I will tell you about all the pros and cons. I have been walking for 8 years now and this is what I can say: You will be taught to fight well, you will be trained by a coach with a black belt (master of sports), but it depends on how ordinary coaches can, although it is written that this is judo, you will be trained in sambo too. In the future, this will be useful to you, for example, if you have been away for almost 10 years, then at the university you may not go to physical education (you will automatically have a 10 by 10 point system) and there is a rocking chair.That's all the pros, and now to the cons: You need to buy a kimono or something, for at least 150 rubles (I bought for 150, but they said it was better to buy for 400), no one will regret, you can be given an agreement (they gave it to me) that if you leave you have to pay 400 rubles per month (for taking a place). The contract lasts until the end of May. Society is more or less normal, but there are some scumbags. You can be hit in the balls and hit in the head (when I had a fight, I was hit so that the blood flowed in a stream), so if you go to train, immediately try to make friends so that you are given indulgences and protected.Safety precautions must also be observed (a person's head was smashed with a vulture, thank God he survived). In general, if you want to become a master of this sport, you need to train hard for 10 years, and maybe then you will have a black belt (not a fact)
Сын когда - то ходил на самбо, очень нравились тренеры, строгие, но справедливые. Не знаю, как сейчас, но тогда были бесплатные секции, но отношение прекрасное