Nice video. Two points of contact or more. Stack the muscles. And of course practice makes perfect. I think speed and reflex action is important. I can’t imagine it would work so well on some hench bloke without the speed and technique. Maybe?
..."You know it works, when you see the guy dancing on his toes..."😄😅...This is by far THE best explanatory video on the subject out there! Thank you very, very much! Very sorry for the poor guy who you demonstrate this on...🤭
If you want to learn these locks in more detail in the Aikido style of application, here is reference to their names, so you can search for them: #10 Kote-gaeshi #9 Nikkyo #8 Sankyo #7 no reference, actually similar to the previous (Sankyo), but #8 is "ura" and #7 is "irimi" #6 Kamakubi #5 no reference, can be seen in some old masters' demos, but now is out of curriculum (as other more risky techniques); also by Seagal again (he is a dick and shows such flashy things) #4 Shiho nage #3 Kaiten osae #2 Nikkyo again, but #9 is the "ura" and this is the "irimi" #1 Rokkyo
@@AngelVelikov Slap the entrapped wrist with the other arm/hand (Hard), This will start a circle , step toward rear of opponent and jut your hip out. You are now in a perfect position for hip toss. Depending on if you feel nice, you finish with a ju-jitsu landing. If you feel nasty finish with a hapkido technique/landing.
That is a excellent point. Many people practice joint locks in a way that are not healthy. To your point I will try and do a video on safety when joint locking.
Thank you sir. Really appreciated your wider view of the shape the opponent’s arm etc needs to be in to make it work, rather than the minutia of how to grab
Nice compilation of useful locks and transitions. Sure, someone could fight back, punch with free hand, kick with either free leg, roll out or step out of the lock...the point is in 10 minutes this is a nice refresher on bone and joint manipulation. If you are in a situation where one of the moves would work, why not use it to your advantage.
you can also add these to a 'defang the snake" procedure. someone grabs a blunt object with one hand or pulls out something sharp like a shank, shiv, screwdriver, edge of a credit card whatever and moves in for a quick slash, you won't have time to grab your own weapon so you get them to drop their's as a natural reaction.
While I never kept with the Aikido I studied so many years ago, some of the joint locks are still innate inside me. A martial arts instructor last Christmas and I were talking (Jiu Jitsu or Judo I think), him 20 years younger and way stronger, reaching to me and I neutralized his advance instantly, him shocked. But please be kinder to your assistant!
I learned small joint locks in Hap Ki Do while in Korea. I've never had to use it in a fight, but I have used it one guys while sparring/wrestling and it worked better than I thought. I've also found that after you lock up a joint it is most beneficial to get them and keep them off balance. They seem to have almost no strength to do anything.
sir, due to my cancer in my neck and throut, my compressed spin, and now very little strenght, I see just how my lil'bit that I still have would work only the way you've demonstraited..very nice tech..is there some place in wash. state that you would recomend for a old weak man like me?
Nicely demonstrated and this works if you can keep an opponent from bashing with their free hand . Required viewing for all personal protection people, bouncers, door men and police. Thanks very much.
I've been on the receiving end of joint locks like these, studied Hapkido at an academy for 7+ years. Once the lock is established your free hand is useless because the pain is paralyzing.
the answer to that question is to apply the joint lock fast. catch your opponent off guard, and the pain overwhelms their sense of "oh sh-t what do i do next?" an opponent who knows, however, will respond and frankly if you train on these, hopefully your sparring partner will...so you can figure out a counter. sometimes it can be another lock :) but if you stand around with these long enough (ie, waiting on the po-po to arrive), your opponent will indeed "build a better mousetrap". the best application of these tricks is when you have multiple opponents. one makes an attempt to strike, you lock them up, and apply pressure in the direction of their buddy who is sneaking behind you. now they're tangled up while you size up the third one's reaction. or do what you see in the movies, and flip them into a piece of furniture :) looks silly but sometimes it does accomplish an FAA (f--cking attitude adjustment). pull it off effortlessly and yes, you can stop the basic bully brawl because "they saw it in a movie once and it didn't end well".
@@QuantumMechanic_88 the unasked one..."what about their free hand?" it is actually the downfall in many martial arts theory--that just like in Hollyweird movies, an opponent attacks using one hand and sticks around to wait for what happens next rather than use the other hand or just flailing away like the usual drunk who doesn't feel enough pain--or enough pain quickly enough. undisciplined street brawlers have won against dojo-trained students simply by doing something that made no sense otherwise--but it worked because the defender never expected something so crazy.
@@windingdriveway Yes = the Chin Na RULES = has it all (all the combinations) + i only dont know how Chin Na is old (but for sure it is older then almost evry martial arts + i see Chin Na as a part of a Tai Chi). Gretings from Belgrade, Serbia .
Joint locks and manipulations are very effective irl, but you're in for a bad day yourself if you're not fast, accurate, and skilled in follow-up techniques.
Great techniques and well demonstrated. Another method is the strike to lock as one of your techniques demonstrated. Once you strike you momentarily take his mind off what he plans to do and it creates an opening for the arm or joint lock. This is most effective against powerful people who can hold you firmly.
This film makes me feel good and concluded that my Sensei has taught me well as he taught us all the locks featured here. Thank you, Slough Sensei (4th Dan, Traditional Japanese Jiu Jitsu)
And since the opponent will instinctively retract their limb to oppose the position you are attempting to impart on their arm, its important to either trick them into going the direction you want, or being able to transition to another lock once they pull back.
I saw Nikkyo, Kotogaeshi, Shihonage, Kaitenage (without the throw), Sankyo, Small Circle jiu jitsu (Wally Jay). Beautiful. I'm taking Krav Maga now, but still incorporate Aikido principles.
As a guy who grew up street fighting then watching the creation of modern mma I really enjoyed this video many times being able to just take someone off me would have been a better option to just taking thier head off. I'm quite certain these locks don't come naturally but with some practice I can see not only advantage but better quality of outcome. 2 of my friends have been sent to prison for one punch unintentional manslaughter. So it's not the best outcome when in physical confrontations.
Do joint locks actually work? You never see them used in MMA/UFC or anything. I know small joint manipulations aren't allowed, but from what I've seen, I've never seen a fight when a fighter intercepts a strike and turns it into a lock, submitting the guy, it's just too difficult to do given how fast the other person is moving/his strikes are. On the other hand, I'd like to see what it would be like if small joint manipulations were allowed, the gloves I'm told interfere with them, either using them or using them on someone else.
First people don’t know why , or how to get there without being punched or beat up . We teach a base 12 lock flow , which is compartmentalization of th me use of the joints to destroy the structure and or break the joint and disarm weapons .
My father was an MOD police officer guarding the base of the SAS in Hereford, many years ago. Two men waited outside the gates to prove themselves in a fight against two of the soldiers. Big mistake. The soldiers quickly broke their fingers and disappeared.
No, even though I truly love Wally Jay's work, it's not related. Straight circle just means that all elements of martial arts are a interplay of linear and circular movements. That includes strikes, joint locks and kicks. Also, generally with footwork it is taught linear, then angles, then circular. Straight circle isn't a style, it's just a place to play with similar concepts from most of the styles I have come across. Instead of arguing who is best I like to show things that can be incorporated into most styles.
#1 armpit elbow lock, you should step through deep and raise his arm more, this arm lock is illegal in judo contest but great self defense if done correctly will result in broken dislocated elbow
For these joint locks to work your opponent needs to be almost static and offer no resistance. In a kinetic encounter your opponent’s hands and arms, and more importantly, legs, are flexed and moving fast.
@@straightcirclemartialarts5226 I meant like the world is round and if I walked in a straight line I would be back where I started. In terms of martial arts circular movements can be thought of as linear in a short sense as a segment of a large circle.
@@josephmalone253 All straight circle means is usually with most techniques there is an interplay if circular and linear motions, one usually fits into the next. That is the hard part, getting your techniques to change planes and angles in a smooth continuous motion. Most people are to tense and struggle with this.
Would be nice to see the capture of the hand a little more slowly. To know instinctively to use L or R hand and to attach to inside outside of opponent's hand. Once the there geometry is ready to understand. My father bills it in Judah Jiu-Jitsu Shotokan karate and Aikido and taught Aikido. And train me from the Age 3 to about 15. He has passed so I can no longer go to him for updates. I remember him telling me that once you have control it's a matter of lines and circles which you are demonstrating
This is totally an off-topic comment, but I would love to see you do a weapons analysis video series. For example, tell us how effective or not effective that nunchucks, a pair of sais, a bo-staff, tonfas, etc. are in a real play for keeps type of fight. Who's more effective n' dangerous when guns aren't in the equation? I don't think I've seen a video like that on youtube. Might be fun to watch.
That would all depend on who is using it & what level they can use it at. Someone just starting out won't have much of a chance against someone that has trained for years.
Dear Sir, Excellent presentation, But for beginners, let me ask for grouping the locks it say by distance, then sides and may be by levels. Plus the famous boxer clinch to control elwbow from inside or the same from outside could be added so as to offer 12 locks alltogether. Best regards, Paul,68, retired instructor o Karate
You need to do close shots, slow down, different angles.
Yes old vid. On channel later I did each lock individually and slower.
Everything you did only works on one armed people
Nice video. Two points of contact or more. Stack the muscles. And of course practice makes perfect. I think speed and reflex action is important. I can’t imagine it would work so well on some hench bloke without the speed and technique. Maybe?
No he doesn't.
I understood everything no problem.
Make your own video or shutup.
Or in a simulated situation instead of that kid simply handing him his wrist 😂
You learn a lot being a throwing dummy. I did.😁
Kudos to the guy in the white t shirt.
I've been doing this for years, but his instruction would have saved me countless hours of trying to understand. Well done!!!
Super Joint locks! Lock the elbow! Many thanks🎈
..."You know it works, when you see the guy dancing on his toes..."😄😅...This is by far THE best explanatory video on the subject out there! Thank you very, very much! Very sorry for the poor guy who you demonstrate this on...🤭
Man, by #6 his uke was done! H e knew what was coming and was not happy!! Great job Sir!!
I would like to thank you test demonstrate subject for the patients he has and how important he is to this video - thank you
Thank you for the demonstrations 👍🏻💯
great and easy instruction! thank you for sharing the info
If you want to learn these locks in more detail in the Aikido style of application, here is reference to their names, so you can search for them:
#10 Kote-gaeshi
#9 Nikkyo
#8 Sankyo
#7 no reference, actually similar to the previous (Sankyo), but #8 is "ura" and #7 is "irimi"
#6 Kamakubi
#5 no reference, can be seen in some old masters' demos, but now is out of curriculum (as other more risky techniques); also by Seagal again (he is a dick and shows such flashy things)
#4 Shiho nage
#3 Kaiten osae
#2 Nikkyo again, but #9 is the "ura" and this is the "irimi"
#1 Rokkyo
Small circle Ju-jitsu is better. #6 will get you hurt. I teach a counter to that one that you can learn in about a minute and any one can learn it.
@@blakedannion9232 I will be happy to see this counter, although I don't like the lock and it is rarely practiced. Can you provide some info?
@@AngelVelikov Slap the entrapped wrist with the other arm/hand (Hard), This will start a circle , step toward rear of opponent and jut your hip out. You are now in a perfect position for hip toss. Depending on if you feel nice, you finish with a ju-jitsu landing. If you feel nasty finish with a hapkido technique/landing.
Loved your instructional videos!
i like the no nonsense approach, thanks
Poor guy! My arms hurt from watching this. I hope y'all bought him lunch
Big thanks to your partner!
Super great moves. Thanks very much !
Excellent techniques,….,.amazing !
Just found your channel by accident and I loved it and I subbed. The camera angles are perfect
Getting "the grip" also helps, but it's a whole other thing. Great lesson on joint locking here.
Thanks for this video - well presented, informative, easy to follow, just great!
A nice summary of all those things that led to my arthritis from those years as uke.
That is a excellent point. Many people practice joint locks in a way that are not healthy. To your point I will try and do a video on safety when joint locking.
You are number one I'm Luis from Los Angeles CA
Thank you sir. Really appreciated your wider view of the shape the opponent’s arm etc needs to be in to make it work, rather than the minutia of how to grab
man! dude! your throwing that guy around like stephen seagal does! good stuff...
I'm tapping out just seeing you demonstrated on that guys.
Nice compilation of useful locks and transitions. Sure, someone could fight back, punch with free hand, kick with either free leg, roll out or step out of the lock...the point is in 10 minutes this is a nice refresher on bone and joint manipulation. If you are in a situation where one of the moves would work, why not use it to your advantage.
you can also add these to a 'defang the snake" procedure. someone grabs a blunt object with one hand or pulls out something sharp like a shank, shiv, screwdriver, edge of a credit card whatever and moves in for a quick slash, you won't have time to grab your own weapon so you get them to drop their's as a natural reaction.
Did you have to break his bones for the demonstration?
All I can say is VERY NICE!
Really surprised that guy getting the moves done on didn't ask if someone else could take a turn at #8 move 😂
Nice job on video. Informative to say the least
While I never kept with the Aikido I studied so many years ago, some of the joint locks are still innate inside me. A martial arts instructor last Christmas and I were talking (Jiu Jitsu or Judo I think), him 20 years younger and way stronger, reaching to me and I neutralized his advance instantly, him shocked. But please be kinder to your assistant!
Hahaha!
Excellent presentation and knowledge transfer. Thank you Teacher.
I learned small joint locks in Hap Ki Do while in Korea. I've never had to use it in a fight, but I have used it one guys while sparring/wrestling and it worked better than I thought. I've also found that after you lock up a joint it is most beneficial to get them and keep them off balance. They seem to have almost no strength to do anything.
Good thing you never had to use them in a fight because they won’t work! Except to piss the other guy off!
@@veiledallegory Sure, they only cause pain when you spar. 🙄
@@veiledallegoryknucklehead, obviously you don’t know these techniques
It’s great seeing the techniques on a model person. Do you ever show how to get the grabs when in a fighting application??
Curious. How long did it take your assistant time to recover?
Amazing!
Some variations of these are in the Japanese Jujitsu that I do. Very painful for Uke. Great video :)
Superb wrist locks❤❤
Great overview! Earned a sub!
Most of these I've encountered in taiji, but you explain them very clearly and i feel for your demo partner's wrists! 😁
Excellent.Tks.
Sir, wow, great instructor, calm, cool, and completely the teacher, great stuff ...thank you..
sir, due to my cancer in my neck and throut, my compressed spin, and now very little strenght, I see just how my lil'bit that I still have would work only the way you've demonstraited..very nice tech..is there some place in wash. state that you would recomend for a old weak man like me?
Nicely done. Semper Fi
Nicely demonstrated and this works if you can keep an opponent from bashing with their free hand . Required viewing for all personal protection people, bouncers, door men and police.
Thanks very much.
I've been on the receiving end of joint locks like these, studied Hapkido at an academy for 7+ years. Once the lock is established your free hand is useless because the pain is paralyzing.
@@MisterVolts Interesting and ATB.
the answer to that question is to apply the joint lock fast. catch your opponent off guard, and the pain overwhelms their sense of "oh sh-t what do i do next?" an opponent who knows, however, will respond and frankly if you train on these, hopefully your sparring partner will...so you can figure out a counter. sometimes it can be another lock :)
but if you stand around with these long enough (ie, waiting on the po-po to arrive), your opponent will indeed "build a better mousetrap". the best application of these tricks is when you have multiple opponents. one makes an attempt to strike, you lock them up, and apply pressure in the direction of their buddy who is sneaking behind you. now they're tangled up while you size up the third one's reaction.
or do what you see in the movies, and flip them into a piece of furniture :) looks silly but sometimes it does accomplish an FAA (f--cking attitude adjustment). pull it off effortlessly and yes, you can stop the basic bully brawl because "they saw it in a movie once and it didn't end well".
@@albertgaspar627 What question?
@@QuantumMechanic_88 the unasked one..."what about their free hand?" it is actually the downfall in many martial arts theory--that just like in Hollyweird movies, an opponent attacks using one hand and sticks around to wait for what happens next rather than use the other hand or just flailing away like the usual drunk who doesn't feel enough pain--or enough pain quickly enough.
undisciplined street brawlers have won against dojo-trained students simply by doing something that made no sense otherwise--but it worked because the defender never expected something so crazy.
I learned the first three from Aikido, but the rest is pretty interesting. Great video. 👍
All from Japanese Jiu Jitsu but Chinese Chin=Na before that.
@@windingdriveway Yes = the Chin Na RULES = has it all (all the combinations) + i only dont know how Chin Na is old (but for sure it is older then almost evry martial arts + i see Chin Na as a part of a Tai Chi). Gretings from Belgrade, Serbia .
Joint locks and manipulations are very effective irl, but you're in for a bad day yourself if you're not fast, accurate, and skilled in follow-up techniques.
timeless!
Love it but clearer video... and saying everyone knows this well if I knew it i wouldn't be watching... ty
Old vid was learning how at time.
Great techniques and well demonstrated. Another method is the strike to lock as one of your techniques demonstrated. Once you strike you momentarily take his mind off what he plans to do and it creates an opening for the arm or joint lock. This is most effective against powerful people who can hold you firmly.
Strike to facilitate grappling. Grapple to facilitate striiking.
Good principles.
This film makes me feel good and concluded that my Sensei has taught me well as he taught us all the locks featured here. Thank you, Slough Sensei (4th Dan, Traditional Japanese Jiu Jitsu)
You are crazy
@@andrewmorgan3949 : Go to hell, Andrew Morgan. Just go straight to hell.
Brilliant thanxz
Excellent video. I think the basis of Chinese Chin Na is very similar.
we have stevie seagull to thank for all this !
🤠👍
Pray an act of perfect contrition everyday
oui, merci frere!
Great techniques. Can you do a video showing how these techniques can be used against various attacks?
I will see what I can come up with.
Joint locks are for counter to the grapple. Useless vs. a rapid striker such as a boxer or Thai boxer.
Learned these in small circle jujitsu
I think this guy must have attended Wally Jay's seminar's & has the balls to rebrand it.
Thank you
Feedback - audio left channel only.
Handy moves.
#7 yep motorcycle grip, from many different situation
And since the opponent will instinctively retract their limb to oppose the position you are attempting to impart on their arm, its important to either trick them into going the direction you want, or being able to transition to another lock once they pull back.
Structure is everything.
To me the same it's Steven !
Thanks, Coach
Sub'd
Thanks
I saw Nikkyo, Kotogaeshi, Shihonage, Kaitenage (without the throw), Sankyo, Small Circle jiu jitsu (Wally Jay). Beautiful. I'm taking Krav Maga now, but still incorporate Aikido principles.
The bone popping whisperer. Semper Fi
OOHRAH! Semper Fi
The person wearing a white T-shirt is appearing reluctantly because of the pain of the instructor's bending.
#3 shoulder lever throw
I really like your moves. What arts do you train if I may ask?
I have done quite a few over the years but mainly North American Goju Karate and Systema.
@@straightcirclemartialarts5226 It's nice to see another practitioner of Systema. All the best.
Easy said ..these moves are more for parties and show
..❤
Not true, it depends on what one is defending against
Yea go do this in a bar filled with HELLS ANGELS lmfao.
I don't frequent drinking establishments but hey, that's just me.
10 good cameras everybody should know. idea for your next movie.
Great video, close would be better, but still great.....
Closer. czcams.com/video/RTYyIiOp7fE/video.html
I've seen this in Grandmaster Remy Presas' Modern Arnis videos.
#10 is actually twisting, wrist out turn, basic hapkido, aikido, etc
nice
JESUS LOVES YOU...!
MASY GOD BLESS YOU...!
As a guy who grew up street fighting then watching the creation of modern mma I really enjoyed this video many times being able to just take someone off me would have been a better option to just taking thier head off. I'm quite certain these locks don't come naturally but with some practice I can see not only advantage but better quality of outcome. 2 of my friends have been sent to prison for one punch unintentional manslaughter. So it's not the best outcome when in physical confrontations.
I liked you showed variations of the techniques but I was worried about your student. Hope he's ok.
#8 elbow up wrist twist
Teach these in all high scholl gym classes
Do joint locks actually work? You never see them used in MMA/UFC or anything. I know small joint manipulations aren't allowed, but from what I've seen, I've never seen a fight when a fighter intercepts a strike and turns it into a lock, submitting the guy, it's just too difficult to do given how fast the other person is moving/his strikes are. On the other hand, I'd like to see what it would be like if small joint manipulations were allowed, the gloves I'm told interfere with them, either using them or using them on someone else.
First people don’t know why , or how to get there without being punched or beat up . We teach a base 12 lock flow , which is compartmentalization of th me use of the joints to destroy the structure and or break the joint and disarm weapons .
My father was an MOD police officer guarding the base of the SAS in Hereford, many years ago. Two men waited outside the gates to prove themselves in a fight against two of the soldiers. Big mistake. The soldiers quickly broke their fingers and disappeared.
Thanks to your Dad for his service. I've done some missions with the SAS, those are bad ass.
What is "Straight Circle" .. is this supposed to be a twist (no pun intended) on Small Circle Jiu-Jitsu?
No, even though I truly love Wally Jay's work, it's not related. Straight circle just means that all elements of martial arts are a interplay of linear and circular movements. That includes strikes, joint locks and kicks. Also, generally with footwork it is taught linear, then angles, then circular.
Straight circle isn't a style, it's just a place to play with similar concepts from most of the styles I have come across. Instead of arguing who is best I like to show things that can be incorporated into most styles.
"What makes this work is that I'm literally twisting his entire metacarpal framework into a tetrahedron-like pretzel."
#1 armpit elbow lock, you should step through deep and raise his arm more, this arm lock is illegal in judo contest but great self defense if done correctly will result in broken dislocated elbow
It is like Aikido techniques
Notice the test subject going off stage to ice his joints after every demo , I'm icing mine just watching !
Gute Technik, aber schön wäre bessere Video Qualität, mehr Nahaufnahmen in Zeitlupe.
For these joint locks to work your opponent needs to be almost static and offer no resistance. In a kinetic encounter your opponent’s hands and arms, and more importantly, legs, are flexed and moving fast.
That technique is aikido?
Similar. I did take some Aikido years ago, but all good styles with joint locks have similarities.
The only rist lock that works occasionally on a trained fighter is the first one. The rest are going to get yourself hurt or worse.
#4, L throw/lock, usually obtain it with 4 corners movemrnt😊
Is straight circle like if I walk in a straight line I will be back were I started?
Like the sound of one hand clapping.
@@straightcirclemartialarts5226 I meant like the world is round and if I walked in a straight line I would be back where I started. In terms of martial arts circular movements can be thought of as linear in a short sense as a segment of a large circle.
@@josephmalone253 All straight circle means is usually with most techniques there is an interplay if circular and linear motions, one usually fits into the next. That is the hard part, getting your techniques to change planes and angles in a smooth continuous motion. Most people are to tense and struggle with this.
Great job and informative but hard to see
Yeah, old vid. This one is closer if you would like to see. czcams.com/video/RTYyIiOp7fE/video.html
Would be nice to see the capture of the hand a little more slowly. To know instinctively to use L or R hand and to attach to inside outside of opponent's hand. Once the there geometry is ready to understand. My father bills it in Judah Jiu-Jitsu Shotokan karate and Aikido and taught Aikido. And train me from the Age 3 to about 15. He has passed so I can no longer go to him for updates. I remember him telling me that once you have control it's a matter of lines and circles which you are demonstrating
Yeah, this vid is just a quick overview. I do them all separately on channel if you want to see them more in-depth.
@@straightcirclemartialarts5226 Nice.... Do you have a product them one can buy to get all the "details"??
This is totally an off-topic comment, but I would love to see you do a weapons analysis video series. For example, tell us how effective or not effective that nunchucks, a pair of sais, a bo-staff, tonfas, etc. are in a real play for keeps type of fight. Who's more effective n' dangerous when guns aren't in the equation? I don't think I've seen a video like that on youtube. Might be fun to watch.
That would all depend on who is using it & what level they can use it at. Someone just starting out won't have much of a chance against someone that has trained for years.
Very informative
It is aikido: kote gaeshi, nikkyo, sankyo...
I like this guy, SUBSCRIBED
I do agree that some better angles and close up’s would be nice but, the info is solid
Closer. czcams.com/video/RTYyIiOp7fE/video.html
Dear Sir, Excellent presentation,
But for beginners, let me ask for grouping the locks it say by distance, then sides and may be by levels.
Plus the famous boxer clinch to control elwbow from inside or the same from outside could be added so as to offer 12 locks alltogether.
Best regards, Paul,68, retired instructor o Karate