Judo with Todd
- ROM, ukemi
- footsweep to control with emphasis on bumping uke to get his front foot floating and then reaching out and touching his foot to see if he is really floating or not.
- deashibarai uchikomi early and late
- deashibarai uchikomi - 2 of any variation on one side and one on the other. This really develops the feel of randori because of the type of synchronization
- osotogari - four variations that allow tori to throw uke right-sided no matter what foot uke is moving or what direction.
Aikido with Todd
- tegatana, slightly faster than normal with emphasis on keeping a dynamic tension between floating and weightedness. This tends to draw you upright into a perfect shizentai (natural posture)
- releases with emphasis on #6 and 8 as ways to get into the #2 and #4 positions by following when uke does something wrong. That sort of makes the kata 4 repetitions of a pure release form followed by four in which you have to synch and follow along with uke until you can find the place to turn into the position from the pure release form.
- chain #3, including near and far wakigatame and near and far kotegaeshi
- ichikata section B, techniques 1-3 (oshitaoshi and tenkai kotehineri) with emphasis on using ki bumps to diffuse uke's strength so you can walk around it, breaking down his posture. This stuff is pure magic, amazing how tori can move around uke's strength. Great example of how inappropriate strength destroys uke.
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