In the podcast, Hayward talks about two situations, fighting at the edge and taking an unorthodox grip. If you have a chance to watch his video, Get a Grip, it is well worth it. One of the drills he does in the video is have players fight for 30 second or 1 minute rounds with a specific grip. Personally, I like to get very tight to the person, almost a bear hug. As Hayward says, most people are uncomfortable in positions like that, and since I have practiced attacking from that position (in my drills) and you probably haven't practiced being in that position at all, the advantage goes to me.
In case you have been living under a rock most of your life and don't know who Hayward Hiroshi Nishioka is, let me enlighten you. Hayward is the only one I know who, in the course of his judo career, has participated in the world judo championships as a player, a coach and a referee. Not all the same year, of course, he's not THAT awesome.
He has a new book out, called Judo: Coaching, Strategy and the Science for Success. It's available at many local bookstores and on-line at Amazon, Borders, and just about everywhere books are sold. It's nice to see a judo book getting such wide distribution, but not too surprising, because, after all, he IS Hayward.
Oh, I want to say something about the Get a Grip DVD. Someone made the comment,
"Is this the same old videos copied to DVD?"So, I just want to make the comment
"Who the f*** are you, buddy? It has great drills on it and great ideas. People who think they invented judo last week ought to be taken out and submitted to uchi mata by Hayward about 10,000 times until they learn some manners. Yes, it was done a long time ago and has some great concepts and drills for improving your gripping significantly. It does not have the latest computer graphics with ninjas riding in on my little ponies. Shut the f*** up, watch it and learn something."
NOTE: Previous statements not endorsed by Hayward nor his publishers, who are no doubt at this very moment asking him very politely if he could please never speak to me again.
Must admit, as someone who was really blind in my younger years (before soft contacts that adjusted for astigmatism) I hated people who pushed on the edge of the mat and the referees who thought I was going there on purpose.
ReplyDeleteLost the Utah State Championship in my weight class that way once, on penalties because I just could not see the edge.
I have TERRIBLE eyesight, but I always wanted to stay in the center of the mat anyway, so I could do matwork.
ReplyDeleteI hated people who clung to the edge because their plan was to run out of bounds the second we started ground work.
I know the feeling about getting stupid remarks about books or DVDs. I've had my share. If a book isn't in color with a lot of glitzy graphics, then the "experts" who seem to live so they can complain or criticize someone who actually knows what he (or she) is talking seem to come out of the woodwork. Anyone who questions what Hayward Nishioka wrties is either terribly uninformed about Hayward's credentials and record or is simply stupid. There are a lot of us in the world of judo who deeply respect Hayward Nishioka. He was one of the greatest judo athletes to ever come out of the United States and is one of the best coaches who ever stepped on a judo mat.
ReplyDeleteSteve Scott
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