Chef Samurai
Global Moderator
Canadian Catch Wrestling
Posts: 843
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Post by Chef Samurai on Sept 6, 2012 4:43:16 GMT -5
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Post by jwbulldogs on Sept 15, 2012 2:17:32 GMT -5
Where do you find these things..lol
I'm a little surprised that he listed osot gari and a few other in ashi waza. Aishi mean foot. But he says ashi waza is leg techniques. Ashi waza would be foot techniques. I think there is a difference as far as terminology is concerned.
I wish we had more mats in our dojo. I would love to work on some of this more.
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Chef Samurai
Global Moderator
Canadian Catch Wrestling
Posts: 843
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Post by Chef Samurai on Sept 15, 2012 22:52:50 GMT -5
I just look harder than most people lol I'm also part of a bunch of groups who research martial arts history & period manuals are one of our best resources. And I'm not really that surprised after all he was alive when people directly under kano were still alive so they had access to the whole system and not just what's allowed in competition. I noticed the leg 7 foot terminology too but it could have been a typo or something or lineage it's hard to tell. I also found this book from 1947 www.scribd.com/doc/22574966/Modern-Judo that has some leg locks & a section called "Individual Developed Technique" that's really interesting I might even post a thing on it by itself if I can figure out exactly what to say without sounding confusing. I wish more people would be practicing this stuff it's worth knowing as far as I'm concerned even if it's useless in a judo match.
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Chef Samurai
Global Moderator
Canadian Catch Wrestling
Posts: 843
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Post by Chef Samurai on Sept 15, 2012 23:32:34 GMT -5
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judo book
Jul 4, 2013 0:00:33 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by boyo1991 on Jul 4, 2013 0:00:33 GMT -5
That gene book is awesome. And free! I remember I downloaded that one a while back.. I usually get links for these sort of things from my sempai and idk how he gets em hahaha! Ashi waza may mean foot technique. But I can look at obi goshi and say "that's not koshi waza! That's a shoulder throw! Seoi waza!" Because it comes over the top. Just like the oooold de ashi barai and kosoto gari debate. It don't matter, all moves are called ippon in my book
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KyKarateka
Global Moderator
Kyokushin & Judo
Posts: 233
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Post by KyKarateka on Jul 5, 2013 16:11:46 GMT -5
Wow nice find, I'll read this further and let you know about it. Thanks!
Regarding the terminology, aishi does mean foot but I think it just might be grouping similar techniques. Kind of how many karate schools regard a knee strike as a kick or an elbow strike as a hand strike.
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Post by Glutton4Punishment on Jul 21, 2013 0:17:33 GMT -5
I'm gonna read the shite outta this.
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