Added: 4 years ago
From: expertvillage
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  • good technique, 'bout to try it on my grandma

  • All these e village vids are good but this guys especially clear.

  • Or you could flying armbar their ass

  • More of mix between Tai Otoshi and O soto Gari. There isn't a reap as such, so not a pure o soto and it isn't a pure tai otoshi either.

  • It's a terrible O soto gari...

  • I want a that No fear gee :)

  • Thanks Don. Your instructions are very clear. I find these clips helpful as I wanna learn more moves.

  • love how there're more comments on the guy than the move itself

  • in the start of the video he also shows that you need to keep your eyes very wide open :D

  • All I know is that guy made a wet fish slapping sound when he hit the mat.

  • Isn't this Osoto-Gari?

  • The teacher blinked like 500 times before he shows how to do the move.

  • @shampoo02 HAAHAHAHAAHAHAHA

  • @amotista LOL

  • That landing foot was set beautifully for de ashi barai instead of o soto gari. Like the hooking position to the back of knee though. Nice.

  • @MrTerryKay that was a horrible osoto gari.

  • @alxh89

    It's not text book but then there's often a difference between the shown technique and tournament technique. If that way works for him then fair do. I just think he could have saved a whole bag of trouble with a well timed leg sweep.

  • @MrTerryKay can't argue with you there

  • Don, I took a week long course with you and a few other instructors once. never really got to speak with ya much (too tired)

    Just wanted to say that you are a gifted teacher and you chose the right profession! One of the best instructors I've ever had and,I'm counting traditional schooling here.

    I think it was Richard Feynman who once said "You do not truly understand something until you can explain it in a way that others may grasp it"

    You, sir, are a cerebral and empathetic teacher. THANKS!

  • hahaha the arm bar was a bonus pwnage

  • does this work on big people

  • @akathumkiller It works. In japan jiu jitsu is it is called osoto gari. and you need to "damage" opponet's balance by pushing him back. But you need to pus only the upper part of body, his legs needs to stay on the ground... Excuse my English but selfdefence words arent my hobby if you know what i mean :) .... Try to type Osoto Gari in to the finder and you will see..... Hope this helps :)

  • @Rammadien ight thanks

  • @akathumkiller it should.

    my gym teacher showed me this video of him going to japan to attend a martial arts meeting of some sort

    and my teacher was like 6'4"

    and the man he was fighting was 4'11"

    and the man put him in all these locks and moves

  • @ZackTaylor1992 really i will learn it

  • @akathumkiller im sure it was something totally different.

    jujisu focuses on the ground and this was just while standing up

  • @ZackTaylor1992 i know my brother is teaching me it i would be a 2 degree black belt

  • no no this is judo wtf then again judo came from jiu jitsu

  • @respaectyourself this is judo. please specify that judo came from japanese jiu jitsu or else all the people who read your comment will be misinformed on the origin of judo. they'll think it came from bjj.

  • Not sure what you guys are talking about. this is a great technique, it works for real and it works against a no gi opponent too- you just grab the arm right above the elbow and the back of the head or shirt or ear if you like.

  • ive seen countless guys in mma fights get taken down by this from withing the clinch. If you dont like using then dont use it. Its just one less weapon in your pocket. This is useful if you have an opponent thats likes to get in your face or in the clinch. You can easily bring the fight to the ground and if you take BJJ then thats exactly where youd like it.

  • @VendettaMLG ,

    I'm amazed at what some of these guys are saying. I learned this move about 15 years ago; long before I moved over to BJJ. I still use it quite frequently. Often some of the most basic moves can be the most effective, especially if you fake first by lowering your position before the clench. You are COMPLETELY right: one less tool in your bag of tricks.

    Peace

  • this is one of the weakest moves I know. never try this or you will get the beat down. It puts both fighters in the same position....believe me , this sux......this is not good jujitsu.

  • in judo, yes. but in mma, dont use it!

  • You just have to be better than your opponent. If you're not, Jujutsu or not, you're gonna get beat down.

  • yes although the gi is not so popular when training for mma. this sweep is very basic and will not be landed on anyone with any experience at all especially a judo background.

  • O soto Gari is one of the TOP Ippons in High Level Judo...

  • I think kata guruma and ground submission plays a bigger role now

  • in beginner bjj classes do they always train using the gi?

  • usually

  • we have gi and no gi bjj trainings

  • This is jiu-jitsu, not bjj. With jiu-jitsu, u always wear a gi :P

  • BJJ is brazilian jiu jitsu. It is a modified form of kano jiu jitsu which was also the basis for modern day judo. In BJJ you always wear a Gi. Many people such as eddy bravo have started teaching it without the Gi. However technically without the Gi it is no longer BJJ, but submission grappling.

  • @TrytobeZen11 Also the Japanese were huge fans of American Catch wrestling since so many Judoka were defeated in style vs style matches. Kano competed extensively in catch matches. So did Maeda who taught Helio and Carlos. The ground fighting is not so much Judo as it is a hybrid of Judo and Carch wrestling. Helios BJJ was more fundamental. All these moves you see today is the evolution due to the amount of competition out there. The Kimura is a double wristlost in wrestling, standard grappling.

  • @Richdanahuff Oops wrong thread I was doing three things at once. I was talking about the Kimura in another. The mispelled world is wristlock the double wristlock or hammer lock is what wrestlers call it.

  • Comment removed

  • very good demo

  • Thats a Judo O Soto Gari aswell.

  • i like tomoe nage

  • Its weird how people compare Judo and Jiu Jitsu but they use basicly the same exact takedowns!

    atleast most the time anyways.

  • the teachure looks really o ver welmed at the beggining when he talks and sounds like he has been smoking 60 a day for 20 ears hw blown is he

  • this is called the osatogari i was recently taught this by my sensei in Jujitsu who specializes in Jujitsu, Muay Thai, Philipino Boxing and Knife Defence bloody awesome

  • This is called a "Schoolyard Trip" in wrestling because it's so basic. Also, this instructor has gnarly colliflower ear.

  • bjj is alot more complicated and talented than wrestling

  • i agree and disagree at the same time because wrestlin and bjj are 2 different styles of fighting they both r complicated and do take talent

  • wrestling you just try and muscle your way throu the match bjj is diff

  • wrestlin you dont muscle your way through a match yes if you r strong your more likly to win but there is alot of talent and technique

  • this is osotogari in judo

  • the only bad thing that if you dont hav a gi on u cant do some of the moves that require the other guy to have a gi, kinda like this but if he had a shirt im pretty sure you could pull it off.

  • thats right and wrong, this is quite similar for judo as well, and i know that for some throws u would substitute a grab of the gi with an under or over hood, instead of grabbing the gi, u would grab part of his should there isnt much grip but enuf for u to push him then pull back

  • i would cup the back of his neck with my hand and grab his wrist with my other hand that would provide plenty of grib this is one of the first moves i learn in my mma class

  • cone you learn the basics you can adapt any technique, and that is the point, we only evolve or a style only evolves when it can adapt

  • You'll find it easier to kick out the front foot with your lead leg as he puts it on the mat. That will also give you better position to pull the arm bar because you don't have to move your foot again... =D

  • no i disagree your more balanced the way they show you in the vid and there for more likely for success.... have you ever grappled before if not try it you will see i thought the same when i started but it is not better... also you land in a great position for a arm in this vid i don't know how you didn't see that

  • That would be true if the person had their arms locked, or was shorter etc.. But when dude steps, he sacrifices his center of gravity and puts it on one foot without leaning towards the opponent. He leans off to the side (which is bad if you're on one foot), etc... Granted, there are many ways of doing it, I just wouldn't recommend this way against a taller or stronger opponent, which is what you're likely to be facing. He should just kick out his lead leg before he places it when he steps ^_^

  • dude u noe wat my cock is huge

  • WTF LOL! Ha ha seriously...  For some reason your lame ass comment made me laugh.

  • and just as im thinking arm bar you throw it in:) nice.

  • ahhh that's a reap, not a sweep. osoto garai.....i was hoping for a deashi harai...

  • oh, what he did was like osoto and tai otoshi combined. my favorite throws.

    i would recommend that you master 3-5 throws in judo so it would be easier to take an opponent doen and begin ground fighting. :)

  • in judo, there's a throw similar to this and it's quite easy to execute. it's called osoto. one one of my fave moves in my judo training.

    go check it out guys. :)

  • i think this tecnique to be quite poor. under real conditions youll never get across your leg when the uke is advancing.

  • well I did it and it was really effective...

    much easyer and faster to use.

  • Don't knock it till you try it. There is never only one way to do something. I am a judo player but I have done stuff in judo tournaments that other people don't expect. I am not saying I am a jack of all trades but try it. You might see it as another tool in your arsenal.

  • vin dieseal teaching that

  • I wouldnt continue that with an armbar. Too risky on the way getting down to get punched in the nuts. Just execute a wrist lock straight after the sweep and the guy will be screaming for Virgin Mary.

  • ive done armbars with this sweep its not too risky

  • In combat or in "the ring"?

  • both it works prety well if you just keep your knees tightand throw em down hard then they will probably will be too dazed to retaliate

  • awsome..!! thanks man.

  • he was demonstrating, not actually fighting.

  • When you do a demonstration you have to demonstrate how to do it CORRECTLY, not half asses like he was doing.

  • shitty armbar they guy could have easily got up

  • this can be EASILY reversed, you have to know absolutely nothing to reversed, just know the right moment to do it

  • this is cool but in a lot of mma or ufc they dont wear shirts so how would you do that? i would guess to pull his right shoulder with your right hand and grab his left elbow with your left..?

  • you can put ya right hand around his neck and grab his left with ya left. not the elbow, a little above on the triceps

  • The way to perform this throw is demonstrated in the "

    Osoto Gari Demo by the Camarillo Brothers

    " video

  • i agree.....this is horrible. when I think of foot sweep its Deashi Barai not "major outer reaping" aka: osoto gari

  • I dont think it is even the same move, but its better to have your hand kind of on the side of his head by his ear, the grab his tricep maybe an inch above the elbow, push his head the direction you want to throw him, push him with your elbow against his chest and just have your leg psted behind his to take it out. somet

  • nice cross over arm lock, red belt lock

  • very smooth. i got a dude twice my size down with this. but it was all in good fun :D

  • Man variations of the footsweep. This was the one I was first taught in Tang Soo Do because it's very simple. And once you get your leg behind the guy, he's pretty much going over.

    My favorite one though is the one where you "sweep kick" the achilles tendon while pushing forward and up into the guys chest.

  • thanks for the help with take downs :) 4 stars

  • then drop a bow...

  • you can kick ass with this move

  • lol. Ashi-barai!!!

    His version of Osoto Gari leaves him open to be countered. The off-balance is absent.

  • AGREED!

  • This guys Osoto Gari sucks.

  • AGREED

  • The reap would be better if done with a "back kick" motion rather than a pendulum swing like he just did.

  • great move, but, what they can do is once you put ur arm on their shoulder, all they have to do is wax off ur arm, then grab it and pull them towards you, where you can do a trip, or take a shot and do a double-leg takedown.

  • Yeah, I'd try an Ashi-barai.

  • sick

  • BJJ for the ground and Judo for the stand up grappling. So, if this is a stand up grappling technique a Judo guy can teach it better to you.

  • that's easy.. it's almost the same in karate, but there u dont do those pushes ;D

  • Try searching Osoto gari its alot better :P judo ;)

  • He said it was basic... give him a break.

  • grey belt?

  • its funny if u actualy try to do this ,pushing him first but insted of pushing you back he gets u wit a sacrifice throw

  • ahah" right to an armbar" ahah it would be funny if he did it to hard and broke his arm..

  • Your comment was choking me, could not stop laughing...

  • Your comment was choking me, could not stop laughing...

  • Yep - That's where he's making his biggest mistake........if you want to learn throwing --- look at people trained in Judo (same goes for groundwork - but in reverse----ie BJJ is better here)........check out yamashita for a proper version of this throw

  • This is awful. The opponents weight isn't on the swept foot, so he can just lift it up off your attacking foot. Its a good setup with absolutely THE WRONG ATTACK.

  • I don't think in any situation you would need to defend yourself you would be able to perform a perfect foot sweep. I see no flaws in their performance and it was a very nice video for those who need to review their basics.

  • This ain't a foot sweep - it's a driving/reaping throw.......if you see no flaws.you seriously have no idea

  • This is a judo tech - just like all the other supposedly jiu jitsu tech's - only thing is that it's very porly performed.

  • The Kodokan was founded in 1882 by the late Prof. Kano who himself had established Judo. Judo was derived from Jujitsu which had many names and schools. Jujitsu is an art for either attacking others or defending oneself with nothing but one's own body.ju jitsu came before judo

  • And Brazilian Jiu-Jitsiu came a lot later. What's your point?

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