Added: 5 years ago
From: clivegirdham
Views: 33,004
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  • same thing as sambo. i wonder witch one came first? probably judo.

  • @jtc1999 ofcourse judo came out first but all the grappling wrestling sports came out of JAPANESE JIU JITSU which was created 1600 1700th century or maybe before that i really dont know

  • very nice

  • FATALITY!

  • a lot of korean judokas did this move to a bunch of japanese judokas at the 88 olympic games because they wanted to hurt them badly (the koreans and japanese have a long history of enmity against each other) a lot of japanese guys got their knees blown out as a result, and this move got banned from judo ever since if i'm not mistaken.

  • @animalstakker Not to start a flame thread, but I just want to point out that the Japanese were very brutal before and during WW2.

  • @JustinDBroughton yea i meant no disrespect. i just got reminded of what someone told me while i was learning judo.

  • @animalstakker Cool story, but that's all it is. The kodokan banned the move after their champion yamashita suffered a broken leg in the lead up to the '84 olympics. His opponent was also Japanese.

  • @Hersiee

    but the video is only 17 seconds?

  • Thought this came from sambo?

  • @stratocaster1986able sambo = russian judo...pretty much lol

  • @Remynat0r This is a judo technique, it's called "kani basami." Its part of the Kodokan's officially recognized 67 throwing techniques. Remember Brazilian jiu-jitsu comes from judo, not traditional jujitsu. Mitsuyo Maeda the man who taught Carlos Gracie was a judoka, and never trained in jujitsu. This move is also found in Russian sambo, which also has its foundations in judo.

  • Scorpion from Mortal Kombat does that move!

  • No it's listed as one of the original 67 judo throws.

  • I got my knees torn up by this move, I couldnt walk for 2 weeks. Glad I will not be seeing it again.

  • i got banned in the australian judo championships with that move and the kid he won lost to me in the state championships in 15 seconds. so i was spewing. I could have won. Then i won the next year so i was happy

  • No it was banned because yamashita had his leg broken defending against it.

  • My only serious MA injury was defending against this technique. I'm still not totally sure what happened, but it rolled my ankle somehow on the way down and I had difficulty walking for a couple weeks, and a lot of pain for a couple months.

  • that's because when the move is done properly, you're supposed to have your opponent off balance (towards his rear, it's more of a rear trip). When it was done to you, the opponent probably just kicked your leg out from under you with your weight on it, and it dragged your ankle across the ground causing it to twist... Happens all the time.

  • usually it's in the knees :P.

    My MA injury was from a knee bar..I didn't feel pain and tried to see how far it will go.

  • yea i heard about that

  • Damn, I've never seen such a sweep/submission combination.

  • kani-basami is banned in judo tournaments, though.. too many broken arms.. lol

  • broken knees/ankles not arms

  • I thought it was ban because it often over rotate the body and uke landed on his/her head and neck instead of back.

  • no if u do it across the knees instead of the hips u can break them as u land ( sudden jarring movement)

  • i broke my friend's ankle with that move...

  • that sucks-- we mess around with it all the time, but no injuries yet....

  • Excelent reference to counter a boxer, very good strategy !

  • HOLY SHIT dat was nice man

  • We do that take down in Capoeira. It's called Tesoura which translates as "Scissors".

  • owned. =D

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