you sensei!
The number written in Japanese is very similar to a plus sign, just like your arms in the technique.
awesome I've always wanted to see that.
hi lenny, enjoying your videos alot, my experience is in Wing Chun and JKD, I was wondering if you could show a few throwing techniques from an aikido perspective from a chi sau type contact (both arms in contact with the opponents arms) close range. always looking for an edge in sparring and I'd enjoy hearing/seeing your thoughts on aikido in Wing Chun. thanks for your time :) - Pete, from England.
It is an absolute joy to watch you teach Lenny sensei!! You have respect for the art as an art, but also no delusions that everything within it will work. I don't do Aikido, fencing is my thing, but one thing I have learned to respect and appreciate throughout my time training and competing is this: Instructors with a true passion for their art, but who also possesses the humility to see its limits. Your videos on Aikido is in my opinion absolutely unrivaled in quality. One question though. How will the third part of your Aikido PPF series, the combative concepts part, be released? Like first you do a bunch of Aikido and the a bunch of CC? or just somwhere in the future? Keep up the wonderfull work!!!!
Emil Friis Ruud
Thank you for your comment. as for your question on the pod series. I usually do a few ppf video's on traditional and tension aikido and then do several video's that are non ppf video's. Then after that I go back to the ppf video's and finish each one with the combative concepts version.
PS: I had another thought about this working on single or double leg takedowns. I'd love to try that when I get back to training. 👍🏻 I'm thinking either do this takedown off a jujinage, or even go for jujinage-tenkan-kotegaeshi or a jujinage-tenkan-kaitenage. So many possibilities!
I'd probably go for less slap, more snatch to get that cross grip instantly. The power of his attack should provide the energy needed to cross his arms into the juji 👍🏻
it means cross grab (JujiNage) beautiful thanks for sharing
really great and nice, and your so called mistake (2:23) was nothing but a great example of how to recover from our oops moments.
Thank you, Sir.
Suggestion(s), if I may Sir?
1. you instructed Uke to tighten his roll, I assume you meant because his roll wasn't tight enough before previously? Would be good to show what a not tight enough roll is vs a tight enough roll that is preferred, and of course, the exact reason / reasons why.
Supposedly not one of your stronger techniques, your words, well, I thought it was great, a bit nervous perhaps, bit too much power, but sometimes when we're not used to being on camera, it can increase the nervous feelings for us. Thought it was great, and if you didn't say so, wouldn't have thought at all it wasn't a strong technique for you. Was great, and the instruction was great.
Lenny you're correct about the jujinage which is indeed the 10th throwing technique in aikido.
Ingemar Wederfoor
Thank you for clarifying that I wasn't 100% sure.
These video's should be on Instagram to.
Good stuff
I'll be joining back in combative Concepts in a few more months
Sensei great job, love it. Can you show the variation on Morotetori Hiji Nage and Tsuki Men Nage.
Thank you.
Excellent teaching as always I have a question what is your take on Birankai Aikikai there is no Tenshin Aikido where I live thank you
thank you for emphasis on closed hands and how to hold you "meat hooks" for this move. Once you deflect and set up the opponents crossed arms, is there any sinking of you center of gravity (pelvis) while conducting the crank move? thank you for sharing this Lenny. Much love and respect from so.cal. USA!!!
Hi sensei can you include an video on consequences of notgetting taking ukemi
"Jujinage" (I believe, but don't dock me for this) was named by the influence of the roman numbers. So, X is Ten in Roman numbers...your arms cross over each other to make the X....therefore "Jujinage" is lovingly named after the formation of the uke.
Yes. Well, I can tell you are from the country of asshole. Tell me, did you easily climb the ranks in your asshole country, or did you have to work hard at being this kind of person?
As you missed my original comment, it was not meant for a "well folks, Japanese counting is from the romans. Ya'll are dumb asses." I attempted to write from a perspective of "this is what I was told when I was taught, but I am not a scholar."
You, on the other hand, might have a wealth of knowledge, but you still are sadly ignorant. You lack the most redeeming qualities that transcends language: humility, kindness, understanding, patience. If this was just a one off comment, then okay. If this is the essence of you, then I would work less on correcting facts on youtube and more on your interactions with strangers. You might make more friends that way.
Yes it was based off of that and "JU" is number 10 in Japanese and jujinage is the 10th basic throw in aikido.
Lenny. Can you please make a video on how to defend agaisnt a grab/MuneDori, if I didn't respond fast. And he already grabbed me.
hey Lenny what subject are you guys on in combative Concepts if you don't mind me asking
Gabriel Mann
all different kinds of stuff. it varys each month.
I love this technique! I remember seeing a variation of it done by Steven Seagal in 'Hard to Kill'. He twisted the guy's wrist so that his bicep was facing up, and then he popped the elbow right on his other arm. Is that a legit use of this technique or just movie material?
I love that part.
@@djignatin4043 Agreed! Best part of the movie 🎬
@@justinwallace269 I am watching Executive Decision right now. He didn't do much martial arts in this film. He got killed off.
@@djignatin4043 Yeah, the best Seagal movies were his originals. I wish he'd get to make a western because I know he'd like that. Or even a movie set in modern day Japan.
@@justinwallace269 I don't see him in a Western. He has a hard enough time acting in the first place. He is quite dorkish in real life.
Rob should have kept his Matsuoka hair.
i tried this on a friend horseplaying, i could never throw him.
Ezekiel Garza a lot of the throws of martial arts are what I call joint lock throws, meaning that if someone doesn’t know the breakfall or escape they will not be thrown and will only result in them feeling pain.
Eventually if you do them hard enough they’ll have no choice but to just fall along with wherever you put them, but they won’t do any flashy flips unless trained to do so. They’ll just fall down.
Plenty of throws in aikido and other martial arts are legitimate throws however.
I don’t know if this throw is real and you just got the throw wrong, or if the throw is a joint lock. Throws are very difficult to teach yourself to do from a video, you may just be doing it wrong. So there’s three answers
Whether or not you think the technique would work in a fight is one thing, but absolutely everything in aikido would work if you got in position for it. There are no fake techniques, just some techniques are bad techniques
Some Black Dude yeah i know, but i think i failed the technique. Also my friend has about 75 lbs or more on me.
Some Black Dude i crossed his arms and pushed but never broke his core balance so no throw or brakefall
Ezekiel Garza you should try going to jiujitsu open mats to get better at takedowns. They are cheap to attend and you can find a training partner to work with. Even though aikido isn’t jiujitsu at all, you’ll get lots of chances to test out takedowns and locks.
Just do them slowly. I’ve learned lots of higher level joint locks that I haven’t been taught in my art yet just by trying them at open mats.
Ezekiel Garza as I said earlier I don’t know the technique and even if I did I’d need to actually see it to help you.
Just go to local open mats, some are as cheap as 5 dollars, and find someone to drill with that’s willing to get thrown.
十字投げ - this time the "十" character means crusfix or cross. Not the number 10.
十字 means "cross", not 十. 十字 is literally "character 10", or "figure 10", referencing the shape of the character, which is the shape of a cross.
It's like saying "figure four" leg lock, where the arms and legs form the shape of the number "4".
You wouldn't say that the word "four" here means "shape of a 4": that's what the word "figure" adds.
I appreciate all of your videos, but I don't believe in coaching uke as much...real world is not perfect..
Yeah but injuries can happen in the dojo with some of these kinds of throws. From a safety standpoint, being anal about posture and breakfalls may pay off in the long run