A Biomechanical Reassessment of the Scientific Foundations of Jigoro Kano's Kodokan Judo
Attilio Sacripanti

TL;DR
This paper reexamines the biomechanical principles underlying Jigoro Kano's Kodokan judo, providing new insights into its fundamental movements, action invariants, and throwing techniques to enhance teaching and understanding.
Contribution
It offers a biomechanical reassessment of judo's core movements, introducing the concepts of action invariants and a new classification of throwing principles.
Findings
Identification of two classes of action invariants in judo techniques.
Support for broadening the unbalance concept to dynamic situations.
Clarification of mechanical steps and connections among judo throws.
Abstract
In this paper we provide an appraisal of the scientific foundations of the Olympic sport "judo" from a Western perspective, i.e. a biomechanical reassessment of the basic teaching tools of the foundations of Jigoro Kano's Kodokan judo. The core of judo functional organization is the triad made up by the "Kuzushi-Tsukuri-Kake" movement. Kuzushi (unbalance), tsukuri (entry and proper fitting of Tori's [the actor] body into the position prior to the throwing phase), and kake (execution of the judo throwing action) occur as one effective movement without separation. Biomechanical analysis is able to broaden and deepen these steps proposed by Kan\=o, who for didactic reasons had separated the whole movement into three steps, as was pointed out previously by old Japanese biomechanical studies. The results of our biomechanical reassessment support: The importance of broadening the unbalance…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMartial Arts: Techniques, Psychology, and Education · Sports Performance and Training · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies
