2 of the current 5 other reviews are from sensei's who work there (neal and julio). Liv, devon and martellas (owen) were asked to write good review purposely after i first wrote this one 8 months ago also, the students dont touch on how 2 of them have had injuries (liv's shoulder was so bad she could no longer spar), martellas (owen) has been knocked unconcious during a mall demonstration and is pretty young (15) and mcmanaman had a broken wrist. All of the instructors have been champions in their own right and are legit judokas with real power, technique, and strength which is why id be cautious training here. They have guests whom i suspect are on steroids. They have lots of talent when it comes to takedowns and grappling. However, If you say you dont want to work on something because of an injury, you may get ridiculed. The sensei's (instructors) are very tournament oriented so they want warriors! The japanese ju-jutsu they advertise is only done on saturdays and is relevant to brazilian jiu jitsu yet, class was consistantly cancelled when i trained here because, the instructor who teaches it (sensei russ) is also an instructor for a police class at owens and rarely has time and cancelled almost every class (not worth $150 a month. Sensei russ is a good reference for heel hooks, if you like bjj, you'll probably like him but, they aren't big on new techniques like the imanari, berimbolo, or web gaurd takedown. Its very, very old school. When they do open at 9 a.m. sat if you decide to go at 9 you'll have to wait till 10 or 11 untill someone decides to train with you and its usually in the kids class. They tell you things like "we dont tap here!" Coming from a backround in brazillian jiu jitsu, it didnt match my style because they teach working through a sub instead of tapping appropriately (sure, we work mental toughness, but through training cardio and technique). In the month ive been there ive had my finger injured black and blue and have had my ribs bruised. My ribs became bruised when a guest blackbelt came in wearing a whitebelt and threw me very hard ("sensei" julio)... When i was wearing a white belt... I didnt even know how to take the fall or rather, i knew how to take the fall at 1/2 speed. When i told sensei neal he replied "i dont want to hear it". Because there is NO cirriculum and the teachers flip flop on who's going to teach and on what days theyll teach, you cant get lesson plans so you cant youtube the moves before going to practice. We spend maybe 10-20 mins on a throw and then move on, i guess if you're a prodigy thats a good way to train but it didnt match my style. Ive been coming here for a month and am looking for a different school because it's mostly sport judo. Their idea of self defense is eye pokes, which is great if you like prison. One instructor (sensei Neal) was training us on hard floor (not throwing us or anything that extreme but, made me think "and if i slip?")off the mat because he didnt want to put on a gi. Students are always dealing with injuries it seems. I used to go to practice dreading the next injury. It takes a different kind to practice judo for sure. If you come from a brazillian jiu jitsu backround and you're just looking for someone to spar with or train with, i wouldnt go here. Id go to badger jiu-jitsu which is right behind judan. You're not allowed to train by touching the legs because they only play by judo rules which, i should've researched. I just assumed that self defense would incorperate double or single leg takedowns which, judo does teach but, judan is very sporty and they train moreso on the sport side. They're self defense class teaches eye pokes, groin strikes and some takedown defense. When asked anything about self defense the instructors usually advise eye and groin strikes and almost never reference judo or ju jutsu which is weird and makes me lose confidence in the instructors. Also, their pricing may vary from person to person sometimes by a large margin. The kids class seems legit as the instructors keep the kids safe and active.