ClassesJuniorsCampSquadCoachesReserve Trial Class
Judo throw seoi-nage from mat level, judoka suspended in air mid-throw
Next Grading — 15 March 2026

The mat is waiting.

Authentic judo. Worn tatami. The grip that comes before the throw.
Twelve-year-olds, office workers, and black belts — all bow in.

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IpponWaza-ariOsoto-gariSeoi-nageUchi-mataO-goshiHarai-goshiTai-otoshiGrading SeasonEarn itIpponWaza-ariOsoto-gariSeoi-nageUchi-mataO-goshiHarai-goshiTai-otoshiGrading SeasonEarn it
Winter — Grading Season

Fog at the door.

Fire on the mat.

January through March is grading season. The dojo heats up with purpose — every fall, every grip, every repetition building toward a moment when you bow in front of the panel and earn the next belt. We train seriously. We also make time for tea.

Judoka in white gi gripping opponent, winter training in dojo with foggy windows
Grading Prep — 12 weeks
This Winter
47

Gradings Passed

4

Classes / Week

"

The only way out is through the fall.

Structured Progression

White belt to shodan — every step mapped, timed, and coached.

Winter Schedule

Adult Beginners

White–Yellow

18:30

Mon & Wed

Adult Intermediate

Blue–Brown

19:30

Tue & Thu

Open Mat (All Grades)

All Belts

10:00

Sat

Black Belt Randori

Shodan+

13:00

Sat

First Step

Reserve Your Trial Class

One class, no commitment. Come in whites if you have them — borrowed gi available. Tell us a little about yourself and we'll place you in the right session.

We'll confirm your session within 24 hours · No payment required

Spring — Junior Tournament Season

Adjusting belts.

Chasing medals.

Spring belongs to the juniors. From April, the under-12s and under-16s step onto competition mats for the first time — or the fifteenth. We prepare every competitor with sport-specific randori, shiai simulation, and the mental framework to bow in and mean it.

Young judoka adjusting white belt before junior tournament, determined expression

U12

& U16

Competition Preparation

Shiai simulation every Thursday evening from March. Video review, weight categories, rules briefing.

Safeguarding First

All junior coaches hold current DBS and British Judo safeguarding certificates. Parents welcome on the balcony.

Player Pathway

From first kyu to national squad — we've had four players selected for regional development programmes.

Spring Tournament Roster

12 Apr

Regional U14 Championships

Bristol

3 spots left
03 May

Junior Open — London

Crystal Palace NSC

5 spots left
24 May

National Schools Judo

Sheffield

Qualifying required
Summer Camp 2026Peak DistrictTwo Sessions DailyOutdoor MatsRandoriNewazaGrip FightingFive DaysNo ExcusesSummer Camp 2026Peak DistrictTwo Sessions DailyOutdoor MatsRandoriNewazaGrip FightingFive DaysNo Excuses
Summer — Training Camp

Outdoor mats.

No excuses.

Judoka training randori on outdoor mats in countryside during summer training camp

Countryside Camp

Peak District — July & August 2026

Five days in the countryside. Morning runs, two sessions daily, evenings around a table eating too much pasta. Outdoor mats when the weather holds, the dojo floor when it doesn't. Randori with people you've never met. Sleep you actually earn.

5

Days

10

Sessions

40

Judoka Max

Register for Summer Camp

£295 per week · All meals included · Beginners welcome

Autumn — Open Mat & Competition Squad

Fluorescent light.

Serious randori.

Judoka training under fluorescent lights during open mat autumn session, gripping judogi

Open Mat

Every Saturday 13:00 · All grades · No agenda

Competition Squad

For judoka who compete.

The competition squad trains Tuesday and Thursday evenings, 19:30–21:30. Entry requires blue belt minimum. Sessions focus on contest-specific newaza, grip fighting, and physical preparation. We enter 15–20 competitions per season, including British nationals for eligible members.

23

Squad members

6

National medals 2025

Weekly sessions

Blue+

Belt requirement

Join the Competition Squad

Blue belt minimum · Commitment to 2 sessions/week · Trial period of 4 weeks

The Sensei

Coaches who still train.

Kenji Watanabe, head judo coach, middle-aged Japanese man in dark judogi, serious expression
4th Dan

Head Coach

Kenji Watanabe

3× National Champion

Former British U90kg champion. Has coached at two Olympic cycles. Trained under Yasuhiro Yamashita in Tokai. Believes the best teaching happens in the first ten seconds of a grip fight.

Orla Fitzpatrick, junior judo coach, young Irish woman with determined expression
2nd Dan

Junior Development Coach

Orla Fitzpatrick

Irish U63kg International

Irish U63kg international. DBS certified, British Judo Level 3 coaching award. Runs every junior session with the firm belief that twelve-year-olds can handle hard training if you explain the why.

Marcus Webb, judo competition coach, British man in his 40s, athletic build
3rd Dan

Strength & Competition Coach

Marcus Webb

European Open Finalist

Competed at European level through his late twenties. Now coaches the competition squad and handles physical preparation. If he's not on the mat, he's reviewing contest footage from the night before.