I am beginning to think if your technique is just pure Kazushi, what you get is Aikido. If this video weren't from the Kodokan and they were wearing hakama, it'd have more downvotes.
Exactly. Uki Otoshi is also an Aikido technique, this is a basic Kokyu Nage. Aikido is full of techniques like this one and standing joint locks, it's a shame that those two categories are some of the harder techniques to pulk off in real fights, it makes arts like Aikido appear useless even tho they are simply awesome
@@jestfullgremblim8002 ...Yes once I started looking into the history of judo and the other arts I noticed more crossover between them too. Pretty sure Tomiki Aikido uses Waki-Gatame pretty heavily, and then there is that whole self-defense oriented kata from Judo (blanking on the name)...which has quite a bit of Aikido looking techniques.
@@JustSomeGuy69420 the Judo kata you are talking about is definitely "Goshin Jutsu" Btw, Tomiki Aikido was founded by a Judoka lol. It is also called "Shodokan Aikido" and it is supposed to compliment Judo with Aikido techniques while also giving Aikidokas some Judo techniques
These short videos are the best I’ve seen - no endless explanations of what’s about to happen but a short concise demonstration from different angles and then in slow motion. Perfect!
If you don't pay attention to the detail of the UKI OTOSHI it looks a lot like SUMI OTOSHI, could someone explain the difference between the two techniques?
In Uki Otoshi, Uke will be thrown forward, over the toes of his weight-bearing foot. In Sumi Otoshi, Uke will be thrown to his rear corner ("45 degrees"), over the heel of his weight-bearing foot. In both cases, Uke is caught with all or nearly all his weight on one foot and then Tori prevents Uke from placing his other foot down on the mat to become stable again. These throws depend on timing and good use of kuzushi.
Hi, Uki Otoshi is done when Uke is coming towards you. Sumi Otoshi would be you going towards Uke. Basically, same technique but applied either after walking backward (Uki) or forward (Sumi).
When your opponent steps forward you are supposed to pull your opponent down in a circular way, because his weight is on his front leg, he won't be able to lift it and will be thrown