Awesome ! I will definitely try that next training session. I love Ogoshi and Koshi guruma. I so want to get better at it. My main problem is (well, it is more a koshi guruma problem) : I grab the lapel with my left hand, my right hand goes around the neck, I try to turn my back and place my hips, AND AT THAT TIME, the opponent straightens his back, puts his head back, and I cannot throw anymore. I have some hypothesis to correct this, but I am not sure of myself. I must be doing something wrong. Anyway, thank you a lot.
У каждого борца может быть свой вариант исполнения броска. что не отменяет другие варианты. Мне кажется показанный бросок исполнен не очень хорошо. Делается на излишне прямых ногах , запаздывает выведение из равновесия - не надо становиться на носок опорной ноги, после вставки бедра голова должна отворачиваться влево по ходу броска. Потому бросок получается переваливанием, как бы с трудом. А должен быть очень динамичный, даже если выполняется без падения. Но повторюсь, каждый имеет право на свой вариант.
Thanks a million for sharing this really helpful video. Koshi-guruma has always been one of my favorite Tokui waza, but before seeing this marvelous video all my hip toss attempts (O-goshi or Uki-goshi) were abortive. Thanks to you I no longer hate Uki-goshi but I reckon the waza you execute at 1:30 is more akin to Uki-goshi and by no stretch of imagination could it be called O-goshi. I know this point is for trivia buffs but please correct me if I'm wrong. Regards,
Thanks for watching, we're glad our videos are helping you improve your Judo! I understand why you call the technique at 1:30 Uki-goshi, I suppose part of it will depend on how much you bend the legs / lift with the hips from this position - when it comes to our Competitive Variation videos, we don't worry too much about getting caught up with the names as long as it works!
Thanks for watching! Is it O-goshi or Uki-goshi? It depends on how you execute it, there could be argument for either depending on how much you pop the hips vs pulling uke over the hip.
Yes and no - its still a hip throw, the action should be from the hip rather than just a pop of the leg, both legs are working together with the correct hip placement. The right leg does pop in a somewhat similar way to how some people perform a tai-otoshi, and so it may have a similar feel. I hope that answers your question.