Added: 3 years ago
From: JuYokuGoOSeisu
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  • Amazing fast efficient footwork. So taking up judo down the road

  • What is the name of this opening acoustic sequence? It is amazing

    

  • legend

    

  • 岡野功 という名前はしっていたが、 ここまで凄いとは知らなかった。 

  • A machine..

  • I like how he actually uses ne-waza.

  • 1 dislike is from a "chi"master lol....

  • awesome

  • treino exaustivo!

  • whats the traditional music in the beginning?

  • at 1:02 he is just a little badass walking out there.

  • THE BEST

  • 2:15 - 2:30 , how did that guy that was supposed to have the upper hand at first, in a split second, went downhill and past out in the end when they twisted their body?

    Was it because he bent his ribs too hard, or was he suffocating from a choke ?

  • @bigfatdick5000 it was from the choke.

  • @bigfatdick5000 it was from the choke. not only does he choke him out but he pulls of that trick to revive him. that was badass. the guy just wakes up like where the hell am i.

  • Judo is an artform once you started on it, it can get addictive.

    It's like If I don't go to practice that week, something just ain't right.

  • Just rememberin the boxer who almost thrown by kimura in boxing match.He said:"No,no judo!" when he applying ippon seoinage

  • Most beautiful and well-balanced judo ever seen!!!

  • TITLE OF THE FIRST SONG???

  • A.W.S.O.M.E!!!!

  • this guy was AWESOME!!

  • Just one word-superb!!

  • Anyone know the name of the first song?

  • Notice on that choke where the opponent passes out, that Isao Okano never lets go of that grip around that artery. He shifts and turns in a myriad of positions but holds on like he is holding on for dear life....till the opponent passes out.

  • A l'occasion voir notre blog Team ju-jitsu traditionnel à La Rochelle (France), nous avons regardé vos vidéos, notre professeur du ju-jitsu traditionnel (et de judo) Roger Cadière sest entrainé avec le grand champion japonais Isao Okano, nous avons dailleurs un vidéo original en noir et blanc de lépoque ou ils étaient tout les deux jeunes. A bientôt sur notre blog peut-être.

    Team Jujitsu traditionnel JSR La Rochelle

  • Wow. Looking at all this, he would've been getting stood up from newaza and getting soooo many shidos under modern rules.

  • @ooogooman where are his shidos? his newaza shows advancement?

  • great sportsmanship chokes the guy out then helps him get up.

  • wow!! whats the name of that lapel choke he was when he rolls on his opponent. that choke looks twice as viscious as the anaconda choke (bjj)

  • @aceofhearts307 Amazingly as it seems, this is in fact Okuri-eri-jime, one of the most basic of Judo chokes, translated as sliding lapel choke (I think). This is Okano's variation. If you search for Okano eri jime, the first video that pops is Okano Sensei (now older) demonstrating this amazing technique. I've been able to submit my BJJ teacher twice using this variation.

  • @aceofhearts307 In BJJ it's often known as a loop choke. If you play a little loose with your grips, so the opponent doesn't realize you're planning something, it comes on super fast.

  • Requiem for a Dream - Clint Mansell (great song isn't it)

  • @mwedders I have to not agree with that..... every 2nd video is with that song its just ridiculous >.>

  • whats the name of the song starting at 1:04 ??

  • @ypsilono700

    Lux Aeterna by Clint Mansell

  • What's the name of the song at the beginning of the video?

  • What's the name of the song?

  • WOW!!

    Great fighter!He knew first Koga's sode tsuri komi goshi , morote seoi nage , ko uchi maki komi

  • This is a great judoka, i love judo, the first song excelent, the second hummm i dont like, i prefer the first song all the video...saludos

  • What does he have tied to the Wood Post? Something elastic? at 3:29

  • man, now that was skill!

  • Talk about unbelievable sportsmanship; choking your opponent out and then being the first one to resuscitate him.

  • absolutely awesome... This is why I love judo!

  • wouah SUPER GREAT

  • Holy shit!! I liked this video! Thank for posting.

  • One of the greatest judomen of all time.

  • Unbelievable skills..anybody else want to learn judo after watching that? I know i do.

  • 4:36 !!!

  • 2:18 anaconda choke showed by the tokyo olympics game

  • Nap time

  • That's actually a very specific spin-under Gi choke. An Anaconda choke is a no-gi choke, which you probably know.

  • Not quite anaconda - it's a variant of an inverted okuri eri jime he demos @ 4:08.

  • Amazing technique

  • Where did the color footage come from?

  • Awesome... he was incredibly fast.

  • amazing.. great vid. Love the soundtrak? Whats that song?

  • fully agreed with loudenvier he is the best,period

  • THE BEST JUDOKA OF ALL TIME... The only middle-weight to ever won the All Japan Championship 3 times!!! An achievement bigger than Kimura's or Yamashita's... The legend! The man! Isao Okano, the greatest judoka that ever lived!

  • Couldn't agree with you more.  Adding on that, excellent lefty and righty Judo.

  • Badass judo! - tkdguy

  • @loudenvier

    The All Japan's 3 times at his weight is very impressive, but Yamashita's 9 wins... Okano's choke on Grossain has won me many a match!

  • It is so hard to objectively define who was the greatest of all time. Yamashita is certainly the most successful competitor of all time, although he has only 1 Olympic versus Doillet 2, which shows we must consider the whole story behind the competitor. Okano was injured and retired from competition early, but was really amazing as a light opponent beating the heavy weights. But was he or Yamashita better than Mifune? Saigo? Maeda? They are so great to be incomparable, even to each other

  • @loudenvier I admit he's incredible, but what about Kano?

  • @SmartGuyMan Kano was never a competitive Judoka. My comment was clear from a competitive point of view, despite the fact that sensei Okano is one of the most enlightened sensei in action today. It is a shame the Kodokan brings upon itself for not promoting him right away to hachidan, as he has been rokudan for a few decades already....

  • @loudenvier

    better then Kyuzo Mifune?

  • @initdialog I've raised this same question in another comment I did before: "But was he or Yamashita better than Mifune? Saigo? Maeda? They are so great to be incomparable, even to each other" ... I think Okano's judo was the perfect blend of technique and fierceness, while Mifune focus was much more in an "aikido-like" approach to Judo. I would love to be coached by both! I think their perspective in relation to Judo to be complementary not antagonistic!

  • @loudenvier

    i don't think Mifune focused on the aikido-like approach. i think he was THAT good that it looks so fluent. he wasn't called the "god of judo" for nothing.

  • @initdialog I don't think this is up to discussion. Mifune Judo is pretty much aikido-like, his inventions like tama-guruma, are "effortless" throws that require perfect debana and tai-sabaki. He even clashed with some prominent Judoka of his time in his approach to Judo because many argued that using one's power efficiently don't mean you should refrain from using all the power you had. Mifune, on the other hand, was all about using as less power as needed, much like Aikido.

  • @loudenvier

    effortless judo is much harder to master, don't you think? mifune is considered the greatest judoka after jigoro kano. his skills were acknowledged as the best at the time when the greatest judoka were alive.

  • @initdialog Mifune is considered one of the greatest technicians of judo, but he was not a competitive judoka. Saigo was also amazing. Hirano was fantastic, almost unbeatable. Kimura was considered to be the highest peak of competitive Judo. Okano was the only middle-weight to won the All-Japan Championships multiple times. How do you compare such greatness? I belive that Okano could defeat Mifune both being on their primes, but that is just a personal impression, anedoctal, and unreliable!

  • @initdialog The greatest judoka are alive today. The old masters would loose to most good modern judoka.

  • @JoachimderZweite

    technique wise the judoka today are shit compaired to the old masters. they play safe in their own world with their shitty rules. no atemi, no openweight like it always was(!), retarded rules like no leglocks and such. most judo techniques on the ground get cut. the groundfight is almost non-existent. bjj whitebelts tap judo blackbelts.

    it's a fucking disgrace.

  • @initdialog So you want atemi in contests and dangerous leg locks that easily rupture the knee. No weight category means lousy huge guys will always beat very good little guys as Geesink beat Koju Sone, Kato, and Akio Kaminaga. Also there is no need to use foul language, my hero and yours, Mifune, whom I met in 1959 at the Kodokan, would not like it. He was against weight catergories however. If you cannot be polite do not bother replying.

  • Comment removed

  • @JoachimderZweite

    1. he isn't my hero but he is regarded as the best by the best. i use strong language to emphasize my aversion towards the judo rules of today. when i starded with judo i was often told i couldn't use this and that during newaza randori. i couldn't understand why since the restricted movements and techniques seemed natural for me. now i still can't understand it. why should i be trained by restricting rules of sport-judo if i don't want to be a professional?

  • @JoachimderZweite

    2. i never said dangerous techniques should be taught to children or used in randori BUT i want to learn them!

    the japanese judoka steel learn leglocks and still go to tournaments, so why, WHY can't the european do the same? since you are doing judo for so long, tell me. how many schools stop teaching techniques only because they aren't allowed anymore. is this a proper way to teach judo? according to some rules? how many judoka are professionals anyway?

  • @JoachimderZweite

    3. i want to learn judo leglocks, judo atemi, kodokan jo-jutsu and other judo weapons. i want to learn everything kano had teached to his disciples. the real judo not some sport-version of it which gets altered every few years because of some organisations!

    why not holding open-weight tournaments? no one is forced to compete. if you lose to a guy who has 20 kg more than you knew it could have happened. many small judoka won back in the day those tournaments.

  • @initdialog you might like this Isao guy, there was a recent interview with him where he mentions that alot of the rule changes are bad like the recent leg rule, and he says the turtle position has no place in martial arts and believes players should get penalized for stalling with it into mate, and that because of this Judo newaza is almost dead. I think he also likes open-weight tournaments alot (I guess obvious since he participated/won them in the past)

  • @initdialog but maybe playing safe is what good judo is?

    presumably good judo is whatever works.

  • The legend !

  • Muy buenas imágenes !!!

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