When four-time Olympian Jason Morris was visiting his friend
two-time Olympian Rene Capo at my dojo, Rene and I were watching him randori.
Rene said to me, “Here comes his tomoe nage.” Yep. A few steps later, up and
over went uke. I inquired, and Rene said, “He always makes those first steps
like that.”
Jason’s big throws, a
tai-otoshi and a move he calls his “Sticker” ( an ankle wrapping, foot lifting
ko soto gake kind of thing) are moves he does that are his methods, unique to
him. They aren’t easy to instantly copy. Jason showed these on a previous visit
a couple of years before, and on this one, was kind enough to again give us a
mini-clinic on them. The first time, folks really sweated to get the moves
right, and a few weeks later, most abandoned them. So, this time, I asked Jason
if he would not only show what he did, but also the “when”. He liked that idea.
I think some folks actually got some of that input.
Earlier, in my
competition days, my money throw was seoi-otoshi. I did it with a step across
the front that was followed by the other leg then corkscrewing across into tai
form, while the arms did a morote seoi nage top. The leg part started similar to o-guruma. When I visited other dojos, I’d get asked sometimes to
teach that. By the end of an hour, most students were getting it. I never saw
it performed in randori or shiai. Many years later, when asked by one of my
students how I used to do the throw, I showed him how I did it. As I watched
him try it unsuccessfully in randori over a couple of sessions, I realized the
problem. I’d never shown him, or the students of years before, when I did it,
how I set it up. Worse, I didn’t know myself!
But when I’d done it to win matches, I didn’t have a conscious idea, and I couldn’t have told you my pre-kuzushi set-up. I was an unconscious competent of the non-useful variety. I was not a conscious competent. Nor, did I know enough about such things to be able to become aware of this situation, so I couldn’t take my unconscious skill, dissect it and use that information to improve my other throws. That was then, and now I can hope to pass this on to you, for all your tachi waza.
·
Experiment with walking
styles
·
Uchi komi for a purpose
you know
·
Randori with intent
The answer isn’t
anything like, “I do it when uke steps forward with the right foot.” That’s
because the question is, “How, and with what rhythm did you get to that point,
just before uke stepped?” Let’s look at some examples we might be familiar
with, or can imagine, almost feel.
You make a circular tai
sabaki step with one foot, as if to walk around uke, uke responds by stepping
in a sideways scissors step, and you do okuri ashi barai. Or, you walk
backwards with two tsugiashi steps, uke follows with somewhat similar steps,
and on the second step, you perform tai otoshi. Or,uke steps back with the
sleeve side foot and you don’t follow, but do a non-compliant step and rather
than follow, you step forward but more to the side than the line on which your
regular step would have gone; uke next steps awkwardly to a right sided
recovery and you do a quick step around for harai goshi as uke’s right foot
comes down.
Uchikomi
When I first
accidentally found the walking pattern that pulled the trigger on my seoi
otoshi, I didn’t have to worry about the kuzushi and tsukuri. I’d done hundreds
and hundreds of step-ins all summer long. The throw now had the speed and the
form. Once the set-up dance had done its treachery, the seoi showed up. I
believe that is a major reason uchikomi is valuable. It makes it possible for
your reflexes to fire off the throw into a functional form when the right opportunity
says hello.
No matter what the
uchikomi situation is in your dojo, there often is time to show up early and
get an uke and do a hundred uchikomi. Uchikomi can be done with a judo
partner anywhere, since there is no throwing.
There are uchikomi
apparatus you can purchase for doing solo uchikomi. Super legend Isao Okano
used to use a tree for an uke, and it is said he wore the bark off one
side.
Randori
This is perfect to work
on in randori. That’s one of the things randori is for, the learning of the
dance that goes with your attack. Don’t get mechanical. It will help make your
judo work. You don’t have to throw at each possible chance. You want to go for
a feeling, not an ippon. Don’t waste randori by making it a contest. It is
practice time, and you will be rewarded if you use it conscientiously. Kano
Shihan referred to randori as “randori practice”. It was a learning time. There
are plenty of times when you randori with judoka of lesser skill. This is a
very good opportunity to practice pre-kuzushi.
Search for the “when” in
your throws, not the “what”. This will help make your judo work.
Great article - randori is not a contest :) that’s makes it more fun
ReplyDeleteThe hardest part is to get your randori partner to be on the same page. :)
ReplyDelete