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  • those last ones make him cry a bit lol that shit look like it hurt

  • "I don't care about my grip much" That completely changed how I viewed the tutorial. I've never had a proper and successful judoka say that.

  • that sounds like a really hard mat. 

  • While it looks weird to me as a Japanese Jujutsuka, his detailed explanation during the technique coupled with the way his Uke hits the floor says much more than how well or not he performs the technique on video.

    Good job!

  • 0:35 um that's your left hand.

  • 0:35 um that's your left hand.

  • Awful

  • HORRIBLE

  • Wow this is really bad!! if he's fighting me in competition and he's that far away and trying to do osoto gari, he's loosing

  • Wow this is good. It looks more like the real ones thrown in the olympics.

  • adam no one cares... coach resnick doesnt even know you ;p

  • This is osoto gari competition style. If you try the kata version it will end badly. The hoping happens very fast when uke is already destabilised. You dont hop until you have full driving force in the direction of the throw.

  • josh is my wrestling coach right now

  • His balance is under control. He have the control over the opponent. He explain it so everyone, even a white belt, understand it.

    How can 39 people then dislike the video?

  • I agree with neal.

    Anyone that thinks this is a bad throw is probably a white belt and doesn't every fight in competition.

    Go watch videos of Yamashita.

  • "I don't care about my grip much".............

    I think that says it all right there.

  • chi non fa judo conosce più meno questa tecnica perche qualche loro amico o parente gliela ha insegnata, ma ciò che mi fa incazzare è che gliela insegnano male come in questo video , e alla fine non serve a un cazzo se l' o soto gari significa "grande falciata esterna" allora significa che il piede lo devi spzzare via, non ti ci devi aggrappare con la gamba, come in questo video, e poi prima di sfalciare la gamba il piede di appoggio deve essere più in avanti altrimenti perdi l' equilibrio

  • this was horrible,all i have to say. This isnt osoto gari,just a take down anyone can do by nature.

  • Why isnt the GUy BREAK FALLIN U CAN HEAR HIM WINSING

  • Actually, I practice both brazilian jiu jitsu and judo and I am pretty sure that the way he is performing it is called O Soto Gake, not O Soto Gari.

  • Actually, I practice both brazilian jiu jitsu and judo and I am pretty sure that the way he is performing it is called O Soto Gake, not O Soto Gari.

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  • pobre cuate

  • isn't he a litlle young to be 4th degree BB?

  • a lapel grip is more effective than a high grip

  • very nice

  • how is this a hard throw it's one of the most basic throws...

  • oh god he just straight up smashes him to the mat

  • Wtf is this? :S Like somebody is gonna bunny hop round me twice and throw me :P Im pretty sure he got his blackbelt at macDonals.

  • Looks like the Rock Bottom.

  • technique looks off.

  • this isnt osoto gari.

  • @aquaman0825 Have you seen Yamashita do Osoto?

  • Ouch.

  • if uke have fast reactions, he can do absolutely the same technic on tori... don't like it :(

  • @christianPlm.. You are supposed to throw them hard lol

  • technically.. Osoto Gake -- this is my favorite technique, can easily turn into Harai Goshi, Osoto Makikomi , Seio Nage and Seoi Otoshi

  • what a dick. he is throwing him pretty hard, i wouldn't want to be his partner, but that was a good tutorial

  • in my opinion this is not the traditional o soto gari, but o soto gari ken ken

  • thast not the way I was taught

  • ouch that went hard..

  • You guys are nuts. Josh is a great judo player and if you did even the slightest amount of research you would know exactly how good he is. I have had the chance to train with him while he was living in WI and I was very impressed with his instruction, persona, and his technical ability. Whether you like the technique or not, this is a great way to set up this throw. Not everyone does things the same and it is Joshua's non-conformity that have taken him to the highest levels of Judo.

  • DAMNNNN the guy was hurt, you can hear him moan TWICE!

  • @RightWingCon81 Hell yeah he was, did you see how hard he hit the floor? Not just once but multiple times with what looks like no padding on the floor. That hurt me just hearing the thud.

  • I hate to be mean but thats a very bad Osoto-gari. not good judo.

  • @elkikoololz "if it slams somebody to the mat, it's judo". So ur saying that a powerbomb is judo? hmm. you might want to rethink that one dude.

  • Judo guys throw damn hard!

  • everyone that thinks this is poor judo must not fight in competition. Josh isn't showing kata techniques. Quit crying

  • @nealofgrafton I have to sort of agree here. If you ever see a judo comp with top guys throws are always ugly as shit. That's because both guys are good you aren't going to see pretty perfect fit-in type throws in real life. I actually like this version.

  • @nealofgrafton it is not shit but i rather the more deadly art which is jjj

  • @nealofgrafton The whole reason for learning things in a very set way in the beginning is so you learn how it works and how it should work. You can learn how to make it work in competition after but first you need to know the fundamentals of the technique. Otherwise it'll never work

  • @nealofgrafton Here is my problem. By bringing the sweeping foot up before you've unbalanced your opponent you leave yourself open to being countered. With any reasonable opponent when you jump in your opponent will counter with his own O Soto Gari. He may not be showing Kata, but proper technique is still important in competition.

  • @JudoNoSeito : the way this actually works at full speed is the foot and the off balance occur at the same time. however i agree that any good opponent will counter you on any throw where you leave a little wiggle room

    for example: inoue countering at 2001 all japan championships

  • @nealofgrafton So true, so true. ^_^

  • @nealofgrafton this is not regular osoto. this is ken ken osoto

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  • @crossfire1129 yes. I am sure you'd crush me like a grape with your amazing skill.

  • @crossfire1129 yes. I am sure you'd just throw me across the tatami with your amazing skill level and knowldge.

  • Nice throw but in the purest sense not O Soto Gare. More like an O Soto Gake. I like the Tori's stance. It's similar to what I used in my shiai days and is more in line with a faster entry for some throws and similar to a kamae I used in a traditional jujitsu style I trained in previously. Cheers.

  • This is nearly identical to a competition o soto my instructor teaches. Kuzushi is there, but it's subtle. Look at 0.58-1:09. Although it doesn't look quite like the classical version, it's the principle not the form that makes the technique. Whatever you call it, it works ... well.

  • those tiles on the walls.... they are doing this in a PUBLIC BATHROOM?!?!

  • Wisconsin?

  • BJJ to me is a load of shit. Those cons have taken Jui Jitsu, gave it a few twists and called it brazillian Jui Jitsu... BJJ is only a hit now because of all this MMA bullshit, makes me laugh all of these fools nowadays want to learn MMA thinking that a few techniques from a few different martial arts is better than learning one style all the way to black belt

  • @Brady2k10 Not a con. A japanese originally taught them self-defense techniques during a time when the world outside of Japan new the art as Jiu-Jitsu. What we've seen since is the sport version of it and, it's a tribute to the japanese to call it Jiu-jitsu, because that's where it came from. Go visit a Brazilian blackbelt and, see how much shit he's dealing out. If he's the real deal, it's just the opposite.

  • needa step wit your right fist to get leverage then you can execute the throw u would def get countered

  • This is one of the advanced ( tournament variations ) of osoto gari. It works better this way for most people...

  • This is almost completely different from how I learned it.

  • I weigh 260 lbs. I'm a black belt in Judo and I do BJJ. I would counter throw you so bad that I would probably take you head off. You have no leverage at ALL.

  • what school do u train at? for bjj

  • @Delanuve Yet you don't have a single video of yourself doing Judo on your channel.  If you were a black belt in Judo I think you'd see the kazushi at 1:33, not to mention you'd have seen this variation before in shiai, but nah, you're just a bullshitter.

  • all of you commenting on his technique in a negative way know absolutely nothing about competitive judo. This is obviously the technique used for osoto gari in a competition situtation. And all of you talking about his low rank should know that he is a successful international black belt competitor.

  • i think this move could work in wrestling as well....what do you guys think????

  • @qnion yeah my brother used this very move a lot during wrestling. It helps if you are a lanky guy though. Do the same thing from a neck in arm. Make sure you pull the guys arm before you come in because if you don't he can counter you.

  • I love watching this guy make up shit and doing it all wrong. He can't be anything more than a blue belt in Judo.  He has no true understanding of the correct body positioning and execution of these techniques.

  • i was a yellow belt in judo when i was 10 years old. i did osotogari a more fluid way.

  • wow he threw him down hard... hehehe ^_^

  • WTF? Left foot first? Why?

  • A nice o soto otoshi! I can't see the gari :)

  • I was taught that Osoto Gari involved taking a step with your outside foot and then following the step with the inside foot and sweeping the leg. It seems that in this video he did not take that initial step.

  • no Kuzushi, works in this video just because Uke is just standing there! In the competition with this form, he leaves lots of room for being counter. Compare with :

    watch?v=loUJH_JgkhY&feature=re­lated

  • wtf he called his left hand, right hand wtf!

  • hahaha listen closely obviously this guy does not know right from left and he calls himself a black belt.

  • are you an idiot lmfao

  • Why is he stepping with the inside foot first and why is there such a big gap for a black belt?

  • Osoto otoshi

  • @bobocroupier  exact

  • @bobocroupier nah, leg comes off the ground to finish... Not osoto otoshi.

  • @bobocroupier No it's not, because uki's foot comes off the floor when he is getting thrown.

  • @bobocroupier Rather do an Ouchi Cochi combination. just in case of course

  • Which country do you practice in? 24 Years is generally not long enough to hold a 6th deg. You are looking at 7 to 10 years for first dan. I am not saying you're lying, but it is ussually 30 plus yeras to reach that level. Unless you have a lot of points from Olympic competition.

  • often though certain places do pass out belts to more than those who necessarily earn it, but ehhh ya never know who could have gotten there possibly if it was aloud. Just as lots of people make black belts in taekwondo without having down most of the moves. Depends on the teacher and areas preferences i guess IF HE IS INDEED TELLING THE TRUTH

  • NO NO NO....

  • one thing that you've forgotten is to teach a movement steps of that throwing. You are good, but need a lot more practice on judo movement steps.

    in this throw if you do not have lead step first (if right sided, you should lead with the right foot first and do the same thing with the other side ) without the leading foot step, it will be hard for this throw style to take and effect.

    I've been in judo training 24 years. and right now I'm holding a 6th degrees black belt judo.

  • If you are a sichidan you should have known already that this is a practical application of o-soto-gari, not a text-book explanation. Even in the o-soto-gari book by sensei Yashuhiro Yamashita, there is a demonstration by Rouge of this same practical application here. Kosei Inoue is also known to initiate his famous and devastating o-soto-gari attack without the leading step. Mata ne.

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  • wow

  • i was taught this throw in my taekwondo class for self defence. ive actually used it in a street fight aswell. its very rffective.

  • This throw is very common in other martial arts too. I used to do brazillian jiu jutsu and they taught us this throw aswell.

  • wow you're an idiot... how the fuck is this move used in other martial arts? This is a jujutsu throw, judo takes the throws from jujutsu and bjj is a variant of real jujutsu.

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  • how the fuck is it? judo came from jujutsu you retard... this is what i mean about judoka being retards.l ook it up moron

  • come down dude there is no need for name calling why are you acting like a woman get your feeling involve chill dude chill it's ok I will let you be right just like I do to girls when I hurt they feeling I sorry ok I am sorry

  • So rude and so ignorant.usual combo.U* must be from BJJ,right?The first exposure of Brasil to "ju jitsu" came from a japanese judokas who were training kosen judo.University judo with stronger emphasys on ground work than Kodokan judo.there wwere no samurays in Brasil to !transfer" real ju jitsu.U do understand that,do you?And.like any upstart u have no manners,mate.

  • Why are you telling me that as if it contradicts what I've said? I do proper jujitsu

  • maeda wasnt a kosen judoka when he went to brasil,he was kodokan but at that time that was like kosen is now.After maeda left japan the kosen rule took effect much limiting competition groundwork.Some universities chose not to follow suitt,thus the kosen subsystem was born.

  • @Obsidian1392 Actually, from what I've read. Judo takes the Ne Waza from jujitsu, or ground techniques. From what I know Judo only uses some of the Jujitsu techniques.

    I know that Judo uses Uki Otoshi and Ippon Seoi Nage, but they're both a bit different than the Jujitsu versions. Judo is derived from Jujitsu, not completely stolen. Judo takes the ne waza, It doesn't take all the throws, alot of the Judo throws are original from what I know.

  • poor guy in the blue

  • It should just point out that it's a KUZURE o soto gari so no more haterz :3

  • For the armchair quarterbacks/haters here's Josh's resume. About Josh: -22 years in judo. Currently a yodan- 4th degree. -USA Judo Certified Continental Coach and National Referee. -Ranked in the top-5 of USA Judo at 66kg and 73kg from 1997 to 2004. -International medals from the US Open, Canadian Open, and Pan-American Circuit Events. -Represented the USA in European, Asian, and Pan-American competitions and events. -Alumni of the San Jose State University Judo Team in San Jose, CA.
  • yes , in randori.

  • this variation of osoto gari is also shown by yamashita in his book on osoto gari judo masterclass series. Like all judo throws there are several variation depending on the position and movement of uke.

  • it more like osoto gake as he is hooking rather than a big reap.

    if you want to see osoto done correctly check out yamashita

  • That guy is using too much strengh rather than proper technique. It may work in randori though. I also think it may be easy to count him as he is very far away from his opponent

  • This is not a formal kata throw.. but a randori throw vs a judoka. A classic osoto will never work at a high level. after you establish tenique the power should be next.. just my view.. im starting to dig left hand grips and this is top notch instruction..

    Thanks for posting!

  • Hey Hector thanks for your view

    I think we agree with each other, as this o soto is definetely more for randori not uchi komi. I think your quite right when you said that the power comes after technique. Just remember that if you can perform a technique with the least amount of strengh you'll be a world champion already. Thanks again.

  • well, if you wanted to, you could find out on your own. but, i mean, its so much easier to be a youtube keyboard warrior.

  • Um....the first problem with this guys instruction is " i dont care about my grip much" ! Judo is all about the grip, additionaly ive seen this throw done better by white belts in my gym.

    P.s. where is the spot for his partner i wonder how many injurys he has dished out to his students on account of his shoddy instruction.

  • i do osoto gari and i am a white belt

  • I CAN COUNT TO POTATO AND I AM CARL! LMFAO jk

  • This guy called himself a 4 dan black belt judo intructor. Wow. Scary hah? Where he got certified as 4 dan? This guy cant even demonstrate a technique correctly.

    It is bad that someone has to pay him to learn judo. This scare me thinking about how judo may

  • He was ranked top ten in the US at his weight class for years, putz.

  • more soto otoshi if you ask me and even that isn't executed properly, and besides I have never heard for back belt only black belt :D

  • nothing to do with judo. the whole concept of judo is the soft way, the easy way. this guy is pushing too much. where is the kuzushi? And why the hell isn't he in the right position before executing the foot sweep? he is 1,5 m away the other guy.

  • What's up with all the Judo purists complaining about his technique? Sure it's not the classical osoto, but this is the osoto most people feel works better in competition. Watch Yamashita and Kimura's osoto when they are in shiai and you will see its quite similar to this one.

  • I think your pages were sticking together when you read (Osoto Gari for Dummies)

    .. you need to be more fluid and smooth.. you're throwing him way to hard to the mat... and why are you falling with him????

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  • TERRIBLE!!!! OMFG! a good osoto gari is done with the ankle not the leg.... and there to much weak point in his tech.... anyway.... loll It's a shame that this person is a black belt.... long life to cracker jack's cereal boxes lolll

  • too much force imo. judo throws shld be more of speed & rotation & breaking the balance.

  • Baddd Lol

  • thats a terrible osoto gari if i've ever seen one. if you just hook the leg like that then enter, he'll do the same thing right back to you. you need to be in deep, so that you are in control before you hook his leg and execute the throw.

  • I was thinking the exact same thing. I rewound it to see if he missed a step! I've always been taught to step in with the outside leg first so you have more leverage against him, otherwise he'll just resist and can even reverse the throw on you. I'm amazed this guy is a 4th dan and makes such a fundamental error.

  • u r wrong.

    as a left handed fighter when u do that u r pushing him in an angle of about 45 degrees therefore using ur hips, while hes pushing u forward generating much less power.

    try it.

  • well i don't know where you or the guy in the video learned how to do osoto gari, but whoever taught it to you, didn't teach it properly

  • Horrible judo instruction.

  • hij doet er wel erg lang over

    i took to much time

  • lol from 1:26 to 1:29

    is just kids dumb shit!!!

    in competition the tori will just lose balance him self

  • u suck :o

  • You guys must understand nothing about the biomechanics of grappling. There is a lot of leverage and technique involved in this move. You're pushing his head backward with your shoulder(where ever the head goes the body follows), and you're blocking his leg with yours(which should pervent him from stepping backwards), this combined movement combined with good foward momentum with your entire body should throw your opponent to to ground easily without using too much strength.

  • yeah somebody's agreeing with me THX

  • thats the best o-soto-gari ive ever seen!

  • i know its prety wikid

  • the guy with the white gee looks like hes doing it good but it looks like hes taking 2 long 2 do it, if it were a strong guy it looks like he could reverse the throw but im just a white belt so i dont really no yet

  • looks more like osoto gake to me, you know when you hook the outher leg istead of sweeping it :P but great klip anyways :D

  • To the people who say this is wrong: classical osoto gari, where you get your pivoting foot level with their feet is almost impossible in a randori or shiai situation, you have to get your reaping leg behind their knee and hop in. Watch Yasuhiro Yamashita, he did this constantly throughout his career, you gonna tell him he's wrong? Great demonstration.

  • (Someone who is experienced, please feel free to correct me.)

    This is not an Osoto Gari, at least it's not a traditional one. That is not the throw I learned. What the hell?

  • I just started Judo a little over a month ago and I agree with you. The Osoto Gari I learned was a step with one leg and big sweep with the other one.

  • i think youre right. ivq been training judo for 12 years and in my opinion this is an o soto otoshi.

    the critical point i have about this one is that the leg thats being swept supports no weight. so the uke wont fall.

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  • That's right... This is poor Judo. He's forcing the Uke to fall over his hooked left leg rather than sweeping out the support leg. Instead of using physics to throw the Uke, he's relying on brute strength to push.

  • wtf r u talking about he did put his knee around his support leg

  • And the spirit of Judo is... "Put your knee around the Uke's supporting leg"? lol...

    He did the move "correctly" at a glance; but it doesn't mean that he actually did it RIGHT. If the Kuzushi was done correctly, the opponent should fall "effortlessly". Judo isn't "Push the guy over", it's "throw the guy cleanly onto his back with MINIMUM effort". The more energy you save, the more EDGE you gain in combat.

  • i agree with SafaFenoner

    watch jigoro kano do his throws not much strength is used

  • @SafaFenoner this is how people do in shiai though, even Yamashita did this way.

  • @SafaFenoner this is true

  • @SafaFenoner This is Josh Resnick dude! Enough said!

  • It is what you would call a Modified or Kazuri throw. You've proabaly noticed in matches its hard to get O Soto Gari so he was showing modifications to make it easier to get. Now weither it is considered O Soto Gari or an O Soto Otoshi is your opinion I would call it a Kazuri O Soto Gari since his leg is not hooking his opponents like in Otoshi so tecjnically it isn't an Otoshi or a Gage but still not a text book O Soto Gari so I don't know its' up to you to make your decison

  • the point if it is an otoshi oder gari does not depend on if the leg is hooking or sweeping straightened but the phisical principle. and about the think to make it easier. the aim of judo is not to have easy technique but efficient technique. this one is supported by power more than by tue technique furthermore its not about choosing a throw and throw it but it is about to notice when you have to use which technique to use the less possible strengh so you can fight for mor than 3 minutes

  • Well you proabaly agree that the more proficent you are at Judo the easier the throw. One of the major principles Maximum Efficancy basicly means the best result using the least amount of effort.

  • i agree that the better you are the easier gets the throw. but the phisical principle is still complicated and by simplifying the technique your needed amount of power will rise. so it is not efficient to simplify a technique because for now you'll have less effort in learning it because its easier to use your raw power thats true. but when you grow older your body weekens and the technique wont work anymore

  • Which is where the masters found that to help fight old age technique and flexibilty were what kept them alive if I am not mistaken? So your right, I was looking at it on more of a sloppy modification of a technique to help get ippon which I dont personally agree with.

  • gaygaygaygaygygaygaygaygaygayg­aygaygaygaygaygyagaygaygaygyag­yaygaygaygyagyaygyagyagyaygyag­ya

  • You're so mature! AND intelligent.. Who could ask for more wisdom?

  • thats a good way to get countered if you arent fast enough.

  • Almost every throw can be countered if you are not fast enough. But you are right, some throws have a higher percentage of countering.

  • Critics,this one is taught by many high level judoka and used in international competition. I've seen double world champion Okada teach it at a seminar as well as having seen World Champion Vitaly Makarov use it in various competitions.

    Since Mr. Resnick's techniques are so bad could you who are critics please post videos where you demonstrate the correct version?

    Thanks

    Tim Neal

  • A very effective osoto variation.

  • what the hell is with the haters. this variation works like a charm and its here for you to learn. just close your mouth and open your mind.

  • its a good video, but more for someone who is just a beginner. In time the player will always make adjustments to suit him or her anyway.

  • sorry, it's not o-soto-gari

    and your partner his like a christmas tree with his bleu judogi full stickers

  • yea that hop....yea youd get killed in competition if you gave that much of an opening.....but not bad for beginners....

  • This is competition style coaching. I know because I used to be a judoka at the competitive level. If you don't like it, or think it is wrong...get back to your kata's and sandbagging greenbelts during ne waza.