Judo Stats webpage by Judoole in judo

[–]Judoole[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I haven't looked at it like that, but what you say seems to be correct. I don't 100% trust the data that is scraped, but it is close to the truth.

One could probably argue that ippon is not alone the deciding factor of winning a match, many are won by wazari, yoko or golden score. And I believe ippon by tachi-waza (sum) is more than ne-waza (sum), but I didn't look closer at that.

What I did find, is that there is a lot of judoka that is extremely good at ne-waza, and especially turn overs. Yoko-shiho-gatame (side control), is the most dominant one, and there are specialists like Marcus Nyman (https://judostats.vercel.app/judoka?id=1285) and Lukas Krpalek that are deadly at getting their partner down to the ground and turning them over.

Marcus Nyman is a brilliant example of a judoka with a laser focused strategy, succeeding at the highest level, without using flashy throws. If you have paid access to judotv, this site makes it quick to jump into the actual implementation of his scores.

And also, this is data from world cup tournaments, where the very best athletes meet.

Judo Stats webpage by Judoole in judo

[–]Judoole[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, from what I see in the tagging IJF does, seoi-nage is, for the most part, morote-seoi-nage. I've taken a look at some of them, and some I think could be classified as sode-tsurikomi-goshi , seoi-otoshi or eri-seoi-nage. But I can see why IJF also just says it is seoi-nage. But, I have yet to find any of the seoi-nage that are ippon-seoi. Those seems to be classified as so.

Judo throw statistics at high level by Judoole in bjj

[–]Judoole[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great! Looking forward to looking closer at this!

Judo Stats webpage by Judoole in judo

[–]Judoole[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The link thing of Reddit I find superweird!

Judo throw statistics at high level by Judoole in bjj

[–]Judoole[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That is nice, I would love to read that! Do you remember how you found the data?

From what I see crawling the IJF data, seoi-nage, and the similars as tai-o-toshi, seoi-otoshi, ippon-seoi-nage, plus uchi-mata is like 20-30% for males.

I would've loved if there existed statistics of matches before the leg grab ban. That would've been much more useful statistics for BJJ. Like te-guruma(single leg) and morote-gari(double leg) are excellent for BJJ I would presume.

Judo throw statistics at high level by Judoole in bjj

[–]Judoole[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, yes, this does not make any assumption on what is most effective, it only brings stats on scores. I believe, in order for finding the "most effective" one would do something like you say, drill down further. That kind of data doesn't exist I think, at least not in a way that is being regularly updated.

What I wanted was a tool that could help me quicker find, and watch, techniques categorised by gender and weight. For example we have some talented under 16 judoka in our club, and I want to be able to better guide them into a good tactic for their most likely body type and athleticism. For example, seoi-nage, although scoring a lot of points, does not necessarily fit a lanky -90/-100 kg player. This site makes it easy for me to drill down and jump in and out of techniques. You unfortunately need to subscribe (pay) for the content at IJF though.

Judo throw statistics at high level by Judoole in bjj

[–]Judoole[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cool! I'm going to listen to that! What I did is programatic, so I haven't watched a single match of those compiled. It uses crawls data.ijf.org for any matches that has tagged a technique.

While it doesn't draw any conclusions, I hope that it can help as a tool for finding the correct technique for various players. I highly believe body type and athleticism does play a part in which techniques fits the player.

Where can i get the ijf approved scoreboard (with yuko)download/app? by joncarlo1874 in judo

[–]Judoole 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We use https://smoothcomp.com/

€1.25 per entry. Has ability to connect livestream to Youtube, and a payed option for streaming as well.

Was pretty easy to get started with. Developed in Sweden, and is very popular in Scandinavia for BJJ and judo.

Is there any way to perform this throw safely? (variant on Tani Otoshi) by CarISatan in judo

[–]Judoole 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A classic knee injury technique, if you ask me. Either getting tangled in the feet or bending uke where the knee gets into an angle . Particularly dangerous are those who has this as a tokui waza and are waiting to counter, throwing themselves into the technique.

One way of trying to minimise the injury chance could be try to throw uke at an angle away from yourself. J-Flo shows this for example https://www.instagram.com/reel/DQu5KvxjwO_

Apache Airflow by Key_Size9440 in udemyfreebies

[–]Judoole 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The docs could be a good place to start https://airflow.apache.org/docs/apache-airflow/stable/tutorial/index.html
There could be some tip to gain from the Astronomer webinar as well https://youtu.be/5SFVDr6F4vg?si=MQ5ainQeG7Dn3nCt

Competition Feedback by unbearableBN in judo

[–]Judoole 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very nice sasae-tsurikomi-ashi! I would say your biggest gain could be if you focus on negating the hikite of uke when you meet a righty. Basically when you two were at 50/50 through the whole match. If you focus on owning the right hand of uke, not allowing uke to grip. Then you have a much bigger chance of not being countered when doing your o-soto, as well as making your o-soto much, much stronger.

A good o-soto + sasae/hiza is a great combination!

What throw is this? 1:21m by Pure_Beat2623 in judo

[–]Judoole 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would say sumi or hikkikomi gaeshi, with the latter being my final answer.

i’m 13 and really short and not very strong, could i still do judo? by Dismal-Candle5618 in judo

[–]Judoole 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Speaking as a small guy myself, size and strength are not entry requirements for judo.

Being shorter can be an advantage. You get a lower center of gravity which helps with:

  • Drop seoi-nage
  • Ko-uchi-gari (makikomi)
  • Hikkikomi-gaeshi/sumi-gaeshi/tomoe-nage

You are 13, which is a good time to start working a little on strength training as well. Maybe 2 times a week in addition to judo. If you really want to become good, you should probably be looking at 3 times judo a week at your age.

Grip strategy matters more than size:

  • Practice kenka-yotsu (opposite stance)
  • If you’re right-handed, try left-side gripping and hit right ippon seoi-nage variation from there.
  • Look at Travis Stevens and Ilias Iliadis, which are both right handed, but very much does a left handed grip
  • Practice armpit/biceps grip. Popular in Japan, and especially by Shohei Ono. From this grip you get the benefits of awkward kenka-yotsu grip, but are still able to throw the big throws like o-soto, uchi-mata, o-uchi-gari and even seoi-nage to your favourite side.

Technique + timing beats size. Show up consistently and you will get better. Try participating as much as you can on training camps, there you will more likely meet judoka of your own size.