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I feel like you eyeballin' me, dawg!
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Posted On:
9/21/2012 5:13pm -
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Posted On:
9/22/2012 8:24am -
training more, posting less
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Posted On:
9/22/2012 1:27pm -
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Posted On:
9/22/2012 3:25pm -
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Posted On:
9/22/2012 7:14pm
Style: Judo--
Uh, it's a common practice in "real" krotty dojos and relatively safe because of the manner in which it is a controlled throw. At the shorin-ryu dojo I trained at they "threw" each other on the floor all the time. They aren't full force judo throws, dude. I don't like to do it, but this is kind of what people mean when they talk about krotty being cruel. Foot sweeps are way more common on the hardwood floor. I assume these are floors with some spring to them. I was kind of suprised when my sensei hip-threw me on the floor for the first time.
Last edited by crappler; 9/22/2012 7:23pm at .
"We often joke -- and we really wish it were a joke -- that you will only encounter two basic problems with your 'self-defense' training.
1) That it doesn't work
2) That it does work"
-Animal MacYoung
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Posted On:
9/22/2012 8:09pm -
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Posted On:
9/22/2012 8:20pm -
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Posted On:
9/22/2012 8:21pm
Style: Judo1
Now here is the proper way to handle it.
From my experience the part of the body in most danger is usually the ankle bone, which impacts directly on the floor and gets maximum force unless you and the uke are working together properly. Which is exactly what happened to the dude in video number one.
Now I actually don't see this as a best practice. I'm just saying it's common and doesn't mean it's a mcdojo. I believe the best practice is to 1) be properly trained and 2) use the best equipment available. Namely mats, and thick ones. Which will still be state of the art hundreds of years from now....
Last edited by crappler; 9/22/2012 8:35pm at .
"We often joke -- and we really wish it were a joke -- that you will only encounter two basic problems with your 'self-defense' training.
1) That it doesn't work
2) That it does work"
-Animal MacYoung



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Posted On:
9/21/2012 4:10pm
Style: Judo