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101 JUDO GAMES - Trailer

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Uploaded by on Nov 28, 2008

http://www.fightingfilms.com./

101 Judo Games

From Tokyo in Japan and Edinburgh in Scotland 101 of the best judo games are brought to you exclusively by Fighting Films.

Presented by Peter Gardiner, 101 Judo Games contains games for three age groups (6-8, 9-10 and 11-13). Each group is divided up into seven sections, with games for warming up, breakfalling, gripping, tachi-waza, newaza, throwing and rough & tumble.

Gardiner was recognised as one of the best junior coaches in the world in 2005 when he was invited by IJF Education and Coaching Director Yasuhiro Yamashita to take part in the ground-breaking DVD Coaching Judo to Juniors.

Viewers join each game in the middle of the action, with a commentary description by Gardiner of the rules, safety points and judo skills that are being developed.

101 Judo Games is the perfect coaching tool for all judo instructors. Some of the games include different variations and many of them provide a platform for more games to be invented.

Bonus footage in this DVD includes a fascinating insight into Japanese judo, with film taken from the Kodokan, Tokai University and the 2007 Kano Cup.

There are also interviews with Gardiner, who explains his philosophy on teaching judo to children and John Buchanan, a former World medallist, who started judo by the playing the games under Gardiner. Buchanan, who is now a junior coach himself, explains the importance of games and how it keeps children interested and involved in judo.

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Uploader Comments (TheJudoExpert)

  • Please watch in high quality!

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All Comments (22)

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  • Foundations are important (Good video)

    A promising player will be born out of this

  • What is the name of the song?

  • @DuykRuyk That tends to be the problem with using the traditional styles rules. They don't necessarily adapt well to fighting with the other styles rules. Like I said, they work great when used all together. The gym I went to was officially a Judo gym, but the coach sort of blended Judo, Japanese Jiu Jitsu and jacket wrestling with some basic punching and kicking techniques. It was actually really fun and practical outside of competition or sparring. We kind of face rolled people at comps.

  • @TheGrimlok Actually I figured it out. If we change the rules of the sparring and make it so we can use strikes, his old style becomes useless and he has to stop lying on his belly and turtle-ling. Thereby giving me the upper hand. My style is meant for one on one fights with another person with grappling and striking, basically cage fight stuff. His style is only grappling. I do plan to try to take the judo classes though.

  • @DuykRuyk Learn Judo too. The three work very well in combination in real fights or in MMA. You'll know what and how to defend from each style with the others.

  • I recently rolled with a judo guy. He was really hard to tap and sweep cause he always lied flat on his belly and whenever I took his back he always threw me. I was thinking of going for leg locks to make it easier on my self. Got any tips? My ground/grapple style is jiu-jitsu and wrestling.

  • Wow such a vibrant class.

  • Hes my coach i got a video to please take a look its called Toby Boston Sportif

  • 0:40 SWEET xD

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