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  • a lot of the throws and chokes taught in judo are immediately taken away when the gi is off. Some variations can be implemented to bring throws and chokes back to the arsenal but you would have to train hard in a judo then after dedicating so much time you would have to think about how you could actually pull these moves off when the gi is gone.

  • The referee almost gave him an elbow WOW.

  • Who is Rick Hawn? He lost in the first round of the men's judo competition In Olympic Games. He did not succee at a world-class judo level. And he is unknown judoka in the world. He doesn't get what it takes to be a top-ranking judoka like Ilias Iliadis and Teddy Riner. I think his techniques are good only in MMA. But I think Ronda rousey and Kayla Harrison are talented judoist. And Travis Stevens too.He never win major championships in Judo, but he has high level techniques.

  • this is great.

  • Seionage!!!!

    

  • I am tired of seeing redundant "my martial art is better than yours because that is the one I trane" conversations. Judo is an amazing martial art and is very effective, let's just leave it at that.

  • Watch Jimy Hettes vs Nam Phan from UFC 141 for some sick judo!!

  • Judo AND Muay Thai?? Thats a deadly combination.

  • I'm not a Judo practitioner nor a Judo fan. But seeing this brings a smile to my face. Such beautiful throw which immediately leads to the strikes and KO.

  • I FUCKIN LOVE JUDO !

    IT WORKS !

  • judo is so underrated and underused in mma. i dont understand why. people forget where bjj comes from.

  • @magicapricot exacly!!! and bjj'ers get cocky saying they wuld smash a judoka on the ground yet the techniques are exacly the same just in bjj they are modified not only that in te past judo had a comp with jijustu wen it comes to ground fighting and judo won the contest

  • @alphie10 i know! and unlike judo, u cant represent your country and get a lot of honor with bjj in the olympics.

  • @magicapricot exaclyyyyy :D im 17 and im green belt in judo fight 66kg wana be competing wen im black for my country soon (hopefully) XD

  • @alphie10 well good luck! ill be cheering for you if you do make it!

  • @magicapricot thank you it will be for Great Britain if i make it xD!!! do u do any martial arts?

  • @alphie10 i do tkd

  • @magicapricot i expect to see u too competing then :D

  • @alphie10 BJJ isn't the best art. EVERY Art is strong. It's just how the fighter uses it. But in the streets. BJJ has an 75% Chance in the streets. Because, BJJ Isn't really effective when you're out numbered.

  • @ymk19 u got the wrong person my friend i never said bjj is the best art all arts have their advantages and disadvantages...judo is more effective because its a grappling art and most fights start wen ur standing not on ground and the ideal thing wen ur outnumbered is just to run away from the fight otherwise ur risking death tbh...i do judo and its very strong in standup and on the ground its strong too but not as strong as bjj as they focus more on the ground but dont forget bjj is judo

  • @alphie10 Well, it sounded like you're trying to say BJJ is best art. And BJJ isn't Judo, they are both different arts. They're just similar.

  • @ymk19 BJJ is Judo u retard do u even know the history of martial arts search it!!!!!!! BJJ came from judo without judo BJJ wuld never exist

  • @alphie10 That's right, BJJ DID come from Judo. But c'mon man, Chill... BJJ and Judo are both seperate arts. BJJ has more ground work. While Judo is more of throwing. Judo has a small amount of strikes, BJJ doesn't have any. BJJ did spawn after Judo, but they both are still different arts.

  • @ymk19 they are not very different arts they are quite similar in the ground prospective not to mention now they are teaching some sweeps in bjj with are simplier versions of judo throws but still the same thing. bjj and judo is wat i like to call sister arts very similar but still diferent in particular aspects

  • @alphie10 Well, Judo and BJJ are 95% Similar.

  • @ymk19 no, they are not. BJJ continues to evolve and judo stays judo. Judo is it's own worst enemy in the fact that it maintains such strict tradition. I train and compete in both, so I'm not just pulling this out of my ass

  • @Jessestewart12 But they are still both different arts. We gotta respect both. BJJ Improves in MMA, Judo evolves in both MMA and Olympics. But both are very strong arts. No art is better then another.

  • @magicapricot

    Doesn't bjj come from Japanese ju jutsu?

  • @cutthatcity judo came from jujutsu. bjj came from judo

  • @magicapricot In pride many Judo Olympic Gold Medalists were taken down and whooped on the ground and had a very hard time executing throws and trips and whenever they did they could hardly ever keep their opponent down. Judo is amazing, but it needs to be applied much differently to mixed martial arts.

  • @magicapricot are there schools that teach no gi judo? just curious

  • @magicapricot i think it's because there are more folks in US MMA with collegiate wrestling backgrounds than with judo training, and that both fill similar roles (taking people down). maybe it's the lack of a gi in mma that causes the fighters to think twice about training in it? i agree with you though. i'd love to see more of it in mma. it just works.

  • @idleeidolon bjj training is traditionally in gi. remember what royce fought in in th early ufc's

  • @magicapricot lol. yep. i also remember sakuraba having fun with that gi. LOL. i guess that's why a lot of them ditched the gi when competing? it's not like they need it to do the stuff they do.

  • @idleeidolon lol but if your nickname is gracie hunter thats kind of a given

  • @magicapricot yeah really, i always liked watching judo. Idk man, I don't do judo, but i feel like people find it harder to translate judo to a no-gi situation rather than bjj, in fact I prefer no gi bjj. Even though bjj came from judo they focus more on throws it seems like, and it just seems like it might be harder to translate the throws to no gi or mma.

  • From the judo throw to the TKO!!!....priceless lol

  • that's why i love judo xp

  • in jui jitsu do they teach you to defend against throws like that?

  • @zz4r Sure, but on that position the guy couldn't do anything, he should have positioned better to avoid the throw.

    Other thing was his bad BJJ, a good black belt would have scooped the guy or have taken one of his arms.

    Watch Fedor x Mark Coleman I and Nogueira x Bob Sapp, and see what a good BJJ does with a loose GP.

  • a judoka representing a gracie!!!

  • well done

    judo + muay thai is a pretty beast combination

  • BEAUTIFUL ippon seo nage

  • Ippon-Sio-Nage ~~

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  • What style of fighting was his opponent? :P

  • Very nice. You really dont see many Ippon seoi nage's in MMA.

  • beautifull

  • Moar strikes in Judo=WIN

  • At 2:02 you can see the "WTF?" expression on his face.

  • the kick is only glancing, it is blocked by the the left arm and shoulder with the leg falling down to touch the head. The reaction nevertheless is that of a stunned mullet-hesitation when the back was available and BAMMM

  • BEAUTIFUL IPPON!!!!!!!!!!!! :D

  • He was KOed from the headkick, he started grappling for survival mode and the guy just threw him and finished it nbd

  • @heyheymultigrain123

    Not ko'd but yeah the kick already rocked him.

  • @cougher989 The headkick didn't even rock him.... he even almost had a advantageous position after it.... Hawn just fucking beasted on him with that nice throw and he didn't know what was going on because it happened so quick. Some Judo throws are so quick the brain can't process what's going on. You look at your opponent and next thing you know you're looking up at him.

  • @SaMiAm702

    If the kick didn't rock him, why did he fall forward and then also just hold his opponent while not doing anything? Why were his hands and arms just resting loosely on his opponent's body, not even trying to get an advantageous position? When a fighter does that... he's rocked.

  • Misleading title for fuck sake.

  • It looks like that kick is what rocked him, Judokas. Everything after that was perfectly trained killer instinct.

  • @1005106 Yea I agree. It was the kick that rocked him. You could tell the way he stumbled onto the other guys back.

  • wow nice technique

  • Ipon seoi

  • judo and muay thai what a deadly combo if u cant work strikes in the clinch toss his ass if u cant toss him knee him sipmle but efective-(bad spelling)

  • Actually, the head kick--which partially hit him in the back of the head--is what put him on queer street. Great kick, to throw, to GnP combo.

  • @angusrocks6464 Not really, as he dove right with pretty good balance to grapple. People stunned by kicks.punches don't respond as stable as maynard did.

    It's hard to understand if you've never been thrown, but trust me, it's a disorienting, painful experience.One second you're standing, thinking you've got the better position then in a second you slam to the ground on your back. Before you can even process what has happened,you're getting your face pounded in.

    The kick was just a precursor.

  • @noose357 Though I was our state's Greco champ, I have been thrown hard more often than I'd care to remember. :) I stand by my comment.

  • @angusrocks6464 You've obviously never been thrown by a Judoka. :) I stand by my comment.

  • that was a beautiful throw

  • Hey kids, BJJ isn't the only form of grappling. It actually came from Judo which came from Jujitsu.

  • That's one hell of a perfectly timed left ippon seoi nage! Seriously, I doubt most people in MMA, even those with Judo, would have been instinctively fast enough to react like that. Shows why Rick Hawn was an Olympian.

  • Wrestlers know how to throw you twice as hard as that.

  • @Svittidiu Give me a break.

  • @Svittidiu You wish

  • @BehemothSuper Sorry but it's the truth. Wrestlers are more athletic, stronger, faster and agile than judokas. Judo is good but wrestlers (Greco-Roman and freestyle) are the kings.

  • @Svittidiu Funny, because it's known fact that Judokas throwing wrestlers often ends up in knocking them out. I don't see too many KOs in wrestling.

    Wrestling IS GOOD LET ME MAKE THAT CLEAR. But in terms of take down, technique will beat strength 99% if the time.

    When a wrestler gasses out from exploding and using up all of his strength, the Judoka's training "Maximum efficiency" will destroy the wrestler in most cases.

  • Come on man, how many times have you seen a guy get knocked out by a flying knee during the middle of an osoto, ouchi, harai, uchimata, ogoshi, koshi guruma, or even failed a seoi and get beat on? I havent even seen it happen in MMA. They have a sick success rate. A double leg or a single leg take way more energy, and put you right in line to get kneed or guillotined. Thats not to say they aren't effective, but you can't deny that they aren't alot safer. Fedor ouchi'd his way past alot of guys.

  • @alphamonX

    I've literally seen interviews where Jon Jones calls it judo and says that when he uses his legs, its Judo.

    He DOES know a good amount of Judo. He would probably be a brown belt if he trained pure judo, because he knows the techniques, he just wouldn't have all the points/accreditation and whatnot. Sure he didn't start as a judoka, and his wrestling ability have lots to do with his ability to learn the throws quicuk, but he does give big ups to judo. Why are you hating?

  • @JudokaJames prove it

  • Its not letting me post the link, but youtube search jon jones judo, and its literally the first video, he is talking about the vera fight. There are other interviews, but I mustve seen them on sherdog or something. Jones likes his judo.

  • @JudokaJames ok i seen the ,cool ..thanks

  • @massnerder1

    It isn't letting me post the link to the video of the interview, but search (on youtube) Jon Jones Judo, and its the first video. He is talking about the Brandon Vera fight. Somewhere around halfway he confirms just about everything I have been saying. Why are y'all hating on judo?

  • @JudokaJames i'm not hating lol.i just never heard anything about jon jones and judo.ive been getting private lessons in jui jitsu for about a year.my teaCHER HAS 2 BLACK BELTS ONE IN JUDO ONE IN brizillan JUIJITSU. he tells me that they are both affective he likes bbj better

  • Amazing, it was second natural to react with that judo move! damn

  • @alphamonX I understand what you are saying and to a certain extent it's true but honestly with a few months (maybe 4-6 months) of training and minor modifications, it's actually very easy for a judoka to transition into mma. More than half of judo standing & ground grappling techniques requires NO GI. So the other half can be modified and is modified. I've seen Judokas that trained only in gi adapt to no gi in less than 2 months.

  • @alphamonX

    Jon Jones has a background in greco, but alot of his throws are actually judo throws. Where he is using his legs to sweep his opponents legs, that is actually judo. You can't attack the legs in greco, so any of those moves where he hooks a leg or sweeps a leg, are actually judo throws adapted for MMA. His background in greco, however, is what gives him the balance and power to make them look easy. Nobody could learn those throws that fast without a strong grappling background.

  • @JudokaJames i wonder how fast or how much time it will take a good boxer or muai thai practitioner to learn a different striking art/style. i also wonder how long it takes for a good grappler to learn striking.

  • @idleeidolon I think that would determine on the person. BJ Penn was a boxer and picked up Jiu-Jitsu extremely well. I believe part of that was practice practice practice and the rest was a good natural ability to pick up the art. It just depends on the person I think.

  • @alphamonX

    No and yes.

    Judo throws are LESS risky than a double leg or a single leg because they don't put you at risk of catching a knee on the way in or getting guillotined. While it looks like a shoulder throw like this could put you at risk of a RnC, if you do it properly it really doesn't. But I agree that it will be hard to transition to mma because there is LESS TO GRIP. Solid training in greco and/or freestyle would help a judoka transition and adapt throws to mma.

  • @alphamonX I disagree because there are dozens of Judokas in mma that are doing or did quite well just by using Judo takedowns and quick ground work.

  • Ohhh, I know the feeling I got thrown like that and it knocks the wind right outta you

  • A single good throw could end a fight.

    I went to school with a couple of Judo guys, and I've seen it happen.

  • 12 seconds from throw to knockout

  • Damn tht was sick

  • Seonageeeeeeeeeeeeee <3

    amazing

  • It is proven by the Kodokan (main training & research facility of Judo in Japan) that after a well executed throw the opponent is "in shock" or "out of place" or "disoriented" and that's enough for a Judoka to:

    1) Continue the fight by punching/kicking (as you see in this video)

    2) Proceed to ne-waza (ground grappling) for a pin, choke or submission

    3) Make a quit getaway (in terms of escaping the situation)

    Judo is excellent for self-defense and MMA, just wish more would corporate it into MMA

  • @pcjudosambo  I am a pure striker with an undefeated amateur mma record.... most of my mma fights is with strikers too... my next fight was with a high level judo practioner with no sparring partners to work with... I invited a friend from college who practice judo he was able to throw me in the ground in a matter of seconds.... I was in a complete shock I thought I am going to die because I can't breathe I am more concern with breathing... it was really a hard throw the day after I quit.

  • @nipols wow. I am sure if you went to any local Judo schools and told them about your situation, for a small fee they would have worked with you several times a week (no gi) to improve your takedown / submission defense. Good luck in future bouts and don't be afraid to learn outside of your comfort zone.

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  • @pcjudosambo judo is something alien to me even though I am half Japanese I grew up in the Philippines where striking is really big... I never really pay attention to judo even though I've been watching MMA for years now... I got a new level of respect for it when I experienced it first hand I retired 5 years ago... I got a boxers injury 3 weeks before the fight. My camp decided to pull out because I am reluctant to have a hand surgery back then so I just focus on school instead.

  • @nipols im a karateka and im striker too pow.also, i've gotten thrown like that too once and since then...no it's not that i havent battled with judoka again but whenever i do im really wary.these guys can get scary and dangerous but i've noticed they work paterns(at least the ones i've seen) ex:some do mostly throws over the shoulders or others try to get you down with them, some like throws that emphasize on twisting moves.if you can figure out the patern you chance of succes increases.

  • @nipols i never said that judo is all about hips and shoulders, only thing i said is that there frenquently is a pattern in judoka moves.watch it, i said sometimes.there are two certain exceptions.the complete expert, which uses a variety of moves and the novice who just tries out whatever he knows,of course, if someone has noticed he moves in patterns and this is unfavorable for him he will change it.oh and what i said isnt a key-point against judokas, i just find it usefull.

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  • @pcjudosambo now that I think about it I think Judo is also the reason why Jon Jones is the champion... I was throw around by a wrestler before... but its different because you can anticipate your fall in wrestling... in Judo its different and it has more torque than a take down...

  • @pcjudosambo pop goes your mommys cherry HEHEHE

  • @pcjudosambo I agree, plus Judo is very useful in MMA because very few people actually use grappling arts and are unable to defend them, and when you're in a street fight it almost always ends up in a grapple so if you have the ability to smash someone through the pavement quickly it saves getting covered in blood n such things lol

  • @nomax345 Well in MMA every single fighter uses some sort of grappling (a must). Even if you're a pure striker you MUST practice grappling because many fights end up on the ground. Some MMA fighters began utilizing Judo takedowns but it's not part of the daily work out of an mma fighter and in my opinion it should be. I think wrestling is excellent but the double leg takedown is very overused. Judo is the new breath of fresh air in MMA

  • @pcjudosambo You're right, but as you say it's mainly wrestling forms, I was so happy when I saw fighters like GSP using judo influence take downs in his fights, they're so effective, and in an octagon when you get thrown well it's almost as bad as getting thrown on concrete, and it's very good for your ground game because of all the jiu-jitsu influence in the sport! I'm amazed that more MMA fighters dont use sambo and judo grappling over wrestling.

  • @nomax345 Yes but things are changing ... Judo is becoming more popular and many people other than GSP are now utilizing Judo as well. There are hundreds to list but a few who do use it (and not black belts) are Jon Jones, Frank Mir, Diaz brothers, Matt Serra, Cung Le and more. In terms of Sambo, that too is growing very popular in MMA/grappling, especially leg locks. Top 5 submission master in the world Vinny Magalhaes stated a dozen times that he trains Sambo leg locks constantly (in Russia).

  • @nomax345 i think it's because a lot of MMA fighters in the US already have a collegiate or high school wrestling background. and they just add the grappling they learned back then to the striking and boxing and muai thai and bjj they're learning now. same way a lot of european/asian fighters already know sambo/judo.

  • that was a great judo throw i take judo about half of the stuff you can execute in mma because most of the throws and stuff like that is using the opponents gi to throw them

  • @RyanNY39 you should take BJJ cause you learn how to do your judo throws with out a gii(all your throws basicly become a ippon sioanagi variation you have your wrist control grip and then under the arm pit) it will help your standing judo and ground judo

  • @JJMDibbs thanks for responding i would but i also have wrestling comming up and i like judo because where i take it we enter in our tournaments and stuff and i have great teachers and several black belts in my class and they help me with more then just judo wrestling, weightlifting, judo because they are all major athletes stuff like that and i dont think we have bjj in my area but thanks alot tho!

  • @JJMDibbs Many Judo dojos are now transforming into No Gi as well, so no need to visit a BJJ facility for that. The only good thing a BJJ facility can offer is to test your ground grappling and learn new ground techniques.

  • Good stoppage. I hate to see people hurt unnecessarily, so that they can live to fight another day (no homo). =[

  • @Shorty20122012

    Why did you say "no homo"?

  • Keep Up the Good Work Hawn! -Lars Dude

  • @choyleefutkid1 Only an ass, basement dwelling cage potato loud mouth would say anything like that. Ask anyone who knows more about fighting than reading a little on the net, whether a guy off the net, making comments, with no experience or tournies, can get into the cage/ring/sandpit/mats...& fight a top tier or 2nd tier fighter, from a farming camp...Maybe U Really DON't know how idiotic that sounds...EZ way 2 beat a dummy, dueling wits, is 2 hand him a pulpit. Take the floor, Oppenheimer...

  • @choyleefutkid1 Wjhere R your videos or even pic.s of your fights or practice..? Just another cage potato, & I NEVER met one true fighter dogging out other fighters, unless a part of ratings ploy. Now, as for him, sure...It's a HUGE conspiracy...Wooo..He has absolutely no skills, & pays off judges, coz he's the secret billionaire3 Bruce Wayne, who is bored w/his life, & wants to fight, but has no ability...Go back to school, you racist cretin (Google that).

  • Good ref, recognizing the guy was hurt.

  • @choyleefutkid1 I'd like to see, ONCE, one of you cage potatoes get in their, on "Proes VS Joes", & put up...you can't knock a man, when you're not in the game, & couldn't even go with the girls, literally. Don't bring crayons to a tank battle, cretin ( you may "Google" the connotation of "cretin," or even "connotation," itself). Stick to commentary on video games, & don't disrespect someone, simply due to skin color or envy.

  • @choyleefutkid1 so i guess that fight where he won against lyman good(just lost 2 the champ askren 2 fights before) unanimous decision was also luck, when you at this high level of mma their is no luck if he wasn't that good he would of lost this fight and many others, When your olympic level judo fighter and have a black belt in jui jutsu under renzo and pedro gracie your not gona lose many fights even against the best welter weights in the ufc

  • @huggy68 dude, you're arguing with a racists, obviously. He's another cage potato, who likely doesn't; even train, & definitely doesn't fight, or else he'd not make such a cage potato comment. ALL the UFC fighters made it there, fighting in other such organizations, & Bellator is a farming camp for UFC & other tiers, above itself. He's a cretin, & couldn't hold this "egghead"'s jock.Likely has a double digit S.A.T., "IF" he even took the test, & THAT with a cheat-sheet.

  • Left side standing Ippon Seoi Nage. All that was needed.

  • Black belt in Judo and trains under Renzo and Pedro Gracie? Man that's a deadly combination!

  • @youngstunna you think Republicans are racists? Lol. What about the Dems that think they can sew up the Black vote by upping Welfare. That's more racist because they think Blacks are too stupid to learn and get a job.

  • I bet his instincts took over when he felt that arm over his bicep/shoulder.

  • If a Judoka can throw without a gi.., on a game, on a spring loaded board... I can picture a fine judoka slaming someone on any hard surface out on the street. Never mind the arm.. Almost 80% of street fights wind up in close quarter, clenching. So where there is no rules and assailant are dressed, at least a T-shirt or any sort of clothing. The Judoka would snatch a grip and bang..fast.., out of nowhere. Kicks can be dodged, blocked and counter with a lethal throw, broken arm, head, choke.

  • I see myself ringside at 58 seconds ;)

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  • wooow

  • He got hurt and won't be on the next tournament.

    Shame

  • Fuck yea, massachusetts pride motherfucker. Massholes own!

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  • i love judo!!!!! wooooohooooooo

  • You gotta be impressed with Hawn here. Goes for broke on a big kick, which is awesome, fails but keeps his composure and literally without having to think, tosses this guy and annihilates him on the ground. Impressive, especially for a mid-30s guy. Stud

  • There's a quote on Judo,

    If they throw you on a carpet you're going to the hospital,

    if they throw you on concrete you're going to the morgue.

  • che belva!!!!

    

  • I think bellator is better than the ufc

  • that was sweet

  • Giving the back, Brazilian Jiu Jitsu is crucial, surely the opponent did not have a good base of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu

  • @Ederson134 If you have ever been put in a Ippon Seoi Nage then you would know if there is no seperation between his back and yours and hes fully commited to the throw that he would tuck his chin in and well the rest is frequent flyer miles really

  • @XxDrago16xX Sorry, yet most still think Brasilian Jiu Jitsu Judo is over, if the opponent had a good technique of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, he surely would do well in this situation....

  • @Ederson134

    I'm sure if you don't know but Levon was going go for RNC (well anyone would have given of this situation lol.). Since Hawn is a Judo Olympian and now a MMA fighter where you have to learn ground game.. Then Judo prepared him for ground game before learning Jiu Jiutsu so now Hawn has higher advantage on stand up grappling and ground..

    Even though Maynard may have more experience in MMA fights. Rick Hawn probably had the upper hand in this fight anyways.

  • @Ederson134 Maynard's teacher was probably shaking his head when he saw this: You had the guy on the ground, you couldn't keep him down and you call yourself a jiu-jitsuka?

  • judokas can make a throw happen very fast. Because randori in competition is very fast.Hawn seio nage timing was perfect. Any mma fighter with a judo base willing to improve and learned other arts is somebody not to be taken lightly.

  • seio nAGE

  • got to say , Bellator has some cut and very good shaped fighters

  • The martial art Judo and the sport of judo both utilize choking (shime waza) and armbars (Kansetsu waza). The difference between the sport and art, from a technique perspective, is that in sport judo, techniques (waza) are modified by the individual player to fit his/her style and to compensate for the dynamic nature of sport judo. The IJF has taken some Judo throws out of judo (Kata Garuma, Kani Basami) and they restrict shime waza to 13 yo and up and kansetsu waza to brown belt and above.

  • @GuamKomudo Katame Waza is ground techniques. Tachi Waza is standing techniques, Kansetsu Waza is joint lock techniques & Shime Waza are choking techniques. Ne Waza (literally, lying down techniques) are a subset of Katame waza. Nage Waza (Throwing techniques) is thus a subset of Tachi Waza. Not all tachi waza are throwing and not all katame waza is newaza.

  • THE POWER OF THE SEOI NAGE!!

  • If you don't know how to break fall, and, if you don't know where the Judoka is going to put you,,,, You're in danger.

  • Thumbs Up for the Beastie Boy's Sabotage tune on the background @ 2:04

  • Jap Whizzer!...for all the wrestlers

  • nice flow into the ground and pound

  • damn i love judo throws bestttttttttttttt