Katsuhiko Kashiwazaki-Sankaku Jime-2

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024
  • Judo master Kashiwazaki applying yoko and ushiro sankaku jime

Komentáře • 65

  • @judoka1976
    @judoka1976 Před 15 lety +3

    This way of doing Sankaku is SOOOO awesome. I've caught many people with it. They didn't know what happened. Nice technique!

  • @ETiDeQuenVesSendo
    @ETiDeQuenVesSendo Před 11 lety +20

    0:55 yoko sankaku jime
    1:51 ushiro sankaku jime
    2:41 juji gatame -> sankaku jime
    4:00 (Kashiwazaki doesn't sey the name) ude jishigi sankaku gatama
    i'f you heard another name post it

  • @paranoiuhh
    @paranoiuhh Před 14 lety +4

    The juji to sankaku transition at 3:20 is pretty awesome

  • @shinjukool
    @shinjukool Před 14 lety +3

    Yes. Triangle comes straight out of judo. Maeda san was 4dan Kodokan judoka (who taught the G's) so it would be a surprise if he didnt teach it. Other Japanese judoka immigrated to Brasil too. No surprises where "BJJ" came from.

  •  Před 10 lety +6

    These are awesome! I can't speak japanese, but somehow could understand all the moves. Can´t wait to hit the tatami and use it.

  • @bryantwh1
    @bryantwh1 Před 10 lety +20

    japanese judo is the best

  • @loudenvier
    @loudenvier Před 15 lety +4

    Yes. The triangle choke came, indeed, from Judo. They may have been rediscovered by the Gracies because the Gracies had to develop their style of Judo segregated from the Japanese, but you can find very old videos of Tsunetane Oda doing many variations of sankaku-jime (triangle choke).

    • @carzoparazzo9698
      @carzoparazzo9698 Před rokem

      The Gracies didnt rediscovery, they just adapted. All this come from Judo, and Judo comes from Ninjutsu.

    • @benjanacho
      @benjanacho Před rokem

      @@carzoparazzo9698 Ninjutsu? wtf?

    • @carzoparazzo9698
      @carzoparazzo9698 Před rokem

      @@benjanacho Yes, go ahead on investigation.

  • @MaxLohMusic
    @MaxLohMusic Před 11 lety +12

    damn dude you kiddin' me? triangles were popularized by judo, probably even INVENTED in judo

    • @huntermosely7420
      @huntermosely7420 Před 3 lety

      It more or less was, look up Oda sensei.

    • @MaxLohMusic
      @MaxLohMusic Před 3 lety

      @@huntermosely7420 CZcams fails again; this was 8 years ago so it must've been before they implemented comment threads and I was probably responding to someone saying they copied this move from BJJ

  • @shinjukool
    @shinjukool Před 14 lety

    Yep. Lucky to meet him in Japan and take his class. Seems a great person too.

  • @MrMZaccone
    @MrMZaccone Před 14 lety +1

    Nice! I love how there are locks everywhere fro these positions.

  • @yoshitaka6525
    @yoshitaka6525 Před 9 měsíci

    I like the yoko and ushiro variations that he showed a lot.

  • @serekithegreat
    @serekithegreat Před 14 lety +1

    Kashiwazaki is a grappling god, straight up !

  • @jaymorris3468
    @jaymorris3468 Před 3 lety

    Love that technique, Neil Eckersley got me on to that technique many moons ago at a seminar, just one of those techniques I took to and used ever since. But after years, my morote seoi, still sucks, horses for courses. Thank god I had that back up

  • @judoka1976
    @judoka1976 Před 15 lety

    Great technique...my favorite. I want to practice in a dojo like that. Very nice!

  • @genisis007
    @genisis007 Před 13 lety

    What a brilliant demonstration of Sangaku or Sankaku Jime, even though he spoke in Japanese the variations were very understandable, well done RuroundiTR for the upload, the use of the judogi or the belt to restrain the hand is a must in contests.

  • @nikulp68
    @nikulp68 Před 14 lety +2

    i wish i could understand what he was saying.... he looks like an awesome sensei!

  • @serekithegreat
    @serekithegreat Před 13 lety +4

    @Dudongo86 That's sad. I truly believe that referees should allow at least a little time for newaza in international judo. Newaza is strong foundation of judo, so why not allow some ground skills to be applied in competition ?

  • @skrimpshidy
    @skrimpshidy Před 13 lety +1

    @billysue2 True. Another big difference is in Judo the ground work has to be quick and explosive. We only have 5 seconds to make a move or we're stood up. In BJJ we can work and play chess.

  • @serekithegreat
    @serekithegreat Před 15 lety +1

    Kashiwazaki is a Judo God, straight up. His newaza is legendary, and I would kill just to spend a couple of months at his dojo in Japan.

  • @ronin2167
    @ronin2167 Před 4 lety +1

    I was just watching a recent video of a BJJ guy showing how to use the gi to tangle up your opponent. I was like...oh look, Judo concepts being rebranded as BJJ.

    • @m5a1stuart83
      @m5a1stuart83 Před 3 lety +1

      BJJ is Old School Judo with no time limit in Newaza.

  • @josephowonantsama8614
    @josephowonantsama8614 Před 6 lety +1

    Un MONSTRE du Judo!!

  • @krisleucht9199
    @krisleucht9199 Před 2 lety

    Whow, this is art!

  • @510Judo
    @510Judo Před 4 lety

    so good thank you for uploading

  • @JudoLife
    @JudoLife Před 15 lety

    International Budo University
    is a private university in Katsuura, Chiba, Japan,

  • @carldelaney2972
    @carldelaney2972 Před 9 lety +6

    1of the best and it hurts as well especially when my instructor puts it on also I'm always catching bjj players with this thay don't like it

  • @JoseNava-sf3en
    @JoseNava-sf3en Před 9 měsíci

    Nice❤❤❤

  • @sisabra
    @sisabra Před 15 lety

    have a look at the book he did 'Fighting Judo'

  • @Dudongo86
    @Dudongo86 Před 13 lety +1

    Beautiful but in countries like mine referees don´t let you do anything.

  • @RodrigoCabanillas
    @RodrigoCabanillas Před 14 lety +1

    @loudenvier
    Thinking that the Gracies did not had any contact with judo or wrestling past Maeda and that they genuinely rediscovered a lot of techniques is naive at best, idiotic at worst.
    Gracies were good at marketing and developed their own set of rules, they were not technical masters, cross-training continued past Maeda.

  • @hectorrojas4490
    @hectorrojas4490 Před 7 lety

    exelente .saludos de chile

  • @7c9ND2el
    @7c9ND2el Před 14 lety

    Very nice! Thx.

  • @Philip-dy3ww
    @Philip-dy3ww Před 8 měsíci +1

    3:10 3:50

  • @wesleyjj
    @wesleyjj Před 15 lety

    meu que técnica é essa!!!

  • @ishikawaml
    @ishikawaml Před 15 lety

    well, given how most Judo matches go, it would seem an equal emphasis on newaza as well as tachewaza would do some good, its like in boxing...there is no gaurentee that 1 punch, or in this case, one throw is gonna end the match, thats where newaza comes in..and as of late it seems japan is a little short on kimuras.

  • @roentgen571
    @roentgen571 Před 14 lety

    @makavelimavi absolutely.

  • @Romios_
    @Romios_ Před 11 lety +3

    most of the people involved with the trendy bjj do not undrestand that it is actually a judo child...Judoka was the man that teached the Gracies and then they made their franchise buisness...I agree with the existance of bjj but learn the history.....jiu jitsu before Judo and jigoro Kano was just a banch of whatever techniques,some of them not realistic at all....

  • @ishikawaml
    @ishikawaml Před 15 lety

    I undrstand being supportive of your art, I myself am a great admirer of judo (i am a bjj practiciner) and am more interested in combining bjj and judo as most bjj players already do, however, refer to the kimura and alieo fight in where kimura himself complemented the gracie on his technique and offered him a teaching position at a japanese academy. Both arts togather (you guys call it ne-waza) are very powerful and beautiful to witness. Gracies introduced leverage to ne-waza combat.

    • @BobSaint
      @BobSaint Před 3 lety +1

      Gracies inventing leverage... not again. Do You in Your sane mind actually believe that? Helio, Roger or who ever Gracie inventing leverage in grappling is like saying Mike Tyson inventing the left hook.

    • @ishikawaml
      @ishikawaml Před 3 lety +2

      I wrote this 11 years ago lol no, I no longer believe this.
      Enjoy your day.

  • @alphie10
    @alphie10 Před 12 lety

    @viothethunderbolt they give more time for newaza but u have to know wat ur doing quick otherwise they will call matte

  • @WAPticon
    @WAPticon Před 15 lety

    your a perect example of bjj practicioner, keep up the good work ;)

  • @vfmm1
    @vfmm1 Před 12 lety

    GREAT!!

  • @alekseybogdanov6562
    @alekseybogdanov6562 Před rokem

    💪💪💪

  • @Raincitywarrior
    @Raincitywarrior Před 15 lety

    impressive

  • @ruslanustkaman
    @ruslanustkaman Před 10 lety

    Оооооооооочень интересно!

  • @diegoeme1
    @diegoeme1 Před 4 lety

    que bueno ver grandes maestros que no usan esa soberbia costumbre de usar cinturones negros rotos para demostrar "antiguedad" en la practica.

  • @PRSer
    @PRSer Před 15 lety

    which dojo does he teach at??

  • @loudenvier
    @loudenvier Před 14 lety

    @RodrigoCabanillas I think it is idiotic to assume that people spending 100% of their time in pure newaza training would not genuinely discover or rediscover or adapt lots of techniques. You must know that Brazil was not the place where most top Japanese technical Judoka lived, and there was a lot of friction between GJJ and Judo here... Of course there was interchange, but the Gracies worked somewhat segregated from mainstream, Japanese Judo for a long time.

  • @user-po2rg7qv9g
    @user-po2rg7qv9g Před 3 lety

    Тигр

  • @solihingulat9704
    @solihingulat9704 Před 6 lety

    Ok

  • @chicabobica
    @chicabobica Před 11 lety

    So were a lot of moves, but the rules in judo change all the time and plenty of stuff is made illegal.

  • @ninjawaffle11
    @ninjawaffle11 Před 11 lety

    are omaplota still legal in judo

  • @jrcortez18
    @jrcortez18 Před 14 lety

    mierda! este tio tiene mas trucos ke libro de brujo

  • @pkpanabasgarciagatangarcia8627

    i love newaza tekniks more i dont lnow y

  • @pkpanabasgarciagatangarcia8627

    thats some green belt tekniks

    • @BobSaint
      @BobSaint Před 3 lety +1

      That's some preschool spelling.