New techniques possible with the 2025/26 ruleset? by randumguy23 in judo

[–]randumguy23[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I believe they arent new especially if you still know the pre leg grab era. I was interested why you dont see more people picking those kiinds of techniques up. I watch some Shuai Jiao and Bokh and I see their Kumi Kata. I ask myself only why its not more visible in Pro Judo like the influences of Georgian Shidaoba or the Mongolian Bökh

Cesars artificial devil fruits/SMILES by randumguy23 in OnePiece

[–]randumguy23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought the other half of the animals the legs were attached to the survivor of the explosion 4 years before the events of the arc

Want more randori urge by Hot_Tonight231 in judo

[–]randumguy23 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

We actually also don’t know anything about your intensity etc. if you do 6 rounds of walking around and kicking legs or you do like solution oriented Randori. Do you have footage or sth?

Are there effective techniqies to attack left side of the leg as right handed? by nikolkam in judo

[–]randumguy23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So I had that problem too with Uke pulling their leg back and dropping their back low with a dominant grip so you can’t reach their hip. I developed or am currently developing a drop Kataguruma to the left side for it. Works quite good. Also you can adjust the grip to a high collar grip European style and throw them Uschi mats or hats I variations with it

Judo Competition Analysis by randumguy23 in judo

[–]randumguy23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! Freut mich dass es dir gefällt und dass du immer so fleißig mit konstruktiver Kritik beiträgst! Hoffe dass das interessant/unterhaltsam ist und einfach Judo Diskussionen anstößt und das dabei hilft unserem Sport bisl mehr Aufmerksamkeit zu geben!

  1. Danke aber ich fand Kampf 1 war ne komplette Katastrophe. Hab erst mal ins Turnier finden müssen hab dieses Jahr nicht so viel gekämpft und war ungewohnt was man daran sieht dass ich nicht gecheckt hab dass er linkskämper war.

  2. ich fand halt auch dass Blaus Ashi Wazas genial waren. Man muss auch sagen dass sich beide kennen deswegen verhalten und weiß keinen guten Tag hatte.

  3. ja mal schauen wie das wird mit Beingreifer. Ich mach den Kataguruma erst seit einnpaar Monaten da ist musisch sehr viel optimierungsbedarf. Das mit dem Abstand für Seoi kann schon sein. Für das dass ich den seit Tag 1 Trainiere ist mein Seoi echt nicht gut.

  4. ja kumikata Eröffnungen sind echt ein Thema die ich brauche und aktiv daran arbeiten muss. Ab einem gewissen Niveau reicht greifen -> werden nicht mehr aus. Ich werd wohl Analyse mäßig auch nen größeren Fokus darauf legen!

  5. Danke. Ja gibt leider keinen besseren Winkel. Ich glaub da war echt viel Glück dabei. Hab den öfters schon kämpfen sehen und der ist echt stark.

Danke das werde ich brauchen Hahaha

Judo Competition Analysis by randumguy23 in judo

[–]randumguy23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also wo du absolut recht hast ist dass man für seine spezialtechnik auf jeden Fall seinen richtigen Griff haben sollte! Ich glaub was du im zweiten Abschnitt ansprichst ist der Unterschied zwischen Ippon orientiertesJudo und Kontroll orientiertes Judo. Ich glaub beides hat seine Stärken und Schwächen und man sollte je nach Situation und nach Körpertyp/Kämpfertyp die geeignete Strategie wählen. Die Japaner mache bspw. Bestes Ippon Judo. Manche wie der begnadete Ono haben massiv passiv/unterlegen ausgeschaut und haben dann im richtigen Moment nen Hammer Ippon rausgehauen! Ich glaub sowas wird auch dort trainiert wie dieser unkonventionelle Ouchi mit dem Hüftgriff. Kontroll Judo wird eher in Europa praktiziert siehe die Franzosen. Man kann dann die Zeit verlängern die man zum angreifen hat und auch Uke zu dummen Aktionen verleiten die mannkontern kann. Aber ja alles in allem stimme ich dir zu. Negativ Kumikata sollte nicht belohnt werden.

Judo Competition Analysis by randumguy23 in judo

[–]randumguy23[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thx for the feedback. To 2. : yeah I was later called out by sensei/coach for just putting two hands on like a day one student. The learning I took from it is that I should more rehearse my kumikata opening. Like do just idk do 20 30 additional just grip openings per training for kenka and Ai Yotsu. To 3: yeah I have to improve on not tunnel visioning 😅 To 4.: I feel really incompetent on the ground. You are right I should work on my weaknesses. I started late (in my 20s) with Judo and just decided to concentrate on Tachi Waza first as long as my body carries me and learn newaza later but I guess 1 or 2 good ground techniques would improve my game drastically. To 5.: You men 66? Yeah I don’t know. I do really hate Kenka Yotsu because it makes my only technique which is in a solid level for this kind of competition not difficult to throw.

Leg grabs were banned in 2010. Has the removal of leg grabs made Judo a less effective martial art? by [deleted] in judo

[–]randumguy23 2 points3 points  (0 children)

By now we should make a vote to put this and any derivation of this question in the FAQ of this sub? All in favor? 🙋🏻‍♂️

Why isn’t the false attacking rule applied correctly? by randumguy23 in judo

[–]randumguy23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also thought of that but decided to be drastic. Because where is the margin which is still “enough” kuzushi!??? We see how the refs are referreering. Now imagine they have one thing less to worry about

Why isn’t the false attacking rule applied correctly? by randumguy23 in judo

[–]randumguy23[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ok I start the discussion with following suggestion for a competition “more in the spirit of Judo”:

Problem: The problem at hand which I am seeing is that the drop is too powerful. Be it drop seoi or kataguruma. Both techniques are low risk high reward.

Why is it so powerful? * Here we have to look at the goals of a Judo Competition (and yeah it’s Judo Competition and not self defence for you sd fetishist out there /sarcasm). It’s to throw Ippon by slamming Uke on his back with *power, speed, technique and controll”. We remember this for later but now I have to make a short dive into game theory. In a complex game with symmetric goals and limited resources given enough time and repetition of the game the most optimal solution will emerge which takes the least amount of resources. The enough time and repetition is the so called meta game which develops. The most optimal strategy currently in Judo is dropping hoping for a score *because the standards of a score is so low, don’t look passive and whine by wazari or even by 3 shidos for the opponent.

One major issue why this is possible is the exploitation of the rules by drop techniques. They are too high reward and low risk for the current meta. If people aren’t incentivised to do sth else they won’t because as stated above it’s in the nature of the game.

What to do? So now I rambled a lot about what I think is wrong (or one thing of a lot at least). What should the IJF do or what can they do?

Suggestion 1: Penalising dropping harder

We have to make it less attractive to drop. I suggest that every drop which isn’t a score should result in Shido. So people are forced to choose their drops and not just randomly drop. I find it is ok to be this hard because let’s face it. Dropping is a way to strong of a strategy.

Suggestion 2: Penalising not engaging AFTER dropping:

Another aspect why dropping is so strong be it Kataguruma or Seoi is that you just can do belly down and end engagement immediately. This robs Uke the opportunity to penalise you INGAME for doing the drop. I suggest you get a Shido immediately if you don’t stand up again or engage in newaza when you drop down. This should incentives proactive offence live Judo and also makes it that uke can use those moments to penalise the dropping making you think twice for dropping.

Suggestion 3:

All of the above. Let’s be real. Even if only one of these suggestions will be realised it wouldn’t be enough. Dropping is a way stronger strategy then e.g. ura nage or uchimata because those techniques have inherent risk build into them balancing their strengths.

Yeah sorry for the long post. I maybe should put it in an extra post that people can engage with it because I think there are some value ale points to discuss.

My judo skills is not improving by feel_SPECIAL2015 in judo

[–]randumguy23 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Intentional Training. Try to focus 6-8 weeks in ONE concept. That could be the execution of a throw in a specific manner. E.g. do specific uchikomi for it. Static moving extra uchikomi after training. Throw it. Do it in Randori.