The Ticket Clinic, Applying Law of Gravity to Judo
In judo it is important to throw your opponent by making use of his
loss of balance, the law at work here is the law of gravity. We know
that Sir Isaac Newton discovered the law of gravitation by seeing an
apple fall from a tree. All bodies in the universe attract one another.
For instance, the earth attracts the bodies near and around it. In turn
they also pull the earth. Since the power of attraction,
according to Newton, is proportional to the mass of the body that
attracts, the larger the mass of the body, the larger its attraction.
All bodies near the earth fall to the earth because it has an immense
mass. An airplane or a bird starts to fall to the ground as soon as its
power of flight is exhausted. The force of attraction between the earth
and a two-pound weight is twice that between the earth and a one-pound
weight. The attraction between the earth and a body is called
gravity. When gravity is represented by weight units, it is called
weight.
Now let us consider the application of the law of gravity to judo. The
heavier the opponent, the more difficult it is for you to move him
horizontally. It is even more difficult for you to move him vertically.
On the other hand, a larger gravity acts on him to make him fall. In
judo gravity may be represented as a force pulling the opponent
downward. If you want to make him fall, you make him lose his
balance;that is, you cause his center of gravity to go outside the
base. Then the gravity that acts on him works for you to make him lean
or fall. Let us study the action of the law of gravity by illustrations. Lets
assume that you and your opponent are standing face to face. When your
opponent advances towards you to take hold of you by the left lapel. At
the same time you withdraw as much as your oponent advances. If your
oponent is mentally or physically unable to let his advanced foot
advance again, he will lean forward, lose his balance, and fall. Also,
it is obvious that the same thing will happen when the stability of the
legs supporting the trunk is taken away. When your opponent takes a
larger step forward than usual, you merely sweep his advanced foot away
in the direction of his advance,(de-ashi-harai, or advanced foot
sweep). By doing this, you will drop him with the gravity acting on him
directly. Finally let us consider a case in which the opponent is
downed by the nullification of his resistance to gravity. It may be
difficult for you, because of the weight advantage of your opponent, to
lift him with your arms. But it is easy to support him at the center of
gravity with your loins as he leans forward. Look at the seesaw in the
above figure. A long board is supported at the center of gravity,
so that the gravity on one side is equal to that on the other. Thus a
slight force can rotate the board around the fulcrum. After making your
opponent lean forward, support him at the center of gravity with your
loins. No matter how much weight he may have, a slight pull can rotate
him around your loins. To support your opponent completely at the
center of gravity with your loins is the key point of such hip throws
as o-goshi, o-tsuri-goshi, ko-tsuri-goshi, hane-goshi, etc.
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