Added: 5 years ago
From: fzinck
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  • yeah the video looks very very good and funny to wona try it :P

  • i would not like to be the guy he's using as an example to teach Ju-Jitsu moves :X!!!

  • When walked through slowly with a training partner the pain is straight on the spine.

    How the hell is that technique going to be used in sparring?

  • Or its too dangerous

    Answer.

    While I would agree to a point somethings need to be trained using sparring and pressure tested I can also see the other point of not sparring and pressure testing.

    There is a particuler move that I know that is a form of throw the result being the person thrown will end up with at least a slipped disc.

  • fzinck -as usual, great vid. I truly appreciate the level of control that you are exerting upon the attacker. Funny thing about resisting uke's. I had one explain to me (it was his first lesson) how that he could easily pull out of one of the techniques I was teaching. He did what everyone does (he was in ikkyo and tried to feed me his elbow). His resistance put him into nikkyo with almost no effort on my part. Nice to see you are still making vids, I'll have to make another of my own ... ~j

  • nice stuff, I currently take BJJ which has some aspects of JJJ, Muay Thai, and boxing, have so for about a year. I'm pretty new still, but I would love to get into this, just ignore those posts below, someone who appreciates martial arts should want to be exposed to as many martial arts as possible and use what fits you best, from a MMA perspective. Great vid.

  • he is this a diff form of jiu jitsu? or is this the original traditional one? cuz i dont like the bjj stuff

  • This is classical Japanese Ju-Jitsu.

  • i thought this vid was very good and the club was like one big happy family. im 15 but want to start jujitsu, is it too late?

  • I've had people over the age of 50 start my classes.

  • @enganese It's NEVER too late to strart with something and certainly not when ur 15. I myself started training JJ and judo when I was 16 (w/o any martial arts exp). Now I'm 18 and I'm starting too win tournaments and getting my blue belt in a month (hopefully :P)

    So my advise is: if ur motivated, just do it ; )

  • That run for it against the knife is sooo true... It would be better to say, that no matter what effort you take, no matter what you do, opponent armed with a knife WILL cut you.

  • if you risisted then they would just use jiu jitsu(go with the flow) and breack your other wrist thats why they go with the flow and its a demonstration, and a way of living, not to see and try to prove that this is the "best" "style".

  • i must say that was very impressive, and humurous lol. i can see that in some situations it would be better/faster to throw some straight punches, elbows, kicks, etc, especially to finish off/incapacitate the attacker. (i have some background in wing chun)

    i reckon that ju jitsu and wing chun are (arguably) the best martial arts around. to be learned in both of these, it would be incredibly effective and efficient!

    Thanks for the vid! 5 stars.

    Cant wait to start ju jitsu :)

  • i must say that was pretty impressive. in some circumstances, it would be better/faster just to throw some straight punches, elbows, and a kick etc, especially to finish them off (i have a wing chun background).

    I reckon that ju jitsu and wing chun are (arguably) the best and most effective martial arts around, and to be learned in both of these, would definitely be incredibly effective and efficient!

    Thanks for the video! 5 stars!

    Cant wait to start ju jitsu :)

  • One of the best films I have seen, for no other reason than attackers are of varying levels of flexibility and agility, and thier fall depends on this. In most films students do nice sexy flips when thrown, but the reality is that someone who has tight shoulders and wrists will fall differently. The true skill of the instuctor is not being conplacent and making the technique work on that person. No martial artist is infallible,the Japanese say, "even monkeys fall out of trees".Good stuff sensei.

  • is Kyushu Ryu Jujitsu kind of a aikido/jujitsu hybrid style?

  • The part about the knife is more than exellent.

    I give you 5 stars for this video man, keep it up!

  • Thanks a lot!!

  • now thats funny that first girl in the black was funny................only japanese jujitsu can you do that with brazilian jujitsu........CAN YOU DO THAT WITH BJJ HELL NAW

  • BJJ is more practical for real life conflict in my opinion. (nothing against this at all, i love japanese styles of jujitsu aswell.)

  • the art is called jujutsu because it yields to force. that is the entire premise of the art. but it is a general term, much like kung fu or karate. for japanese unarmed (or lightly armed) martial arts. a small part of a larger art.

  • what i meant was, you didnt see any aikido in this video. i am right about jujutsu's translation. it's the same ju in judo, aikijujutsu, goju ryu..etc.

    aikido came mostly from daito ryu aikijujutsu.

    internal power is called ki. as in...aiKIdo. chi/qi in china.

  • aikido? ...jujutsu doesn't mean magic, it means yeilding way, or science of softness. ju (soft, gentle, to yeild) jutsu (art, skill, science)

  • Well, one day someone will tap,there will be no let-up and there will be a nasty accident.

    Of course, it`s OK to burn through a red light if you`re a good driver, right?

  • but the only way to know if a control technique is working is to control yes? even modern legends like wally jay tell you not to let go of the hold, just ease up a bit.

  • For us when we do a lock and Uke taps we don't let go, we reduce the pressure. You don't want to let pressure off on the street when someone screams. Control locks are about reward and punishment. You do what I tell you and I ease up on the pressure (not let go). I am ready to re apply the pain if you don't comply.

  • thats really the only way to develope any sensitivity.

  • Exactly!

  • ffs what is it with you people? Can you not understand that, as fzinck so rightly says, this is a small part of a DEMO. He is illustrating a principle for his audience and doing it with good humour. His Uke's would most certainly let him know if they felt at all disrespected. I suppose your style of jujitsu is peerless in its effectiveness?

  • When someone taps, pressure needs to be released immediately.

  • no animals or egos were bruised or injured during the making of this clip.

  • With regards to actual injury, most, if not all Uke's will tap way way before a lock is in any danger of causing real injury. I dare say thet fzincks uke would have known exactly what he was in for. :)

  • Exactly, not to mention we have all worked together for years, if I really hurt them they would pay me back! That's right Sanjuricus, our Uke's tap when a technique is working, not about to snap in half.

  • Well SnakePee you should try a Martial Arts class and maybe you will understand what a demo is. My Ukes were fine, sorry you were so concerned and I showed them the utmost respect. This is 3 minutes of a 40 minute demo of a system hundreds of years old, excuse me mister critical if I didn't fit in every technique in the world, have a clue. The demo was about leverage, I opted out of too much impact and throws to demonstrate to kids and parents.

  • nicely done

  • Did the students in this class get to train that day?, this Sensei is just showing off and humiliating his uke. Except the techniques are compliant for the sake of safety, Sensei is taking the mickey, in reality he would get slapped.

  • Wow your ignorance and ability to jump to conclusions knows no bound. This was a demo my Kancho asked me to do for my youth students after my eight hour 5th Dan grading. IT'S JUST A DEMO for kids. Get over it.

  • I'd just like to say that I agree wholeheartedly Master Zinck. I wonder if the day will come when the idiots who post in comments sections all over the internet will actually post something even slightly informed or intelligent. :)

  • +1. and it's not jujitsu but aïkido. the Sensei doesn't hit Uke. Moreover it's not a Judo Kimono, so...Aikido, folks.

  • Sorry, you are wrong. Where did Aikido come from? Ju-Jitsu! This was a ceremony so I wore a hakima. You are right in that multiple impacts are a staple of ju-jitsu. This was a demo discussing leverage for my kids.

  • ok, sorry sensei ^_^'

  • a whole lot of classical ryu-ha had very little striking involved. and hakama was regular dress in those days. it depends on the time period your style comes from, in the later period, edo for example there was no armor, and much less use of the katana, along with more striking. why would you hit an armored samurai armed with a katana?

  • Good point. You're right on the money. This clip was from my 5th dan grading as my Kancho wanted me to a little demo for the kids. I was put through an 8 hour testing that day and my back was gone. I decided to focus on classic fluidity stuff for the demo. Typically we do lots of impact. Hakama was just for show.

  • personally i think the impact is what makes the grappling stuff work! especially today. a teacher i know said the worst part of his entire career was his aikijujutsu shodan test because he had to sit in seiza so long haha

  • The kids might buy it, but I don't, and I'm not ignorant, fellow martial artist myself. You post on utube, dont expect everyone to luv the the video. Congrats on the grading and no hard feelings.

  • Hey I'm never insulted by people with little or no experience in the martial arts or who only know how to critize than create.

  • Most impressive. I've been meaning to take up a martial art for a while now, but they are all so interesting I have a hard time choosing one. I think I'm going to take up Jujitsu (and maybe Aikido later on).

    By the way, I've seen it spelled Jujitsu, Jujutsu, Jiu-Jitsu, Ju-Jutsu, etc. Is any one of these the official "correct" spelling, or is it just personal preference?

  • Good one about fzinck.

    six of one, half dozen of the other... translation differences and preference.

  • An excellent video. I've been meaning to take up a martial art for a while now, but they are all so interesting I have a hard time choosing one. I think I am going to take up Jujitsu (and maybe Aikido later on).

    I'd also like to say that after reading all the comments for this video, I am impressed that you made the effort to reply to so many of them. You're a good man in my book!

    ("fzinck", isn't that the sound of a light bulb going out? haha just kidding)

  • Find a style that interests you & look for an instructor you trust whose ego is in check & interested in the development of his students and not showing how tough he is or showing off. As for the second bit, my passion is real, especially for training my youth students. I use youtube as a medium to hopefully motivate others to want to increase their awareness, confidence, self-esteem and control through the martial arts (note I didn't say anything about fighting) heheheheh.

  • Find a style that interests you & look for an instructor you trust whose ego is in check & interested in the development of his students and not showing how tough he is or showing off. As for the second bit, my passion is real, especially for training my youth students. I use youtube as a medium to hopefully motivate others to want to increase their awareness, confidence, self-esteem and control through the martial arts (note I didn't say anything about fighting) heheheheh.

  • Thank you very much, I'll keep that in mind. I met a sensei once who thought he was God's gift to the world, and when a student said he was having trouble with a few techniques his reply was more or less "well, you should be an expert like me!" But I can see how much you want to help others learn and I really admire that!

    (By the way, I didn't mean to double post like that; the first one took so long to post I thought my computer froze up, so I reset and retyped it. Whoops.)

  • heheheh Double posts happen to me all the time.

    My Grand Master made sure he squashed my ego a long time ago :-). I'm on this planet to perfect my skills and help others build self-esteem and self-confidence through the martial arts. Not to show how tough I am, hopefully to lead by example and honour my many instructors, teachers and mentors.

    Good luck in your search my friend and stay true to yourself and what you need.

  • Find a style that interests you & look for an instructor you trust whose ego is in check & interested in the development of his students and not showing how tough he is or showing off. As for the second bit, my passion is real, especially for training my youth students. I use youtube as a medium to hopefully motivate others to want to increase their awareness, confidence, self-esteem and control through the martial arts (note I didn't say anything about fighting) heheheheh.

  • Very good TapMaster209. You are absolyutely right.

  • Yep, Jutsu or Art is always the parent of a Do or Way.

    Ju-Jutsu spawned Judo. Kenjutsu spawned Kendo. IaiJutsu spawned Iaido etc etc! :)

  • Yeah and the major difference is...the Jitsu/Jutsu arts ar war arts, more combative..the Do arts are more pacifist...less combat if any at all

  • thats not ju jitsu thats aikodo sukcers!!!!

  • Sorry dude your wrong... remember Aikido came from ju-jitsu so sometimes it can look similar.

  • are those trousers or a dress?

  • The Hakama is like a pair of pants with huge legs designed to hide the movement of the feet.

  • Though they originated as a sort of Chap, similar to the leather overtrousers worn by cowboys. :)

  • am a practician of i Kyushin ryu ju jutsu Indonesia,i just wana ask,is there simular tehnic in all ju jutsu all ryu's??Than x

  • Absolutely, often in the old days the style was named after family or region names so now we have hundreds of ju-jitsu styles. There may have been subtle differences in styles but a lot of common elements.

  • You will find similarities in ALL styles of Ju Jitsu...but that is about as much as can be said with any certainty. Minor variations in the way each technique is executed could be argued about ad nauseaum!!!!

  • That's for sure!!

  • nice video and techniques

  • Thanks pal.... keep practicing and stay dedicated. Good luck with your future training.

  • i like aikido and ju-jitsu.Nice video.I liked aikido more but whnen i came back of the ju -jitsu camp this summer i prefer ju-jitsu

  • I'm genuinely curious....what is, in your opinion, practical for "the street" if JuJitsu is not?

  • Great control

  • oops sorry man, was talkin about kayzen76. hard to keep track of the names

  • Thanks for fixing your foopa!! Ju-Jitsu is a complex parent art. Lots of styles originated from ju-jitsu. Learning to create impact is very important in Ju-Jitsu.

  • isn't jujitsu derived from aiki-jujitsu? which in turn is related to traditional aikido? i don't get fzink's comment. you're not expected to punch and kick a lot if you're primary aim is to dis-arm an opponent with your open hands. instead you use holds and throws. can this loser get out of his room for a while and stop fiddling with his x-box?

  • This style of jujitsu looks like aikido style.... No punch and kick in this style? which are the difference with brazilian jujitsu?

    Thanks for reply :)

  • Sorry, but you're so wrong, we do lots of punching and kicking. Don't judge an entire style by a 2 minute clip. This was a half hour demo for kids after I had been tested for 8 hours for my 5th dan. I had a sever back and kept it simple and funny for the kids. This is a classic Japanese ju-jitsu style.

  • I'm right there with you on the beginners...they really hurt!!!! somewhat ironic!!! Had my nose bust and a rib cracked by beginners before now!!!! not to mention lots if sprains and bruises!!!

  • heheheheh I hear you pal!!

  • i dont doubt your dedication to your craft, all im saying is that how well will these things you are learning apply to real life situations if your not training in an actual speed situation. The reason for existance of martial arts was for use in fighing/war and that is the undoubtable truth, therefore it would be wishful thinking if you think your not going to get hurt even in training.

  • Start slow when a technique is new to you and speed up with competence. Practising a new technique at full speed from the off is pure folly. We show students slowly so they can see the individual steps that make up a lock or throw...they become competent at these then speed up. Wan Can Setsu for example...lightning quick if done by Yudansha...slow and plodding if done by a newbie. :)

  • Do I need to train full speed finger locks to know I can break someone's fingers, of course not. Some aspects of training should be full out. You miss a big factor. When I train fast with a wrist lock my partner goes with it to avoid the pain & damage. On the street people will not go with it. I can study the technique better going slower and it allows my partner to resist me to ensure I am doing the lock properly without him breaking any bones and ensures he's not just going with it.

  • I've found that some of those wristlocks work a little differently on the street than I had expected (I was a bouncer for a while).

  • That is why in Ju-Jitsu you train to be adaptive, never relying on one technique. A punch in the nose can create different results too. Why are you so surprised? However, a wrist lock properly applied with body weight can produce similar results 90% of the time that's why the cops I teach like to use them so much.

  • This is Aiki Do and not Ju Jitsu.

  • Don't judge the entire system by by a 60second clip. That was my 5th Dan grading. I was tested for 8 hours prior to this and suffering horribly with a bad back and asked to do a demo for my kids group.

  • This is pretty good stuff. I train bjj, and our work is more ground based, I like that alot of the stuff you are showing involves standup techniques. I'm not too sure I'd want to roll in a street fight. heeheh.. Well I guess that's why I train mma and kickboxing, but nonetheless, it would be nice to know those techniques as well. I have an "ryu aiki jujitsu" school across the street from me, do you feel this would compliment my brazilian ju jitsu and mma???

  • Listen I'm big in cross training. I do this style, Kyushu-Ryu ju-jitsu as well as Karate-do Shotokai. I participate in seminars of other styles despite being a Master in this style. Never stop learning.

  • A style like Kyushu-Ryu is full of deadly and bone breaking techniques. Going fast or full out is never an option. Eventually you'll have no one train with.

    Beginners hyrt me more than my black belts because they don't understand how little it takes to dislocate a shoulder for instances.

  • practicing slow is the worst way to train martial arts, real life situations are fast, if you train slow your not preparing yourself or your students to the reality. you might as well teach them ballet if your going to teach them slow.

  • Your young and lack some understanding. If all your interested in is hurting people that's one thing. If you're interested in perfection of form and technique muscle memory is greater when a movements is performed slower. Oviously there are times when we train very hard and fast. Especially seniors.

  • looks very similar to what i used to do. kumite ryu jujitsu. great stuff! loved the vid

  • I really wish I could of been there to see all that. Love that line, "I'll give you a $100... $1,000 if you can hit me" heh. Good stuff as always :D

  • interesting =] I practise Eikoku Ryu Tai Jutsu (Ju Jutsu) some similar techniques here

  • i realy enjoyed watching it. what was the last "quite simple" move? what did you do with your right hand?

  • It was a simple pinch to the inside of the bicep using the hard edge of the Yawara stick and my thumb... hurts like crazy!

  • great control thats what i call controling the situation

  • :)) Very nice He is funny sensei.But pity for woman:)

  • I can tell you those gals are tough!!! I put the same beating them as the men... no favorites.... however they give it back to me during practice you can be sure about that.

  • great man! i have like a month practicing jiujitsu, but im very bad compared with u xD

  • Like anything in life Ju-Jitsu is about doing and practising. Make improvement your goal! Good Luck.

  • good ju jitsu!

  • liked it alot :) im going to try get some ju-jitsu lessons when my wrist is out of plaster

  • Give it a go... It's lots of fun!!

  • I think he was the same guy I met in the very erly 80's and 5 or so of the karaty guys i was with thought it was a joke, well they were all invited up on the stage and all 5 or so of them slaped out very fast. but the guy who was teaching the seminar did not have a bad back and he did a lot more throws and droping throws that i always wanted to learn but never did.

  • This was a resent demo and my back was pretty bad so didn't do too many hip throws this day...unlike years ago. But I'm happy to report it's getting better and I'm still kicking ass hehehehehe

  • buen video y la clase muy entretenida

  • Gracias

  • It's bio dynamics really. Understanding that when you do something this is what happens to the human body. We all respond to pain stimulus and pressure, some more than others, and a few not all. Those that don't respond end up with broken joints. These techniques allow you to control the person without perminent damage or send them for surgery depending on the demands or the self-defense situation.

  • Great clip.

  • Thank you, I enjoyed dishing out the pain heheheheheh.

  • Hey Crazytomboy.... it was with a series of principles with bio-dynamics and leverage.... basically behavioral modification techniques... hehehehe. Finger locks work amazingly, especial when you're suffering a bad back like in the video. They work great!!!!

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