heavyjudo
10/27/2009 7:34pm,
ANYBODY TRAIN IN KOREAN JUDO HERE ?:waoya
1point2
10/27/2009 7:58pm,
If you do then I, for one, would be interested in hearing your opinions on the differences (if any) that you've experienced or seen first hand between yudo and judo.
If you don't do it, that's a weird thread.
Evil Solvalou
10/27/2009 8:30pm,
ANYBODY TRAIN IN KOREAN JUDO HERE ?:waoya
No, but a bit of friendly advice for you: please don't post in all caps.
Welcome to Bullshido.
hey guys check this one out, says its a unique Korean technique from cirem...Judo men is it a part of your lexicon as well? It seems like they have a whole collection techniques up there for you (and i) to peruse.
YouTube - Yudo (Judo) Lift and Drop Throw (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWKYMiB6Hbk)
D Dempsey
10/27/2009 10:36pm,
I trained Yudo for a year when I was living in Korea in '03-'04. My experience was that it was exactly the same as Judo but some of the terminology was Korean. The Korean terminology wasn't alwasy consistent though and people frequently used both terms to refer to techniques.
Rene "Zendokan" Gysenbergs
10/28/2009 2:51am,
I've got an idea (what is rare, I know) for a Yudo/Judo project.
What if we look for movieclips on youtube that are described as 'Yudo' specific techniques. Post them in this thread and then let an experienced 'Judoka' (thinking MTripp or Coach Josh) look at them.
They can say what is Yudo and what is Judo.
If we can get from this, one or two extra techniques to add to our Judo it would be a benefit.
Tangent
10/28/2009 3:41am,
I trained Yudo for a year when I was living in Korea in '03-'04. My experience was that it was exactly the same as Judo but some of the terminology was Korean. The Korean terminology wasn't alwasy consistent though and people frequently used both terms to refer to techniques.
I trained Yudo for a year in Korea in 08-09. Same experience. They also didn't differentiate between Yudo and Judo - they thought and said that it was the same art. They almost exclusively used Korean terminology, though I wasn't witness to any techniques that were specifically Korean and which were absent in Japanese Judo.
Coach Josh
10/28/2009 6:51am,
It's the same thing. The Koreans just don't like the Japanese and give everything a Korean name or pronunciation.
Rene "Zendokan" Gysenbergs
10/28/2009 7:10am,
It's the same thing. The Koreans just don't like the Japanese and give everything a Korean name or pronunciation.
So the Yudo technique that JBliss posted belongs also to the Judo sylabus?
I still got a long way to go before knowing all the 67 throws/takedowns.
Coach Josh
10/28/2009 7:25am,
There are plenty of techniques that have been developed by many different players that are not part of the standard throws. That does not instantly turn the art form into a specific country based martial art. The bases for that throw and any other variation comes from basic Judo.
There are many styles of Judo associated with specific countries. French, Russian, Korean and Cuban to name a few. It deals with the way that country approaches Judo in competition and some techniques that they incorporate that other places do not. It could be a way of gripping or a variation to a particular throw. It doesn't change the fact that it started as Judo.
Judo is not practiced in a fish bowl like many other martial arts. It's open to the world. Much like open source programming. While many people will change it and make it to their liking the base OS is common through out all the programming.
Hedgehogey
10/28/2009 7:33am,
That video's te guruma.
Coach Josh
10/28/2009 7:57am,
Case in point Te guruma is not one of the 67
Rene "Zendokan" Gysenbergs
10/28/2009 8:27am,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judo_technique
This wiki-page gives the names of the non reconized throws (together with the 67 ofcourse).
DerAuslander
10/28/2009 9:25am,
The Koreans just don't like the Japanese and give everything a Korean name or pronunciation.
That has nothing to do with why it's called yudo.
DerAuslander
10/28/2009 9:28am,
There are plenty of techniques that have been developed by many different players that are not part of the standard throws. That does not instantly turn the art form into a specific country based martial art. The bases for that throw and any other variation comes from basic Judo.
There are many styles of Judo associated with specific countries. French, Russian, Korean and Cuban to name a few. It deals with the way that country approaches Judo in competition and some techniques that they incorporate that other places do not. It could be a way of gripping or a variation to a particular throw. It doesn't change the fact that it started as Judo.
Judo is not practiced in a fish bowl like many other martial arts. It's open to the world. Much like open source programming. While many people will change it and make it to their liking the base OS is common through out all the programming.
The throw shown is a Ssireum throw.
Whether or not it is taught elsewhere deriving from Judo does not negate the cross-pollination of Ssireum techniques within Yudo.
Coach Josh
10/28/2009 9:31am,
Really how so? You're telling me that after the Koreans finally got rid of the Japanese from there land that they did not have any hard feelings for all the years of occupation? The fact that many of the Korean martial arts masters were trained in Japan and latter to have a since of national pride created TKD and brought back styles that were forbidden to be practiced?
Why is it that every time I go to Japan there is a TV talk show with Koreans bitching about how the Japanese fucked up there society and they wish they would all burn in hell.
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