How many of you BJJ guys train hip throws (Ogashi)?

Not if you're competent

No throw is foolproof, no matter how competent you are.

In fact, in my school we were taught to avoid hip throws entirely because they can leave you vulnerable. Like I said, there's a reason you don't see them much in MMA and sport BJJ.
 
No throw is foolproof, no matter how competent you are.

In fact, in my school we were taught to avoid hip throws entirely because they can leave you vulnerable. Like I said, there's a reason you don't see them much in MMA and sport BJJ.

MMA is no gi. You see them in BJJ whenever a black belt judoka competes
 
I visited another BJJ school for comparison. They train takedowns positionally every session but only spar standing once a week, in the competitors group. No hip throw that session.

By contrast, the instructor for my club said "start standing all sparring rounds". Not sure if that is equivalent to "every sparring session".
 
Can you please break down how you avoid a back take?
Anybody who train "hip throw" should know this.

1. Don't rotate your body. You cut in from the side in a mirror stance (you have right side forward, your opponent has left side forward).
2. Use under hook (or cracking) to control your opponent's free arm so that free arm won't wrap around your waist.
3. Don't let your opponent's leading hand to reach to your leg.
4. Don't allow your opponent to stay in horse stance. Spring his foot and force him into a bow-arrow stance.

No body rotation in this hip throw. He cuts in from a side angle.

 
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