Thread #243740 | Image & Video Expansion | Click to Play
File: 7251a7e571387106f2f11f4d59ab5ad8.jpg (182.8 KB)
182.8 KB JPG
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu General: This is our board edition
>Daily deals
https://www.bjjhq.com
>Instructionals
https://www.bilibili.com
>Smoothcomp
https://smoothcomp.com (not sure why we post this)
>Belt Checker
https://www.beltchecker.com (back online)
>Thread question
seems like this hobby peaked and is dying now y/n?
Previous thread: >>234876
602 RepliesView Thread
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: SmartSelect_20251002_231639_YouTube.gif (3.2 MB)
3.2 MB GIF
>>243913
>>
Bros... it feels like things are finally clicking for me.
My top game is actually coming together. From guard passing to the various mount positions, I feel like having an actual game plan. Even in scramble positions it feels like I have at least a decent response for everything.
I still get dunked on by opponents with better technique but even there it feels like I can actually create threats.
My bottom game lags behind but I am working on it by starting more from disadvantageous positions.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>244291
Prolly MT
Lower skill floor, BJJ has a bunch of fluff that works well in competitions but not necessarily when your opponent can just stomp on your face, and getting on the ground in a self-defense scenario is kinda sketchy in general
>>
Following situation:
I've got a rear body triangle on my opponent, but he has managed to wrap an arm around my head in a quasi bulldog choke position, with us both lying on that arm's side (meaning his elbow and forearm are on the ground)
It's not choking me, but I can't effectively attack with my head stuck, I can't move his arm because he's leaning on it with all his weight, and I'm reluctant to release the body triangle
He, on the other hand, is quite safe from being attacked so long as he holds my head, but he can't start opening the body triangle to escape without risking releasing my head and having his back fully taken
So, in a stalemate like this, what do?
>>
>>
>>244304
Don't get me wrong, BJJ can be very effective, and you definitely should have at least a basic idea of how to grapple, if only to be able to get out of a pin and stand up. But punching and kicking is easier and faster to learn and doesn't put you in as precarious of a position if something goes wrong
Honestly, if you can justify the time and money commitment, you should at least try, and ideally become halfway competent in both. But if you just want to know how to fight off drunk retards at a bar, you can't go wrong with MT
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>244304
BJJ will give you some great skills that compliment striking well.
You learn about takedowns, counters to takedowns, staying on your feet, recovering quickly when on the ground and all of the obvious things as well.
Having these tools really comes in handy even if you don't plan on grappling in a self defense situation.
Another bonus BJJ has is that damage is more controlled so you can choose how hard you want to injure someone. This can help in countries where self defense laws are fucked since a punch or throw can lead to your opponent taking a greater injury than intended, though of course in life and death situations, you probably don't care about that. But you may have to control someone until police arrives without killing the person and here it can help a lot.
Still MT is a great choice if you go for that instead.
>>
File: 1756064729915059.png (1.7 MB)
1.7 MB PNG
IT'S F*CKING SIMPLE
>>
>>
Just discovered octopus guard and it seems pretty cool.
However it looks like a position where I could end up unintentionally reaping someone. Is this an actual danger of the position or am I just being paranoid?
Also how forgiving is the position in general? Do I have to do everything perfectly or does it leave room for error?
>>
>>244447
It's buggy choke tier, mostly used to meme on someone and disrespect them
There's so many other preferable things you could be doing from there
To make it work well you need to either be a lanklet or really fast twitch
>>
>>
>>244451
>Does striking really make 99% of BJJ obsolete?
No both work well together.
>What about if you add dirty attacks like gouges, ball grabs etc
With BJJ they work even better. Why does everyone assume BJJ involves signing a treaty that you can never use any dirty tricks in a fight?
>>
>>
I'm at a bit of a dilemma
I have a Carlson Gracie bjj school near me. It provides bjj every day, and one session a week "judo for bjj"
Or I have Judo near me for half the price.
I intend to go around 3 times a week.
I keep seeing videos of Judokas getting their backs taken and choked out after failed throws by BJJ guys so it's swaying me away from judo as it seems to be very high risk low reward and has lots of rules compared to bjj (no leg grabs, guillotines, etc)
What would be the better choice. What should I consider when choosing between these options?
>>
>>244295
I had a similar situation many times with a few people in side control.
My opponent was unable to escape (mostly because they go for 1 move escapes instead of chaining them) while I messed up submissions or going to full mount and they were good at defending. So it was minutes of side control. The way I see it, they were unwilling to give me an easy way to mount or a submission, just like I was too stubborn to go for a more risky way to mount or a submission that could lose me side control. So both of us were fine with the stalemate for better or worse.
You have to ask yourself what your goal is for the round. If you want to improve and get more training value out of it then just give up the advantage so the position becomes mobile again. However it is also fine to keep the stalemate going as the other guy can do the same and there is also training value in trying to learn how to break up a stalemate against someone who is stubborn.
It only becomes a problem when one of you begins bitching about it.
>>
>>244461
What are your goals?
If you just want to do a martial art, then it doesn't matter, just pick the one that seems more fun
For MMA, BJJ will be generally more useful, since the rules are more open and the skills transfer better
For self defense, knowing how to throw people and remain standing is extremely valuable, much more so than ground game. And while Judo's newaza is quite basic compared to BJJ, it will be more than enough against 99% of poeple
>>
>>
>>
>>244476
As I said, if you want to do MMA (or any other kind of cross-discipline competition), then BJJ is probably better
For self-defense, this doesn't really matter. "On the streets", it's extremely unlikely that someone will shoot a good leg takedown (and for the less-than-good ones, sprawling them out will be quite easy), and you almost certainly won't need them, as you'll most likely be working from a clinch, where Judo's foot sweeps and hip throws are incredibly useful
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>244461
>I keep seeing videos of Judokas getting their backs taken and choked out after failed throws by BJJ guys
I doubt those guys were good at judo. This isn't a "hurr judo is ackshually better" post, it's just the risk of back exposure on turn throws is way overblown compared to how much it really happens. You can take somebody's back in judo and choke them, but you rarely see it done on good throw attempts. It usually happens on lazy/sloppy throws after a guy is gassed or trying to stall. In modern no-gi/mma, we see more turn throws now than ever before, yet we don't see guys getting their back taken and choked off of it anywhere near as often.
>>
>>
>>
File: 1734719772329589.jpg (84.2 KB)
84.2 KB JPG
why the fuck is the john wayne sweep so effective? once you understand how to use the knee-lever and how to position yourself underneath your partner it's stupid easy and i hit it all the time in training
>>
>>
File: G26lfvIXgAEOZFd.jpg (266.7 KB)
266.7 KB JPG
huh
>>
File: bjj humiliation ritual.mp4 (1.1 MB)
1.1 MB MP4
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>244539
People aren't that good at passing half guard and put their knee on the mat. Even good people might do it in transition from bodylock to half guard. I particularly like this setup too, if I'm in a splitsquat/RDLR situation:
https://youtu.be/LU2beiyQcTQ?si=9UnPHwVeLRIVRPMi&t=255
>>
>>
>>244759
can you get test? start with that , it can be crazy effective, even at low doses.
are you trying to get huge with muscle into a higher wieghclass? steroids won't make you better at bjj.
If you start with some test, you'll be able to train longer and harder , which will give you more muscle and actually make you better
>>
>>244760
i want to body recomp, stay at the same weight class but with way more muscles.
Right now, i have trouble finishing people because i feel weak as fuck. Even little guys makes me look like i'm some sort of weak ass woman.
I want to break the arms of people without even realizing it was that much pressure, to be honnest. At least, being capable of doing so.
>>
>>244768
This is the stack
https://www.yoursoma.com/products/cjc-1295-ipamorelin-blend?_pos=1&_si d=c220d1090&_ss=r
https://www.yoursoma.com/products/bpc-157-tb-500-blend?_pos=2&_sid=df6 414a0a&_ss=r
40lbs of contractile tissue in 6 months
>>
>>
>>
File: 1758663741437711.gif (2.8 MB)
2.8 MB GIF
>>244768
>Even little guys makes me look like i'm some sort of weak ass woman.
have you tried going to the gym?
>>
>>244796
i do, i bench 110kg, squat 130kg, deadlift 160kg. My knees are kinda fucked up so i could do better squats i guess but i'm kinda afraid to blow them.
But when i'm rolling, i don't know i can't apply strength i find myself unable to exploit my muscles efficiently.
>>
File: 1743166680628006.jpg (6.3 KB)
6.3 KB JPG
>>244797
doesnt sound like a lack of strength to me then unless you're deathgripping and gassing out every round or something. how long have you been training?
strength really doesn't play as big of a role if your technique sucks ass. take the basic arm bar finish for example: i'm not a strong guy but i can tire out beefy white belts just by holding my elbows tight to my chest and gable gripping my hands together. they pull and pull and pull but nothing happens, even though on paper they can bench or deadlift more than i could.
>>
>>244799
I really start to struggle with cardio after like 3 to 4 rounds depending on the intensity my opponents puts. I try to always match theirs, starting from flow on my side up to wherever they want to go.
May be my techniques are really shitty, i'm little bit less than one year in (~9months). But even 1 months whitebelts can sometimes be tricky to submit (they never win, i gain the positions easily and maintain them as long as i wish but i struggle with the finishing part of the fight. I could win with points I guess, but i want to know that i can be dangerous.)
this is really frustrating to me as I rarely win against people that started at the same time as me or 2-3 months before. I feel like absolute garbage and i know for a fact that if i were to compete today, i'd get obliterated because i have absolutely nothing on me to be confident since i know that no matter what i try and how much tryhard i put i still end up loosing eventually. My fair guess is, if I were 15kg of fat lighter, and 15kg of muscles more dense, i'd end people with ease
>>
File: 1748456380411297.png (981.4 KB)
981.4 KB PNG
>>244800
>I really start to struggle with cardio after like 3 to 4 rounds
you should work on your cardio off the mats, but on the mats you need to be mindful of your breathing and pacing: don't hold your breath, calm down when you're in a position where you can rest, don't deathgrip etc.
as you get better, you spaz less and expend less energy.
>May be my techniques are really shitty, i'm little bit less than one year in (~9months). But even 1 months whitebelts can sometimes be tricky to submit
>this is really frustrating to me as I rarely win against people that started at the same time as me or 2-3 months before.
9 months is nothing in the grand scheme of things and everybody learns at a different rate. some of them can have an athletic background or previous grappling experience. some people are just smart and pick things up quickly.
>i know that no matter what i try and how much tryhard i put i still end up loosing eventually
dont worry about losing, you get to eat plenty of shit in this sport. try stuff out and dont be afraid to lose, that's how you grow.
competing is a skill in itself. no way you can get worse by competing, so i recommend you try it out.
anyway my professional psychoanalysis is that you dont need TRT or steroids, you just need to git gud
>>
>>
>>244768
>Right now, i have trouble finishing people because i feel weak as fuck. Even little guys makes me look like i'm some sort of weak ass woman.
>I want to break the arms of people without even realizing it was that much pressure, to be honnest. At least, being capable of doing so.
Yeah just give this guy tren. Nothing could go wrong here.
>>
>>
>>244797
Either your technique is shit or you try to muscle through situations where it is pointless which is also shit technique.
>>244800
>i'm little bit less than one year in (~9months). But even 1 months whitebelts can sometimes be tricky to submit
NIGGER YOU HAVEN'T EVEN BEEN TRAINING FOR A YEAR XD
When in a position like top mount or side control, you have to isolate the elbows and weaken their mobility before you can go for serious attacks. Someone with a strong frame will not give up his arms voluntarily if you just try to pull them off. You always want to create uneven fights like 2 arms against 1 arm or having your big muscles push against his small muscles.
Mate it looks like you need a psyche evaluation more than technique tips.
>>
>>
>>244814
well i started in september 2024, but where i live there is not training during summer and i had to take a month off in december and in june due to job.
But the whole "2 arms vs 1" i know, but when i put the two i get set off balance and the person escape, or sometimes, they don't do shit i just can't manage to get their arms to move even 2v1.
>>
>>244836
If someone is very stubborn with locking his arms then just attack his neck. Crossface or papercutter are great at forcing someone to react. An elbow will go up, your opponent will try to pivot to the side or there will be an escape attempt.
Whitebelts are usually bad enough that they won't set up a proper defense or counter play when they get passed. Most of the times I pass a whitebelt, I can just get an isolated arm together with the pass and attack from there.
The #1 Kesa Gatame defense for example is just NOT flaring your inside elbow out when your opponent has you in side control, yet I see this happen all the time.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>244924
ofc i don't expect to win against everyone easily. I just want to win against some people, as of right now i haven't won more than 10 rolls in my whole year-ish of practice. Even against smaller opponents, sometimes white belts smaller opponents (which had 6-12months more experience than me, but whatever)
I feel like if I get assaulted on the street right now i'm defenseless and i don't like it.
>>
>>244800
Matching is a meme
Performing at your comfort level in your comfort zone is what you should be doing
Unless you compete then idk what to tell you
I do both judo and BJJ but I have nerdy hobbies and a typey-articilate job so I'm not willing to match others and compromise my other aspects of my life
But I think I'm better for it
>>
>>244928
I feel like if I get assaulted on the street right now i'm defenseless and i don't like it.
What fucking shit hole do you live in where this is a practical and grounded fear
My advice is avoid such places
I don't care if you're a girl or a boy
This is a really fucked up fear to have but if you must learn self defense
>Volunteer to grapple with someone using a rubber knife, to see how much of a shit show knifes are
>Learn the breakfall aspect of judo, because not dying from a fall on hard surfaces is a useful life skill
>Learn how to create space to stand up, which is from BJJ, and is useful for running away
Otherwise in terms of grappling to win have a goal in mind and ask yourself when you show up to class how the lesson of the day can conceivably lead to that goal
It won't always, but it does get you thinking
My goal was the Boston crab
I've only crabbed like 4 people in 2 years but what it ended up leading to was a tendency to get to north south and north south choke
Find something you want to do that's concrete and technical
"I should be winning more" is not concrete
And "I'm worse than people who started around my time" is unhealthy
Never compare yourself to others when you could be getting good at your own thing, in your own way. A blue or purple belt is always going to be technical, but browns and blacks are ideally stylish
>>
>>
>>243740
How do I counter wrestlers with BJJ? They keep going for double leg takedowns and I can’t stop them. I go for guillotine chokes, but i get taken down. I can never seem to get the choke tight enough when they are charging at me. The fact that they are not wearing a gi really really limits me as well.
>>
>>
I'm still trying to work out why BJJ is so much more "respected" in the eyes of general people than judo. If someone says they have a judo black belt especially if they aren't physically imposing you almost think "haha bullshido"
If someone has a bjj blue belt even if they are dyel you sort of think damn this guy can snap my limbs or choke me out from 100 angles
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>244934
>And "I'm worse than people who started around my time" is unhealthy
yeah bro it's like it's hardcoded in our DNA that we want to compete and survive. Everyone wants to be good, those who say otherwise are copingmaxx
>>
>>
File: 93b23fc3a2475c3be3604bb8d2e334a4.jpg (69.6 KB)
69.6 KB JPG
>>244965
Can you really call it respected when the normie opinion is that it's the gayshit martial art?
>>
>>244971
No I mean everyone learns differently so you can't expect yourself to pick up on the same skills in the same time
Yes you should want to get better, but you simply shouldnt compare yourself to anyone else in that way because it's pointless
>>
>>244966
At least in modern times judo where I'm at doesn't emphasize submissions
So I think in general knowing a little about odd interactions is where BJJ shines
>Law enforcement
Namely knowing that it's a bitch for one person to hold another down
>What you said
Some judo throws are an ippon but throw your opponent right into you, which leads into my next point
>If you are on the ground with or without your opponent
Its better to have some experience there than none at all
and to know how to stand up in a way that protects your head
>Joint manipulation
Even if you aren't trying to sub someone being able to foresee your arm or leg bending in a fucked up way is excellent for safety
>>
>>
>>244971
Comparing yourself to others like this one guy does can make you more insecure, even if you actually do improve at a better rate than your peers. There is room for that mindset to develop into an unhealthy obsession.
Nothing wrong with trying to improve in general but measuring your skill compared to other people at your gym can be pretty pointless, especially for those who have been training for longer than you, since everyone else improves as well.
Some people train more often than others, people will attempt to specialize in one area over another, injury may cockblock someone for a while and of course there are occasional plateaus and setbacks.
You should approach classes with getting great learning value out of them not with merely winning. I have a high winrate game plan that is just spamming guard pass -> Side Control - Americana but I have done it so often that I get more learning value out of intentionally getting passed or trying different dominant positions, even if they are less secure.
>>
>>244928
Again, git gud. Figure out a submission you are decent at or might like to focus on. Learn proper finishing mechanics, some setups, and common reactions (ask your coach, find an instructional). You're not going to get good just trying to "win" in training without any direction. You need to be able to evaluate your rounds and ask your coach good questions. Example:
>hmm I keep putting this guy in a triangle but it never works because he does X, what should I do?
>I'm trying this sweep you taught but X is happening, how do I fix it?
>this person keeps putting me in side control and I'm stuck, how do I escape?
>>244945
There is no way around just learning some wrestling fundamentals, especially defensive skills. Just ask your coach (or youtube) for some basic double leg defense and handfighting tips. Keep in mind that just because you get put on a hip, it doesn't mean the exchange is over. You can often get up, potentially counter wrestle, or at the very least get a good guard rather than end up in a pin.
>t. I train in a very ADCC-centric gym where we focus on preventing scoring from takedowns
>>
>>
>>245001
On the corollary my last 20 subs in the past 2 months was north south choke
Again the point is the path isn't clear cut unless anon has a coach, talent, competes, and wants to go pro
All us hobbiests can do is what we're comfortable with on our own pace
Anon's current mindset imo will have them bring a classic "blue belt and quit" kind of guy
>>
>>
>>
>>245026
i don't have anything better to do with my life than training, with little perspective of improvement on that matter. So no, i'll keep showing up.
I don't have much friends either, so i'd say that it is the best way for me to socialize.
But i just want to feel like i'm improving and not just the worst guy in the gym. My coaches don't give a single fuck about me, because there are many people around and some of them are competitors with some hope to get somewhere someday.
Last time i asked one positive one negative feedback to my coach, the guy was embarassed and just said "yeah uh, idk just keep coming it's going to work out" i was there for 6 months already. He just straight up doesn't have a clue about what i'm doing usually and how/if i have improved since the beginning.
I tend to hang out with blue/purple, but even there when i ask questions they answer not precisely, which is fair and fine since they are not coaches. But i feel like i'm on my own to figure things out. Which i did every single time i realized something, was due to youtube / instructionnals and me visualizing things in my mind before and mid roll. But it takes time, too much in my opinion.
Oh, and ofc, i considered switching gyms : there are not another one in the area. Sadface.
>>
>>245081
>don't have anything better to do with my life than training
I think unless you intend to compete and go pro is this unhealthy
Endeavor to partake in other simultaneous hobbies
>Yoga
Helps me big time with shoulder flexibility and just keeping my heart rate low, the more tense you are the worsenyiur breathing=you gas quicker
That and breathing with your diaphragm (thanks rickson ala the hulk) is huge
>I don't have much friends either, so i'd say that it is the best way for me to socialize.
Yeah BJJ is good for this, engage in people who stay to workshop stuff after class is over
Ask questions. Always volunteer to Uke when people are asking each other to try a sub, feeling a sub or developing a feeling for good subs is half the fun of learning to defend them
>But i just want to feel like i'm improving and not just the worst guy in the gym
Win rate isn't everything, especially if you're just a white/blue belt
no one technique will improve your game, but once you consistently show up to class and learn a little bit of everything you can start piecing together fundamental movements to make interesting sequences
>i was there for 6 months already
I've got 3-4 years in the sport
I dont consider myself very good
But there are people I absolutely clown on, and people who absolutely clown on me, no such thing as a fair fight since all of us have different talents and backgrounds, it's up to you to keep showing up regularly and engaging in as many different styles of exposure and training until you find something that clicks
>But it takes time, too much in my opinion
The fastest black belt is something retarded like less than a year
But I don't know about you, I would rather be the best white belt rather than the greenest black belt
>>
>>245081
>every single time i realized something, was due to youtube / instructionnals
This is more common than you think. A lot of coaches might be good at rolling, but suck at teaching. Just stick to good instructionals (submeta, Danaher, Gordon, etc.) and you'll quickly surpass people at your gym.
Also, start lifting if you haven't already
>>
>>245150
>Also, start lifting if you haven't already
i do, that's the whole starter of the convo i wonder if i should just blast steroids to get better on the mat faster. But yes i do
>A lot of coaches might be good at rolling, but suck at teaching
Bro he doesn't even acknowledge me as i don't have the money to compete i'm a second class citizen to him lol, as i said he only focuses on kids that competes every weekend and the most promising people in the gym. Which i'm not
>>245133
>I think unless you intend to compete and go pro is this unhealthy
i don't have much money, life has been pretty hard on me recently so i can only afford the gym and bjj. I wish i could do something else from time to time
>workshop stuff after class is over
impossible as our gym can't do overtime, we need to leave the place after training
>>
>>245155
>impossible as our gym can't do overtime, we need to leave the place after training
Honrstly if you want to build strong relationships and learn the good personalized shit this is non negotiable
The sooner you find a gym that doesn't care the sooner you'll be pissed to get gooder in a healthy way
>>
>>
>>
>>245026
Nah I was just memeing about boston crab. You need to have at least some sadism to go for that.
I sometimes tap people with kesa gatame pressure and feel bad a bit about it but the position develops naturally from side control. For boston crab you have to actively go out of your way into strange positions to get it as far as I know, so you 100% intend to pull a humiliating submission.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>245279
more likely 4 than 2 at once a week, yeah. Especially if you are not a fast learner and/or no athletic background.
But remember at the end of the day, at 1x a week you are a pure hobbyist, who cares which belt you are ? its only purpose is to close the kimono and impress the newfags
>>
>>245291
Thank you based anon. I have been offered classes once a week for free.
I could only realistically attend once a week anyway due to doing MT, lifting and also having a job, family etc.
I've seen so many threads where people say once a week you won't learn anything etc. so your post is very encouraging
>>
>>245292
>I've seen so many threads where people say once a week you won't learn anything etc. so your post is very encouraging
how can your brain not getting informations and getting smarter if it does something ? by definition you'll always learn when you do something. The question is the rate and the quantity of information you get, which will be low there. But it can never be 0.
Ofc, if you were to do 2 sessions per week, you would have +100% mat time instantly which makes it better
>>
>>245292
Your learning will depend on your learning style, their teaching style and how much live situational training there is.
If you are spending half the class doing solo warm ups like break fall and shrimping up/down the mat then they show you two-three unrelated techniques IE a side control escape then an armlock, then you just "roll" starting from your knees - you are in the worst environment for learning and it's going to take you a really long time to get "good" and any belt you get will be based just on how much money you've given the instructor.
>>
>>245302
>If you are spending half the class doing solo warm ups like break fall and shrimping up/down the mat then they show you two-three unrelated techniques IE a side control escape then an armlock, then you just "roll" starting from your knees
Kek that's literally me, i left after less than 2 years, it was so boring.
>>
>>
>>
>>245292
>I've seen so many threads where people say once a week you won't learn anything etc. so your post is very encouraging
I blame all the lifting youtubers who started pushing the optimization meme for this mindset.
"IF YOU DON'T OPTIMIZE 100% THEN ALL GAINZ WILL BE LOST IN A WEEK!" and shit like that caused this general mindset that doing anything physical is only worthwile if you can get 100% efficiency or otherwise you may not do any activity at all.
In reality training once a week is pretty solid. While you get more out of training multiple days a week, you can still get decent progress.
>>
>>
>>
File: 1760741358060.jpg (103.3 KB)
103.3 KB JPG
How much do you pay to train? I’m shopping around to get back on the mat
>>
>>244451
If you close your eyes and think about all the weird niche moves that now comprise the tournaments nowadays, then almost, yes. But like, you only really need like 5 moves to be effective, so it's a moot point.
>>
>>244509
Not all judo is created equal. There's lots of places where it's not very popular and doesn't have a very good talent pool. And judoka giving up their backs is chronic because it's used as a stalling tactic in competitions where you got limited time to do matwork. it's a problem with wrestlers too.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>244945
Learn to outwrestle them and stop them.
takedown defense has always been cope, if professional fighters can't stop them, what makes you think there is a way around time and effort put in the basics?
at least I have a shitty decent sprawl.
>>244963
LMAO at the guard puller. I used to think I was fancy doing that like I know what I'm doing when even Marcelo and that Mikey kid are fags that go for shitty overcomplicated leglocks only to eat right hands, soccer kicks and get lay and prayed for 5 rounds.
shit like octopus guard has never been useful or caught an opponent off guard in the history of EVER, and I'm not just repeating what I remember my partners and coaches said.
proof is if it were, Japan would be KING in the fighting arena because they're so smart. they're not.
>>
>>245317
I forgot how shitty and incomplete Judo is. GI dependent throw that is impossible to pull off + armbar, the shittiest submission ever will always be a joke.
to answer the other guys question : don't be a poorfag and do both.
in this special specific instance it is the exception, that BJJ is richer and superior. but not the rule.
>>
>>245309
a lot of Asian people let you go for moves instead of smashing you for their Mexican ego.
you get 8 rolls per 1, 2 hour class I don't remember. No bullshit drills, no even more bullshit warm up. just taking advantage that sparring doesn't rock your brain and getting your money's worth.
>>
>>
>>245459
In my opinion RNC is overrated as most of the strength comes from the back take. It really is a great submission but 90% of the danger comes from the position itself which does the heavy lifting.
Armbar is pretty good especially with all the combo and recovery potential you have, yet it's one of the easier submissions to counter, even when the armbar is already late.
>>
>>245459
There had to be a retard who defends that shit. The moment you sit on your ass to pull on a strong grown man’s arm to do a pussy hip extension on the elbow you lose top position.
Trust the science but you look like a pussy to me.
Modern arm triangles are far more respectable submissions. A triangle can save you from the jaws of death and give you a last minute win and did beat fedor emelianenko
I’d shill for kimuras instead but objectively speaking they didn’t work well for me.
Sitting on your ass is my chance to laugh at your pussy submission attempt confirming while I was butt scootting that you in fact ain’t shit.
You want to be respected be rousimar palhares. Or learn to wrestle a cowards way of fighting.
But don’t fucking sit here tell me some weeabo shit about the men in Japanese judo and their out dated armbars when you fight like a softer bigger pussy
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>245455
>shit like octopus guard has never been useful or caught an opponent off guard in the history of EVER
low IQ blue belt namefag. people use octopus guard in MMA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvaYcqW9cNo
>>245523
Eye gouge
>>
>>245523
Depends on position but in da streetz I would try to not get in a position where this is easy to do in the first place. If possible I would always go side control or better yet top mount if I need to throw punches too.
If for some reason my balls do get grabbed I would just start gouging the eyes or biting into a sensitive area full force.
>>
>>
>>
Given a year of training, what metrics would you consider for someone who trains 4x a week ? 4x bjj ; 4x gym ULUL routine
I mean in terms of strength, cardio and somewhat a number of techniques (like, still be bad overall but have developped decent guard retention even vs blue belts, for example) if that makes any sense ?
>>
How common is it for blue belts to be worse than white belts?
I'm a blue belt, but spent 5 and a half years without training. Now I'm back on the mat, but I'm getting owned by a white belt. I don't know if I should feel bad about it
>>
>>
>>
>>245711
The strength/cardio metrics are pretty much impossible to say, but for a year of focused BJJ training at a decent gym:
>basic escapes from side control variations, the back, mount, north south, and a few submissions
>guard retention principles
>basic wrestling fundamentals (handfighting, sprawling)
>a few sweeps from both seated and supine guards
>a submission dilemma or two that you can hit on 99% of new white belts and a few blue belts
Do yourself a favor and start watching stuff on submeta.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>245782
No I was on top most of the time because I'm a keen white belt and I was also mounted a lot never had anyone in guard
I guess there always going to be little pains and sprains right? It is fighting after all. I can still move around it's just mild discomfort
>>
File: 1682947778623983.gif (3.3 MB)
3.3 MB GIF
>>245785
>I was also mounted a lot
>>
>>245785
Sometimes this shit just happens
Backs are weird like that. Let it rest for a bit and see if that helps. If it still hurts after a week or two, then it might be time to see a doctor
I once had horrible lower back pain that lasted for like three months, then suddenly disappeared completely. Now it's back and I'm pretty sure it's here to stay (then again, that's what I though last time as well)
>>
>>245830
Thanks. Its more like a small bruise in the middle of my spine. It's almost like the spinal bone got pressed onto the skin more than anything
It seems to be healing now so I'm guessing it's just a spinal bruise. Like banging your hip/knee
>>
>>245714
I'm the guy you're replying to and thank you. A lot of that "shrimp up and down the mat" stuff pisses me off the longer I am in this sport/martial art because 1. You can do that on your own, you're paying to do BJJ with a partner and a mat space and an instructor, anything that is not giving you those 3 things you cannot easily replicate at home isn't exactly what you are paying money to be there for and 2. the movement of shrimping without a partner shit testing you isn't really doing the movement justice and why is it only a warm up with one kind of shrimp movement, a lot of times I'm just switching from one hip to another and not pushing the mat with my foot and doing a huge movement to cover ground across the mat
>>
>>
>>
>>246060
On my first day rolling I was being quite explosive and trying to run around people's guard. No one complained. Later I read online this is called the "white belt dance" and frowned upon lol
I also asked someone are small joint manipulations to get grips off allowed to which they said no. I also don't know how hard to go in general
I wasn't treating it as life or death but I certainly wasn't letting them get grips or try to choke me. And was actively trying to get in side control/mount/back take or getting out of their mount/guard
I was only shown one sweep so far in drilling and really struggled to understand the mechanics of it
I also didn't know how to approach rolling with a lightweight female who I initially tried to just brute force into arm locks before realising this is probably not conductive to either of our learning
Just keep turning up I guess?
>>
>>
>>
>>246061
Why is in bjj common to not explain to new people how to spar? I had a guy coming from years of kung fu/krav maga sticking his fingers in my throat and doing other retarded shit. In kick boxing the instructor yells all the time to go light and relaxed.
>>
>>246081
There's some weird phenomena in BJJ where it's cultural or something where instructors are sort of oblivious and lazy to doing or saying anything like this. They want you to figure it out or have some blue/purple belt tell you and spoon feed you (for free)
>>
So I'm wanna train to learn how too defend myself and get fitter I wrestled a year in High-school and really enjoyed it but had to stop to work on grades and I was better at other sports but I wanna go back and do some other forms of grappling so where do I start how do I start
>>
>>
>>
>>
>be me
>certified victimweight
>roll with just about anyone
>get bench-pressed out of any pin the moment they get a frame
what do? (other than gain weight, which is a given)
I thought about snatching armbars whenever they start extending, but they usually get their knees in too fast
>>
>>
File: Screenshot_20251028-201926_Photos.png (2.9 MB)
2.9 MB PNG
>>
>>
File: 1758650915192159.png (25.7 KB)
25.7 KB PNG
>>246371
cant say ive ever seen spider guard in a street fight video but that doesnt mean you couldnt be the first
>>
>>
>>246369
Don't know if I'd agree with 1/2 guard being neutral outside of a jiujitsu context. I'd also like to see back separated into two categories of "have their back while they're on top" and "have their back while you're on top".
>>
>>
>>
>>246371
Open guards are kinda sketchy when striking is allowed
Not that all of them are useless - DLR ties up their legs and is sweep city, while butterfly is incredibly powerful if you can control their upper body. But generally you don't want to be on the ground while your opponent is standing
The rest is very relevant
>>
>>
File: images(2).jpg (16.4 KB)
16.4 KB JPG
I was put into this position when rolling today, he then began to bend my neck and leg towards each other from this position
I tapped before I could feel any pain as I assumed my spine or neck would be injured, but I dont really understand what he was doing. Is there a name for this? Was he trying to choke me somehow or do a spine crank?
>>
>>246454
Cradle; it's an immobilization move, harder to get out of than regular side control, but also difficult to mount an attack from
I don't see how this would hurt you, unless you're grossly inflexible, or the other guy was literally twice your size and folding you like a lawn chair
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: jflojudo harai goshi without koing yourself.webm (3.9 MB)
3.9 MB WEBM
>>246407
>How could this have been avoided?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>246454
>>246458
>>246462
Not necessarily
Some people (namely people who can't invert) have innately inflexible spines and will tap to a crank
Someone i knew could bench 700lb cradled me and had me drooling and greying out, as I was essentially put to sleep
If I can join my hands together in cradle I've noticed there's a lot of interesting options to transition out of like a no-hook back take or again just making someone's head touch their foot
But young, athletic, and inversion prone people just have a fairly trivial time wiggling their head out
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>246611
i dont think its underrated
just really freaking hard/functionally impractical to get to
the police specifically dont try to get you prone and laying down because its nigh impossible to do it to someone actively resisting
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>246678
Right
Per week:
>2-3 to improve
>1 to maintain
Anything more than 3 I think is diminishing returns unless you have friends at the gym or a higher belt to take you under their wing
I think it's so physically and mentally exhausting that if I go a 4th time a week I'm just too tired to try anything new
>Tired how, mentally? Physically
Tired, boss
Even when you're not BJJing if you want to improve you should be reflecting on what you did and thinking up shit you can try next time you go in to improve and innovate on yourself
>>
>>
>>
>>
As someone who just started BJJ recently, what sort of historical time period is this for BJJ?
Has the golden age ended?
Has it begun ?
Is the party over?
Is the sport still evolving and for better or worse?
Has BJJ been solved?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>246810
>Can't say I see much difference between gi and no-gi
Maybe because no-gi is niche here. You have to search for "luta-livre" to find an actual no-gi gym with more than one no-gi class a week.
Most BJJ gyms only have no-gi on fridays, and that's if they actually have it.
>>
>>
>>
>>246804
>Golden age
Depends, people are a lot less hardcore now that less tryhards are joining, you may or may not prefer that "break someone's arm and mutually both laugh it off
Era
>Has it begun
Definitely not
>Is the party over
It's become casualized, which is to say you're now in an era where the most people have heard of it and can discuss it at some length
>Is the sport evolving
Again in my opinion for the better, there are as many competition focused tryhards as there are hobbiests who want to get good just to get good
>Has BJJ been solved
BJJ always homes in on a meta depending on the ruleset, but the best players are all over the place in my opinion
There's also a pressure to play to the audience in competition so guard is bizarrely unfavored by spectators despite being the most valued asset in training
>>
>>
hey guys, 19 yr old unemployed competitive purple belt here
> get a job or get a degree
ive been doing jiu jitsu and karate since i was a kid i practically have a degree in fighting and im not giving up my purpose to be rich but miserable. the money from coaching gets me by.
if you guys need any help it keeps my autism stimulated i love helping others. i can even create some youtube videos for technique questions. aside from just fighting itself im also pretty well versed in the nutrition aspect, lifting, and the “porrada lifestyle”
> drilling or eco?
do both, keep jiu jitsu stimulating however you can because its a boring ass journey and not very rewarding.
> grappling or striking?
both, id rather knockout somebody disrespecting me but grappling can avoid assault charges. for mma i play it safe and take it to the ground because of punchers chance.
>>
>>
>>246943
i think you can get very far with minimal training every week by being intentional with every session. i always go in with a specific area to work on and communicate that with my partners. this will also help you decide whos best to train with. new moves i start with white belts and work up. i never go with somebody, doesnt matter size or experience, if they are huffing and puffing after every round. i always check heart rate for myself and others
low - easy talking, conscious, conceding positions
medium - can talk but labored, in and out of flow state, conceding less positions
high - difficult to talk, full flow state, dont concede positions
communication is key so talk with your partners after rounds. these brief talks will boost you up so much. as a autist itll help your social skills too.
now that weve established this we can start creating a split for your training every week. the harder lifts the lower heart rate training. a lot of the high heart rate training is based on if im working for top position or not.
example split for 3x a week:
monday: lower power lift, low heart rate sweeping
wednesday: upper power, medium low heart rate passing
friday: back and tricep hypertrophy, high heart rate wrestling
the more sessions the better but there are champions such as paul ardilla who train like this and dominate.
going into competition camp we go from a learning skills phase to a honing skills phase. about two to four weeks out ill start adding more high heart rate sessions. we want to perform our best moves at a fast pace even if we have very little. also focusing on not giving up scoring positions is key in these camps. performance versus amount of skills is why you see blue belts beating black belts nowadays. even on low heart rate days try boosting your heart rate at the end of the session briefly.
if you do this let me know how it goes. ill be active on this thread if you need anything. youre ready!
>>
>>
>>246955
i got my black belt in chun kuk do (chuck norris systems) and joe lewis systems when i was 12.
i originally taught kids class at my karate school when i was 11. then later i got a gig teaching a ufc fighters kids class at 13. by 15 i was teaching the main adults class.
now ive left all schools and im training out of a shed. the black belts in bjj that i was under were all either grooming the minors/ hitting on the women or trying to assert their power over the community. i think a lot the training they gave me was outdated anyways but i miss the variety in training partners. lately ive been getting a lot of cross training in when i can.
im looking to start a gym right now to make more income doing what i love. i know at this stage though i got to compete too for branding.
>>
>>
>>246958
yeah id increase the sessions if you want to compete. training smarter will allow you to not be so exhausted too. a year of training will be enough to be competent though at white belt. youre already applying what you know to rolls too so dont listen to those people.
emphasize these skills to compete well with minimum sessions a week:
handfighting
winning inside postition
getting on top and staying on top
you can win the general positions and avoid dangerous spots by winning the handfight and inside position. doing this, you will be able to get on top and stay on top easier.
https://youtu.be/wRS7OV9jJdI?si=nOt6d6cRgQG0E6mv
this video goes over these concepts more in depth. think about the visual cues and why things work more than technical knowledge in every position. techniques are the cherry on top.
>>
>>
>>
>>246987
Find a gym with these conditions
>No retarded 1 year committal
>Willing to provide trial periods
>At least willing to let you spectate a class
>Instructor can trace their lineage to someone who doesn't suck, has chops in competition, or you watch them and they don't suck
And then it's up to god
At the gym I go to in nuawlins if you just want to watch your first day the gym owner unironically goads you to try as long as your attire is correct
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
Weird question but are there genuine black belts out there that can't do moves like cartwheels etc ?
I'm fairly athletic and can handstand for a few seconds etc, but just can't cartwheel. I'm scared to go to a gym where it's part of a warmup and wondering if you can get promoted without knowing stuff like cartwheel etc
>>
>>
>>247219
If I saw a gym doing cart wheels at the beginning of class I'd turn 360 degrees and back hand spring out of there
That's all I need to see to know the class is going to be total ass and the instructor doesn't know shit if he's wasting everyone's time and energy doing gymnastics at the beginning if a grappling class
>>
>>
>>247219
dont worry about the warm ups dude, they're just that, warm ups
my judo gym does traditional warm ups. it's normal to suck at them for a long time but they're a separate skill on their own, they don't make you any better at grappling. they make you better at doing hand stands and cartwheels.
if they bother you that much, you'll find that practicing them at home by yourself or at the gym after everyone has left will be a lot easier because there's no pressure.
>>
File: wimp lo.gif (564.8 KB)
564.8 KB GIF
>>247229
The only way I have mastered is the wrong way of holding a rear body triangle, by the looks of it
(Yeah, that was my mistake, hooking my leg over my toes instead of my ankle, and letting my opponent push on it with his leg - effectively an inside heel hook)
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>247647
Muay Thai and whichever of the other two you like more
The reason being that you want to be familiar with both striking and grappling. I'd consider Judo and BJJ to be about equal - Judo is very good for takedowns but its ground game is fairly shallow, BJJ being more or less the opposite. Maybe slight edge for Judo, since it can be argued that throwing your opponent while remaining standing is more useful than going down with them and controlling them there
>>
>>247219
Why do you think people should be able to do a cartwheel? Most black belts have bad wrists, necks, etc, most people that were athletic and able to invert all day and night have radically changed their game thru injury, weight gain, life in general.... most black belts want to move as little as possible and are above 30, why should they cartwheel? How is a cartwheel applicable to BJJ other than as something you ejaculated to on Instagram thinking it was cool?
>>
>>247223
That reminds me, I wrestled in 8th grade, my only non BJJ grappling experience in my life. We learned very little. One of the coaches out of fucking NOWHERE had us walk out before a tournament and "warm up" by running in a circle as a group then he'd call out move for us to do, out of fucking no where he has us do cartwheels and we have never done them before in this practice, I've never done one in my life and almost wrecked my shit trying to do it in front of the whole school and my parents. My dad was mad and might have said something to him about it.
>>
>>
>>247368
Sit to your butt to play seated guard aka butterfly guard. Watch Marcelo Garcia or Gordon Ryan for examples. Alternatively, you could stand up. They would either have to wrestle you or concede top position
>>247420
>>247441
Mikey (the guy hopping around) has a very good guard and is trying to bait a single leg so that when they end up on the ground, he has connections to his opponent. Mikey is very good at leg locks and probably had an entry in mind
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>247304
For most subs I generally do a small pause before the last step and then slowly do the actual submission. it's also the advice I give noobs when I drill with them so they don't injure someone the moment they learn how to americana.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: 1753412526247818.png (504.3 KB)
504.3 KB PNG
>>
>>
>>
>>247860
Strength/mass is raw numbers and technique is a multiplier. You can absolutely escape bad positions from someone who weighs 30kg more than you. However if the skill is the same it will obviously be harder.
I weigh 110kg (all muscles frfr) and often get side control/top mount. The best escapes are where opponents actually chain escape attempts. Any Youtube video saying "X escape will work all the time" is a meme. The escape itself might be good but if someone does side control or top mount well, you will need to chain escapes unless the guy on top makes big mistakes.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>248185
Isolate the arms. If you can get your knees in his armpits, he's pretty fucked
Other than that, I like to go for an americana, and when they reach out with their other arm to defend, I can either grab it to go for an armbar or get my head in to go for an arm triangle. I don't think it would work against someone who knows what's going on, but neither I nor my opponents are very good so...
>>
>>
Guys I'm fucking sick AGAIN I missed work and my whole family is sick now... How the fuck do we stop people from training and getting the entire gym sick.
What the fuck.
I'm about to just take cold and flu season off every year. I actually miss COVID 2020-2022 because it wasn't like this.
>>
Guys, I feel like I'm just wasting my time and that bjj is not for me. White belt, we don't do stripes here, 1y of training.
I (5"11/180cm) have been fat almost my whole life, or ultra skinny when I was a child. Now I'm okay-ish (around 85kg a few months ago, but I'll come back to that after) but obviously not a very athletic guy. I'm 27 now, training 4x a week + 4x gym.
Been using steroids since June, 500mg test E/week.
I've never been that jacked, I reached 100kg (not all muscles, ofc, but it CHANGES my life) and increased my strength a lot. I feel like a normal human being for once in my life. I have always been the weak child, then the fatty who plays video games all night. I, for once, don't feel like a fucking failure most of the time.
But when it comes to bjj ? Oh boy.
I can't get even against people my size. Like I'm getting CRUSHED. They are way stronger, faster and overall better than me. I can't get anything out of it. One could say that it is because they have been longer on the mat ? Nope, started on the same day. Always been a little bitch against them.
Against people smaller than me ? I can control, sometimes. But I cannot get a submission, I always fail.
Tonight, as an example, I rolled against a brand new white belt, 3 months in, a kid not even 18 and 20-30kg lighter than me. All the time, I got the dominant position. Which sounds fair, I'm the bigger guy, right ? Yeah, can't get to do a kimura from the guard. Can't get the americana from the mount. Can't get the triangle either, etc.
I feel like shit, I know I'm a shitty white belt, and I'm frustrated against myself. I'd even say that I hate myself and my weak body.
I don't want to become a world champion, and especially not overnight it doesn't work like that, and I know that. But I want to get at least on even grounds against people my size with a somewhat similar time on the mat. Honestly want to just fucking quit.
>>
>>
>>248216
people at my gym get promoted after 1-1.5y. I don't. I don't feel near good enough to be promoted since even new white belt can resist me anyway. People my size and mat time get their blue, i will not. Not yet at least. I don't care, i don't deserve it now anyway and I don't want a piece of clothes that is given out of pity.
What i'm asking is exactly how can i get it by merit and skills ? I'm tired of being dogshit
>>
>>
>>
>>248211
Nah son. You're overcoming an entire lifetime of sedentary livng and physical incompetence. You've had to remake yourself as an adult. A lot of guys have. I've had to.
You're "bad" at jiujitsu because it's an extremely complex skill. One year of training is nothing, in the grand scheme of things.
Here's the good news: it's never over. You will continue to get stronger, your body composition will improve, you will get more skilled/coordinated, IF you keep doing the right things.
Here's the bad news: it's never over. Strength and skill can be rented, but not owned, and the rent is due every damn day. It's not easy but it's worth it. Do it just to prove that you have the ability to do difficult and uncomfortable things.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
When I'm rolling with someone much weaker than me I find myself in a position let's say mounting them, and i have control of one of their arms. I then start trying to brute force their arm with my strength in a position where I can kimura/Americana it.
They resist and I then start feeling bad and like I'm "using too much strength" or something and then just give up as It feels like I'm bullying them with my strength. Is this what I'm supposed to be doing or is this bad etiquette?
>>
>>248250
if they're the same age, gender and roughly equal skill level i would say it's a them problem for being weaker
big guys love americanas and kimuras. nothing wrong with using strength. if you're completely dominating them, just get a few taps and try something else next time that you're not good at.
>>
>>
>>248250
Well they have to test their technique and see if it works against stronger guys. There is a counter for pretty much every strength move but of course being stronger is an advantage.
Get the tap anyway and once you reset use 20% less strength.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>248570
It's a black belt so I gotta do it
Honestly I only got into this for clout, I never really enjoyed it
I just wanted to do the trendy thing everyone was talking about and stroke my ego seeing people fall off and quit over the years but I remained
>>
>>248587
Your life must be sad. I mean that with the most empathy possible, man, why would you want to inflict that to yourself ? There is so much more in this world than showing off to people who don't give a fuck about you anyway.
I hope you'll find peace and something to truly enjoy Anon
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>248648
Non combattivity is something judges can enforce at their discretion
Butt scoots remove the space for you to run around with
Running around in circles is inherently more tiring than spinning on your butt and inverting
Also there are rulesets where you cant pull guard without some form of connection
It all just naturally sorts itself out
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>248660
Imo talented people can start as soon as their coach is on board for it
I know my gym owner fastidiously attends local tournaments where his students are competing so I think your coach's opinion is more important than ours
Unironically though,
No matter how bad you think you are, if you want to compete it's its own practice so yes if you can spare the money
>>
>>248648
This is basically what Dorian Olivarez does
>>248660
Sure, why not. You’ll probably be more gassed than you have ever been in your life, and will probably face someone who has been training 3x as long as you, but it doesn’t really matter. It’s good to get the experience and come back to the training room with specific problems to solve.
>>
>>248660
It's funny how for the first time ever we declined to let someone compete, because the rule I guess is if you're under 18 you need to have the coach of your team sign off on it
And this 15 year old that's been coming for a year at this point asked and was denied
He's too much of a pussy and he's not going out there with our name attached
We don't care if you win or lose but you're not going to be an embarrassment and he has no cardio
One 5 minute round and he's stepping outside to get fresh air trying not to pass out or throw up
>>
Whats the rule on turning up half way through a class?
My work schedule means I'd miss the first 30 minutes of a 1 hour long class
The 1 hour long class then leads into an open mat. Would I be able to observe/drill/spar in the class even though Im half an hour late?
>>
>>
>>
>>248980
Obviously a faux pax but probably no more than that
I'll give you a stink eye if you go hard all fresh like that
Otherwise I personally wouldn't hold it against you
You aren't a pro (I'm assuming) and it's a paid hobby, who's the owner to give you a shit if you pay your fees
>>
>>
>>249155
I'm just saying I've gone traveling and didn't have the luxury of a washing machine, but hanging it in the area of greatest airflow cut the post training smell down to "did my opponent have perfume or deodorant on" rather than that fragrant bacterial odor
>>
>>
>>248655
That is what I do, since I can't wash my stuff after every session (college dorm living)
It's not ideal, but airing the gi out for 24h out in the hallway where there's good air circulation gets rid of the funk
Still needs to be washed regularly of course, but it's a good temporary measure
>>
File: BeltRank_Landscape_CR-1024x768.jpg (91 KB)
91 KB JPG
When do you actually understand what's going on?
>Coach demonstrates move to whole class
>Pair up and drill, mostly just figuring it out with no/minimal intervention from him
>Basically indefinite sparring period, mostly just getting manhandled by more experienced guys, no pointers from coach
I've been going 3 times a week for a month and I feel like I haven't learned anything, is this level of hands off teaching productive? I think I've heard 3 sentences from him total
>>
>>249173
>When do you actually understand what's going on?
Give it time, you'll eventually start understanding the moves, noticing common trends and patterns, connecting the dots as it were
But honestly it just sounds like you may have a pretty bad coach. Usually they should be more involved, walking around, seeing who's struggling or doing something wrong and correcting them. The more experienced guys should be giving you some advice as well, if they know what's what and you don't
Honestly, if you don't get something just ask and keep asking. There are stupid questions, but the stupidest of all is the person who never asks
>>
File: 1757023502131636.webm (3.8 MB)
3.8 MB WEBM
>>244458
>Why does everyone assume BJJ involves signing a treaty that you can never use any dirty tricks in a fight?
Generations of people growing up playing video games where fighters have a set number if 'moves', has infected the minds of a lot of violence theorists. They believe that, since you trained your B button to footsweep, you cannot use it to eye Gouge, like they plsn to.
This also explains the phenomenon where people believe that if someone is stronger than them, they must be faster, because all stat blocks are equal, if varied.
>>
>>249177
>The more experienced guys should be giving you some advice as well, if they know what's what and you don't
They're actually really proactive about this and helpful so that's a major benefit here, even moreso when I ask, I can't help but feel that asking them to spar/drill is wasting their time though
>Usually they should be more involved, walking around, seeing who's struggling or doing something wrong and correcting them
They do this but sparingly and usually towards the (seemingly) more experienced members, he's not on his phone but I do wish I was getting form corrections from the coach
At what point should I consider finding a new coach/gym?
>>
>>249177
Yeah I regularly gossip and the people I hang out single out weirdoes as
>People who show up consistently
>Never improve
>Never hang around to ask questions or mingle so no one has any idea about the guy
>But he consistently sucks and isn't improving or innovating any time soon
>>
>>249190
>I can't help but feel that asking them to spar/drill is wasting their time though
Be able to put things to words is its own form of training because then your betters can talk about it
Also me personally as a blue belt I get to practice submissions and getting to them on people significantly worse than me
Otherwise I'm only practicing reversals and defense against equal or better people
It's not a waste unless your opponent can't find something to work on, and that's 100% on them
>>
>>
>>249193
>How do I not be this wierdo? I ask questions and mingle
The weirdo aspect isnt about the lack of improvement, it's sucking, being stagnant, WHILE being 'that guy' nobody talks to and has no read on
Don't be that guy
If your system has enough people in it, then one of them is bound to resonate with you
> idk if the gym has belts, it's no-gi and I've never heard it mentioned
Oh that should be even less of a reason then
One easy way is to stay after class , and a way to get brownie points is to be that guy who has to feel how a sub being demonstrated, feels
>>
>>249196
As an addendum when I say one of them is bound to resonate with you
You should prioritize people you haven't rolled with if there are people you don't know yet
Hell, try to rope a friend into the sport if you can
>>
>>249196
>WHILE being 'that guy' nobody talks to
I think my gym is moderately cliquey, they're all friendly when it comes to rolls, but I don't sense a lot of reciprocal interest, the gym is also moderately 'toxic' in the sense of drama (coach sleeping with students) and making fun of some people when they're not around - idrc abt this so long as it doesn't spill into poorer quality of learning. It's also a really small gym
>One easy way is to stay after class
The classes don't really end cleanly, after ~30 minutes of drills it just basically becomes open mat, and that extends into open mat for the next few hours where people drop in and out, best i've gotten so far is convo between rolls and before class. The whole gym is very sparring focused, which is also odd cause I frankly don't know wtf I'm supposed to be doing in a roll
>>
>>249173
You need to spar with other newbies and get little wins like, escaping from their mount, getting them in guard, sweeping them, getting them in back control, mount, or side control, and then getting a sub
Do you not have any fighting instinct?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>249190
>At what point should I consider finding a new coach/gym?
The problem is that while the type of instruction you've described is awful, its also the standard at most gyms so you'll have to be lucky if there's one near by where the instructor actually gives a shit enough to design effective practices and doesn't just demonstrate moves then leave you on your own to figure it out
>>
>>
>>249213
>You need to spar with other newbies
I think I'm the only guy with less than 6 months of experience in the gym - it's really small. I've escaped stuff like a body triangle and a side control but that was more their mistake than my win (think exploiting a mistake in their form, rather than executing a real escape)
>Do you not have any fighting instinct?
No, I'm usually apologizing half the roll because I'm afraid of hurting them, I'm 6'2", 210 so I'm one of the bigger guys in the gym
>>249218
Fuck, well in that case is this kind of coaching actually productive or should I spend my time doing something else until I can find a decent coach?
>>
>>249221
>is this kind of coaching actually productive
Well to put it simply the entire jiujitsu online space is about instructionals and "hacks" to learn jiujitsu faster
You know how you spend all that time in class doing what you're told and then by the next class you've already forgotten everything from the previous class
That's the typical jiujitsu experience
Demonstrating moves doesn't actually teach anything, because jiujitsu is a skill and learning about the existence of a move doesn't make you able to do it
The best and only course of action is to be completely self directed in your learning, you research and work on the things you want to do
The instructor is just showing you random shit he feels like showing with no rhyme or reason for it, you can't progress like that
In class just play along, and then when free time comes it's only the stuff you're working on 100% of the time
>>
>>249225
>The best and only course of action is to be completely self directed in your learning
I'm not opposed to this because it's what I did for lifting, but my understanding is that form matters a lot more here in terms of injury prevention? Oh and actually winning against someone that knows what they're doing
>>
>>249227
The only thing that matters is effect and understanding the principles behind the effect
There's only like 5 moves in jiujitsu, everything else is just flavor
The 85 iq bjj teacher thinks an armbar from guard, armbar from spider web, reverse armbar, inverted armbar, spiral armbar, belly down armbar etc are all different moves. But they're not. They're all the exact same thing
Block the movement of the proximal joint (shoulder), put a fulcrum behind the elbow, apply force at the distal end of the lever (wrist) you can use any part of your body at any angle in any configuration configuration to do that but the conditions of move never changes
Oh and it turns out the leg has the same anatomy as the arm but in reverse, so you can do all that stuff to the leg too
Your known submissions just doubled
Oh and all the attacks you can do from mount? Guard is the same position but reversed, so all the same moves work from there too. Your submissions just doubled again
The nitwits teaching this crap don't have the neurons to recognize patterns so they think and teach all these thousands of different moves like they exist in a vacuum and need to be individually studied and practiced
They don't. Just observe the commonalities, recognize them, then improvise the execution
>>
>>249234
So you’re saying all I need to do in the near term is
>participate in open mat time
>pay close attention how I’m getting trapped consistently
>autistically learn these escapes from YouTube
>go back to open mat time until I can escape these positions
>repeat with new technique
>eventually start worrying about learning submissions
>learn core concepts by trying to apply them in different scenarios
And I just do this until I stop submitting in less than a minute?
>>
>>249244
The game of jiujitsu is immobilization and isolation as it leads to submission
Attack the extremities (arms, legs, head) to gain access to and control of the center mass (Chest, back, hips,) then isolated and re-attack the extremities (submission)
So just pay attention to where you are on that continuum in relation to your partner
>>
>>249173
When I started out I picked a few guys who were way better than me and sparred against them whenever possible. Lost hard every time for years but always set milestones like only getting tapped once/twice or trying to survive a difficult position for as long as possible.
>>
>>
>>249296
They went out of bounds, so the ref reset them in the center in roughly the same position they were in before, the fat guy on the bottom playing open guard, the smaller one passing. As for the leglock, one guy went for it, the other tried to counter with his own, nothing more than that
>>
>>249221
>No, I'm usually apologizing half the roll because I'm afraid of hurting them, I'm 6'2", 210 so I'm one of the bigger guys in the gym
Without becoming a huge dick : stop.
Everyone accepted to be here, signed the waiver and paid to get to class. Don't actively try to HURT them, but you need to understand that this is a combat sport and you need to fight. If they are more experienced, it is their job to know when they are done for and you won the round (if it happens) so just give it your best.
Yet, don't confuse tryhard with unregulated speed/strength. Try to think, but don't OVERTHINK it. Try stuff and you'll see quickly if it seems to be working or not (if they don't try hard to get out and kinda let you tire out, most probably they know you are doing nothing and just wasting energy)
>>
File: bjj pepe.png (2.2 MB)
2.2 MB PNG
recommended guard against fat fucks nogi? I can sometimes get my regular guard attacks to work if they overextend their arms (triangles, armbars, etc) and if I can get inside leg position I can get slx and go for legs, but other than that they just force half guard and go full snorlax until I can't maintain my frames. Should I just stand and try to pull a nicky rod: https://youtu.be/iTLXUpgCMIw?t=118 ?
>>
>>249375
Why are you playing guard? They're fat, slow, and easily tired
I can guarantee They're just waddling over to you on their knees and you're just complying with their request to lay down under them
Literally don't do it, stand up run around the side and tip them over like cattle
>>
>>249378
Becuase I'm a guardfag who wants to get good at bottom position, but I'm realizing that from a stragetic perspective that's not always going to be the optimal choice against large opponents. I don't know if it's a good idea to wrestle up or just literally stand up to match their posture and wrestle from standing.
>They're just waddling over to you on their knees
Usually we slap/bump and I take a seated guard position, they stand and try to run around my guard while throwing all of their blubber in my direction. I can frame and keep them in guard for a while but eventually they get half guard and pressure their way past. I have a good half guard game against people my size but I can't get much going against whales.
>>
>>249380
Basically it's like saying you like to slip punches so you stand in the corner and let them swing at you so you can do that but feel frustrated you keep getting hit
You need to get on top and stay on top. This top vs bottom thing isn't a preference the way people present it, it's effective vs ineffective jiujitsu
Every scoring position in jiu jitsu is a top position except for one, and the only way to score from the bottom is a reversal that lands you in the top position, that's how important it is
The only reason to ever take bottom is because you were forced there and are now trying to sweep your way back to the top, with the one niche exception that you might be trying to invert into a leg attack but that's the only time you should go there on purpose
>>
>>
>>249244
Sort of. But the value in going to classes to consistently is that you will roll more, and have the opportunity to discuss and identify problems in your skillset. That anon isn't entirely wrong, but trying to self teach as a white belt is tough. The most practical version of that IMO is using a resource like submeta to dive into very specific problems you encounter, rather than trying to get just one instructional.
The other autistic stuff that guy is regurgitating comes from this guy and his methods:
https://youtu.be/V4QtQTRwwD0?si=e-Rcorq23LagADhW
I'm a big fan but it needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Without cleverly designed games (specific to your training needs), you might have a hard time. And not everyone trains at a gym with a culture that encourages this style of training
>>
>>249375
Try to get good at Ashi or focus on contesting top positions from the get go. A lot of heavy guys are not used to actually fighting for top pressure as most lighter opponents just default to getting you into their guard at the beginning.
Butterfly guard can also work quite well.
t. 6'4 250 lbs
>>
>>
>>
>>249483
I know a guy that had a couple heart attacks during class
But that's a maturity thing knowing he has a condition and still pushing it
The question here is what about getting jostled and squished? Knowing when to slow it down is your decision but what's out of your hands is you're gonna get your middle squished and bumped around. Don't know if that matters here
>>
File: G7BH7vrWkAAbX7F.jpg (109.7 KB)
109.7 KB JPG
Competed in my first comp over the weekend after 2 months of training. (Beginner No-gi 100kg plus)
Did alright in the stand up but got submitted and puked after my first fight, as soon as I got back from puking I was up again, same story puked again. Lost by walkover on my third. Didn't score a single point.
10/10 experience though, walked away uninjured and now know that guard defense is my most glaring weak point. Did shit but everyone said it was great for only 2 months
Also I'm not a fatfuck, just 195cm with really bad cardio
>>
>>
>>
>>249501
Personally for me smashing a liquid IV within an hour before performance time is a cheat code
But the competition starts the day before you even step on the mat
You have to prime yourself for what you're about to do so you can perform at your best and that means good quality resting recovery staying warm and loose, Eating the right things
Whatever the process is to have you feeling as good as possible when you step out there
>>
File: 1761963795414572.png (19.8 KB)
19.8 KB PNG
i didn't learn anything new today but i drew this
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>249791
Well that's really whatever their policy is
But the move is you go in and say you saw the other price and make it really awkward for them, then when they say the new price say oh you only budgeted for the old price you saw so it's too expensive for you now
Don't be afraid to walk, the strongest negotiation tactic is getting up from the table
>>
>>
>>249817
Try both and see, I've been taken down by basic wrestling single/double legs than I have been by any judo shit, so I think wrestling works better. I've stuffed a fireman's carry by posting my hand and then getting out of the "throw" I've never had anyone hit a sieo-naghi or big hip throw or any of that flashy judo shit but I will get snapped down into front headlock
There's a good reason why olympic judo banned wrestling moves
>>
>>
I peeped in the supply closet and saw my belt in there, it's a premium hand made item, pricing it out on the website the belt is $125
But it's the wrong size, this thing is going to hang way too low and I feel bad about that
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: 1524281018518.webm (2.9 MB)
2.9 MB WEBM
>>249956
Mongolians weren't especially known for leg grabs in judo when they were still legal. Not all Mongolian wrestling styles allow leg grabs either. Mongolians in judo are more known for over/unders, back grips, belt grips, armpit/lat grips, i.e. grips that they can use with the traditional bokh jacket.
>>
Not that anyone cares but a couple of months ago I was an incessant "question asker" in these threads and even shitting on BJJ saying how i tried it once and it doesn't work. I didn't understand guard and thought it was all fake shit for soft people (we didn't spar after my session). I ended up giving it another go for free via a friend and the class did a lot of sparring which ended with me getting dominated/swept/fully controlled even from guard (which opened my eyes to falsely thinking.. heh I would have just punched/bitten him!) but also managing to pull off my first sub, an armlock I learn from UFC against another beginner, so I began to enjoy it. Ive now started to go regularly and have joined a club, so thanks guys for keeping me interested. The most fun part is the new injuries every session.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
Went for a fundamental beginners class and it revolved around balloon sweeps and leg locks
Idk but these two things seem like some of the most dangerous stuff you can do In bjj
Thank god I had some previous experience otherwise Id certainly be crippled
>>
>>
>>250168
There is nothing fundemental about those things at all
"Fundamentals" aren't moves, they're fighting for inside position, building/collapsing frames, disrupting balance
These buttheads just teach random shit, I hate it
Once again the 10+ year timeline from white to black is mostly due to the completely inept instruction people are getting
I was training for no joke a year and a half before someone told me to use my bottom knee as a frame in side control
>>
>>250180
I just went for another session somewhere else. We were all white belts but the instructor was teaching us complicated 10 step inverted sweeps into x guard and shit
We were all looking confused. And could barely drill it
Wrestling classes were much simpler than this.. I'm starting to think I should have stayed with wrestling or Judo!
>>
>>250192
It's really grim, these people have no idea how to relay information and structure productive training sessions
Side rant I make every year btw, the time has come where I'm now being asked to contribute money for a Christmas gift for the teacher
Why the tits do these cuckold do this every year? Know what his Christmas gift is? The fact you niggers pay his fucking mortgage
>>
>>250192
I was new, definitely under 6 months of training time, I can't remember the exact amount, maybe only a few weeks. Anyway, the Wiltse brothers taught class and showed berimbolo. I think Andrew said something about how we're all retarded. I might be having a Mendalla effect from watching so many of his videos calling people retarded and he didn't really say this at the time. But I didn't know who they were and some purple belt tells me "he's such and such world champion" then he rolled w people after class (not me) and my mind was blown.
>>
>>250192
The problem is that skill alone doesn't make you a good teacher. So there are a lot of coaches who are very legit, but suck at imparting those skills onto others
BJJ has a particular problem with this because of how deep some positions are, so a lot of coaches get "sidetracked" with what's optimal for an experienced practitioner, instead of what a beginner should learn to grasp the fundamentals
>>250197
I know this might sound like a novel concept, but do you know that some people like other people and don't reduce every interaction to a cynical business transaction?
>>
>>
>>250282
Sometimes, but I usually just ignore grips unless it's in the way of where I'm trying to go
Most of the time people are just gripping for the sake of it with no intention "me hold on to guy cloth mean me doing good!" Nah
>>250273
It is a business transaction, and it's shitty to be guilting people into putting money towards a gift. It's not about just the gift, it's also who's name gets to go on the card, it's creating a clique of people on the inside and outside
Nah, I'd ban it
>>
File: house fire.jpg (174.7 KB)
174.7 KB JPG
Will we ever find out who did it?
>>
>>
File: vlcsnap-2024-11-04-20h07m22s391.png (537.7 KB)
537.7 KB PNG
>>250329
Don't be a little retard. These are LIES told by the devil herself, formerly known as girlfriend but she is the DEVIL and she is EVIL.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>250392
You need to use tape nigga and also let go of shit or not grip too hard and learn how to grab and twist so you aren't using too much of your finger tips
>>250402
He's not doing better now lmao he just did 2 months in jail and is homeless and wrecked his car and is stranded in the UP of Michigan.
>>
>>250402
I always take the based nuance take on this stuff where it's a shame to see people struggle with mental health and I hope on a human level he can get help and healing for those issues
On a personal level though I think he's kind of a piece of shit and deserves justice for his crimes, and shouldn't be part of polite society
>>
>>250416
>On a personal level though I think he's kind of a piece of shit and deserves justice for his crimes, and shouldn't be part of polite society
What crimes? He made some threats while he was having a mental episode. Did he hurt anyone other than their feelings and make them feel scared? I am aware that threatening to kill people's kids is illegal so I agree that he should be in trouble for that but I don't think he should be locked up for a really long time or anything, he prob needs forced meds and maybe an actual adult to be his guardian though.
>>
>>
>>250413
>He's not doing better now lmao he just did 2 months in jail and is homeless and wrecked his car and is stranded in the UP of Michigan
Oh did he go downhill again? I recall that after his whole schizomaxxing saga he got medicated, came back to his senses and was trying to get his shit together and apologize to everyone he threatened
What happened now?
>>
>>
>>250433
>https://www.youtube.com/@TeamWiltse
>Former Atheist Turned Soldier and Prophet for Gods
Oh boy, here we go again
Shame, he honestly seems like pretty decent guy when lucid, but if he just can't stay on his meds then he should probably be committed. Loony bins exist for a reason
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>250461
Wiltse's video today was pretty bad, he had dirt under his finger nails, missed the bus and was in a hotel room that he was supposed to leave. He struggled to stay on topic and say which is better for BJJ offense or defense. He used to be able to articulate the pros and cons of each and say a lot on the topic. This one was hard to watch. He's got nothing left.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>250762
As in the top player guillotining the bottom?
Very, it's a super strong choke as well as a very nasty neck crank
From the bottom? No, the bottom player won't be able to finish you (unless you do something extraordinarily stupid) and it's counterproductive to an escape/reversal, so it's just stalling until you can get your head out (which can admittedly take some work, especially if they're strong). And they're arguably setting themselves up to get arm triangled
>>
>>250762
>Because it's the most dominant position?
But if you have a win condition in front of you why would you forego that in favor of a theoretical win condition down the line, which may or may not materialize?
Maybe you've just given away everything you had
Winning isn't really a spectrum in this
If there is a submission available don't leave it on the table to pursue a different position where you'll then ultimately be searching for a submission again
Learning to not be greedy is a part of developing robust skills
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>250817
In training? Yeah, no reason to snap your shit up
In competition? Depends on how much you want that medal
Also, finishing it in mount can be harder, but I found it that if you step over to a kesa-gatame-like position, it's pretty much an instant tap
>>
File: 1757936504526961m.jpg (105.8 KB)
105.8 KB JPG
I backed out of a fight at a work Christmas party.
Me and a colleague were both drunk and got into an argument over a woman and shoved each other a bit before I yelled "let's fucking go" then I ended up backing down and walking away.
I am a blue belt in BJJ, 29 yo. He is 41 and untrained, similar size.
I kinda feel like I bitched out, but I don't want to get in a real fight.
Anyone else had to do this? Genuinely might beat him up another time.
>>
>>
>>
>>250851
You beat him up he calls Police and says a trained martial artist beat him up without provocation and you get your cheeks clapped by big bubba
Why don't you just invite him to some gentle MMA sparring or doing bjj with you
>>
>>
>>
>>
I notice in matches someone gets a dominant position like take down to mount and a pin that the other person isn't escaping
Is there any rule to prohibit the one on top just stalling for the entire match and winning on points from the takedown and mount?
>>
>>250893
Flexibility and mobility need to be cultivated deliberately the same as strength and stamina
Just stretching is the flexibility equivalent of going for a walk around the block to improve cardio or doing some curls to get ready for strong man
You need to pick 3-4 skills at a time and drill down on them for weeks or months with daily practices of nerve flossing, PNF stretching, static holds with *time under tension*, and strengthening the antagonistic muscles involved
If you're just sitting on the floor pulling on your feet because it feels good when your hamstrings stretch a little bit like most people do that isn't going to get you in any gains, Mobility training should get your heart rate up and even leave you sore afterwards at first
You need to treat it like a real training endeavor if you want your body to make adaptations
>>250902
If you speak Portuguese and the other guy doesn't, or if you're up enough in points the penalties don't matter then you stall
There are consequences but if it's late in the match there won't be enough for them to add up to a loss
>>
>>250902
>Is there any rule to prohibit the one on top just stalling for the entire match and winning on points from the takedown and mount?
in mount and side control it's the bottom player's job to escape. if they choose to stay there then it's their problem. i believe they only call it stalling if you're in their guard.
>>
>>
>>250994
Are you actually fighting the hands and trying to mount an escape or are you just cooking in a choke until you can't take it anymore?
Know when you're beat
Something that annoys me is when people make me finish submissions on them, it's like when you pull a strike that was going to connect so you don't ko your partner and they use the grace to counter attack you
I never finish submissions, I lock them in and just sit there with the understanding they realize what happened. If someone takes advantage of that then they don't get the benefit next time and I'll just pull it
>>
>>251028
>I never finish submissions, I lock them in and just sit there with the understanding they realize what happened. If someone takes advantage of that then they don't get the benefit next time and I'll just pull it
Definitely an upper belt that is trying to let everyone get better and learn, ty and merry christmas, one of my favorite bjj moments was someone doing this then telling me "you can get out of this" and me going huh how
>>
File: trianglexxxx_34eade64-fc25-4eba-8b94-bb3325015825.jpg (75.2 KB)
75.2 KB JPG
Can you sweep them from this position?
Or will falling on their ass cause their spine damage since have your weight around their shoulders?
>>
>>251274
I know you can sweep them so they land on their right shoulder and then finish into an armbar
If you sweep them to their left shoulder, will you instantly break their arm from the pressure, and if you sweep them backwards onto their ass will you hurt their spine?
>>
>>
>>251408
You can become a world champion in bjj with no takedowns or submissions
That's why "the point" is to become a robust grappler that can win exchanges in any phase of the battle, not to arbitrarily score made up points
>>
>>
>>251482
No. IIRC if you can't score twice for the same position unless your opponent hits a reversal in-between, or manages to re-guard
But you should just read the rules for any given tournament you're entering to familiarize yourself with the details like this
>>
>>251482
I did a similar thing at my last comp (alternating between side-control and knee-on-belly, holding for at least 5 seconds) since my opponent was gassed and not good at defending against it...but it was a Fuji comp so take that with a grain of salt since they run sloppy events
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>252003
It'll just be funny when literally nothing you learned in gi class will transfer over and you realize you've been lead astray
Better you learn this sooner rather than later tho
Oh and tap as soon as anyone grabs your leg
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: wiltse lessons.png (614.2 KB)
614.2 KB PNG
Wiltse is in Kansas City looking to do seminars and privates if anyone wants to book him!
>>
>>
>>252017
Story time
>be hobbyist who doesn't care about gi or no gi
>mat time is mat time and I just want to cuddle sweaty dudes
>occasionally roll no gi with friend who's serious about competition
>close matches as he's technically better but typically eke out a sub and escape his because I'm slightly heavier
>one day the unthinkable happens
>we roll in gi
>grab his lapel near his left collarbone
>he can't break it
>his entire game instantly goes out of the window
>takedown into knee slide into collar choke
>repeat for the rest of the round
>he swore to never train gi again
Admittedly I am known for having retard grips due to years of judo, deadlifts and climbing but on the other hand this guy won brown belt gold in his weight class at IBJJF Europeans and he got shut down hard by a hobbyist with a single basic grip.
>>
>>244450
I am lanklet (6'4" with 6'6" wingspan) and fast twitch. My coach says I need a guard to get to purple. However, playing guard is gay and not why I chose to train jui jitsu. I want wrestling with submissions, I already have to waste so much time passing fake guards that woulnt exist in MMA / street fight, but I digress.
Octopus seems like the most enjoyable guard since it creates scrambles and is a total troll. I plan on buying ;) craig jones instructional on it, will I need any other guard? Let's find out
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>252951
What clothing other than a gi are you wearing an 2 inch wide, 1/2 inch thick EVA foam filled inverted overlapping cross body collar, secured shut with a double wrapped cotton belt with 9-12 inches of fabric hanging from the knot?
No, people don't wear these clothes. The gi is an artifact Asian fetishist TMA fags can't let go of
>>252999
Nah
Once again, gi avoid nogi because it's too hard
Nogi avoid gi because it's stupid
>>
>>
23 yrs old, 155 muscular af - only lifting last two years. Going to the best camp in my city, arguably best in the entire state. If I blast, go to every training. How quickly can I go from Day 1 Beginner to Blue Belt(thinking Josh Saunders)
>>
>>
>>
>>253087
> there is something to the things he's saying
There is but who cares. Couch did flip out and tear a bunch of his medals off the wall at the gym and threaten to burn his house down (but didn't)
Gordon Ryan does have people fuck his girlfriend (that old bitch who just got a DUI) while he watches including his younger brother.
Oh no jiu jitsu people sold weed! One of them was in the Mongols! One of them took the condom off when he fucked a chick two decades ago!
Yeah there's a lot of shitty scummy people in jiu jitsu. Like someone who was against steroids while doing them and lying about it who also threatened to kill people numerous times including a 12 year old boy. And then kidnapped his sister's dogs during a manic episode. I'm talking about Andrew if you aren't picking this up.
He's focused on the wrong things and not on getting himself better. No his brother isn't going to prison no his mom isn't going to prison, he thinks "everyone else is the problem but me" while he's become homeless from his actions.
>>
>>
>>253107
Stop eating carbs, farting and burping aren't normal things your body should be doing
The garbage you eat is fermenting in your gut and causing gas
Keep your carb intake below 50grams if you can but definitely below 100 per day and no more farting
>>
>>
>>
File: Farmerburnsfigure24fullnelson.jpg (10.5 KB)
10.5 KB JPG
What is the purpose of the full nelson?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: SmartSelect_20260111_013520_Google.jpg (305.1 KB)
305.1 KB JPG
It's pretty easily defended just by doing this with your own arms
It creates counter pressure exactly opposite the hood
The more they try to push your head forward the more it reinforces the structure of your arms and keeps your head supported
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>253463
It's harder to choke someone than bjj pretends
There are very few legitimate chokes, mostly what's happening is the person quits because it's obstructing their breathing enough that they just want out of the situation
>>
>>253463
RNCs are great but they are a bit overrated. The position itself is just so good. You can also stall the choke for a long time and escaping isn't that difficult unless the skill gap is massive.
But maybe this is me coping because I don't like taking the back that much.
>>
>>
So i basically bear hugged the back of a white belts neck from guard and it made him tap
I tried the same move on a blue belt and he didn't tap no matter how hard I thought I was crushing the back of his neck
Wtf. Is this a submission or not?
>>
>>253521
Did you do a Can Opener?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98iW2ahMPK0
I guess the blue belt framed or something. Maybe he was just more flexible. Can Openers are neck cranks and you won't make friends with them. While you are at it you might want to learn Morther's Milk.
>>
>>
File: images(3).jpg (18.6 KB)
18.6 KB JPG
>>253528
>>253534
No, I did this to the back of his neck whilst he was lying on top of me with his head on my chest. I increased pressure slowly, the white belt tapped after a while but the blue belt didn't
>>
>>
>>253535
Would put a forearm across your face and start pressing weight down and posturing until your grip releases then attack one of the now extended arms
This is pretty basic but everyone these days ignores jiujitsu fighting techniques and doesn't learn this stuff
>>
>>253507
>It's the highest percentage submission in both grappling and MMA
100% true but there is more to it. You get a lot of situations where your opponent has the dilemma of defending the submission and risk getting tapped or evading to a worse position but not getting tapped.
RNCs are at the end of this since there is no where else to run for the opponent once the back has been taken. There are also few non-meme alternatives outside of an RNC from the back so it is natural to go for it.
>Pass guard and get to side control
>Attack Americana
>Opponent defends by rolling to the side
>Take the back
>Go for RNC
In that case the Americana didn't get the tap but it absolutely led to getting into a position where you even managed to get an RNC in the first place.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
why is the standup in jiujitsu so gay and retarded? people just slapping collar ties or shooting with no setup. and i see this happening with higher level people and people with mma/wrestling experience so it's not only a skill issue. my theory is that it's because there is nothing incentivizing forward pressure which leads to people disengaging and backing up a lot in standup situations and hence no situations for setups. in wrestling you get points for pushouts and that should be the case in jiujitsu as well
>>
>>
>>
>>253735
-1 if you pull in ADCC, also nogi grapplers aren't as much of pussies as gi so they're willing to actually compete and not try to game the rules to a win, also ibjjf penalizes the person who got pushed out of bounds defending takedowns and not the one who pushes them put
Where ADCC doesn't have any restrictions on boundaries so in ibjjf its a detrement to stay on your feet too long
>>
>>253718
Combination of skill issue (quickly changing) and rule sets.
>long matches, so you can't be in a low stance and act too aggressively
>no shoes, so single legs can be hard to finish
>front headlock submissions, so a bad shot can result in a loss
I was pretty happy with how effective CJI addressed the pushout issue. So many bullshit ADCC resets and off-mat exchanges.
>>
One guy has been going 3-4 times a week for a year. He's a no stripe white belt
Another guy from a different gym goes only once a week and he's been going for half a year. He has been given a stripe on his white belt
I've rolled with both of them and felt they are both the same skill level
Does belt quality vary this much across gyms and instructors? Or is one stripe and no stripe arbitrary and doesn't really mean much?
>>
>>253763
Some gyms don't do stripes at all but yeah it varies, different gyms have different things they look for in promotions (total time spent training, consistency of training, being a good training partner, knowledge, application in rolls, comp results)
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>253763
Belts are arbitrary, stripes even more so. I've met black belts that barely know anything
>>253778
Wrestling
>>253779
Common issue at blue/white belt, when there is not a huge skill gap in the room. Either your technique is off or your training partners are too good for it.
>>253781
How bad would the fallout be if it didn't work out? Could you manage training in the same gym? What if she ends up with another person at the gym? (common)
>>
>>253763
>Or is one stripe and no stripe arbitrary and doesn't really mean much?
Pretty much no difference.
Belts are awarded diferently with some gyms simply handing them out, while others grant them under certain conditions.
White belt territory in particular is the Wild West. You have lots of guys that cross train in other martial arts and someone who did 8 years of Judo and Sambo before starting BJJ will have the upper hand against any pure BJJ white belt no matter how many stripes he has.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>253827
Its always interesting seeing the time capsule of what people in non-major jiujitsu hubs are experiencing
Maybe 10 years ago that was the case but nobody inverts or stack passes anymore
You're dealing with cultural lag, the current ways haven't gotten to you yet
>>
>>
>>253845
Passing on the knees is boomer shit
He never even would've been in position to get triangled if he wasn't down on his knees in the first place
The while scenario was artificial, because prior to that you could've just stood up any time you wanted but chose to lay on the floor so he chose to be on his knees in front of you
Neither one of you was pinning or holding down the other, you both just decided whelp it's time to lay on the floor now
When people don't go along with that gentleman's agreement to participate in jiujitsu the only way to pass them is to be on your feet so you can move quickly
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>253892
What does that have to do with jiujitsu?
In MMA in order to punch someone on the ground you'd need to get close by going to your knees
There's no punching in jiujitsu, there's no reason to do that
Side note 98/100 "submissions" you've seen in MMA are the result of fatigue not because they were actually caught with anything which circles back to my original point it's just lazy boomer circumstances
Out here tryna fight geriatric ass niggas too weak to stand on their own feet
>>
>>
>>253912
You haven't actually managed to refute the argument, bjj is universally agreed upon to be the woest base for MMA, not even a debate
Shifting back now to the topic, passing on the knees is fake, there's no reason to open the guard, and if you're on bottom you can just stand up and you're only getting stacked because you chose to lay on the floor
>>
I had someone grab my foot and twist it in bjj the other night and it made a horrendous snap, crackle and pop.
It has been swollen and bruised, but the swelling has gone down.
It's been nearly a week since it happened. My mum tells me to go to the hospital (it's free) but idk, what can they even do? Tell me I sprained it or that a ligament is broken and not train for a while?
Idk might go might not.
>>
>>
>>253921
If it was broken, you'd know. Same for snapped ligaments
It's probably just sprained, if you can walk on your own, but it's better to have it checked out just to be sure
Could you better describe what the other guy did?
>>
>>253923
Yeah I can walk on it fine. Doesn't hurt most of the time, just feels weaker than usual and a little pain if I jolt or knock it. It hurt on the evening I did it when I got home.
I took this guys back and had a RNC on him and my feet that I was using as hooks on his legs, he just grabbed one and basically gave me a toe hold, like grabbed my ankle with one hand and my toes with the other and twisted it. I think he twisted it so the toes go outwards (right foot clockwise) it made multiple little clicks and one big pop
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>253960
>is there like a neuroscientific reason bjj is so addicting?
Wrestling and grappling itself is simply fun. Full contact sparring is always great. You exercise your whole body and a lot of adrenaline is released.
>my friend said this level of obsession lasts for about a year and then slowly subsides
I have a lot of fun 7 years in as my game plan finally comes together. There were some low points for me but the feeling of it all clicking feels great. Still mess up a lot of times but rolling with skilled opponents becomes more and more tactical.
>>
>>253967
>>253960
This is going to sound really lame but rolling with people for the first time felt afterwards almost like a religious experience, my brain felt different before I fell asleep that night like I was processing the first truly novel experience I had in a long time . Its very primal and people are afraid of contact and social situations and since I started training I feel a lot calmer and give less of a fuck about stuff that would have sent me to a place of anxiety and anger before. I think certain types of goal and competition oriented people who like to roughhouse (as a child I didn't have the opportunity for this) will become addicted to bjj
Most people will never have a fight or grapple someone. That's very sad imo
>>
>>253960
Enrichment, escapism, novelty
I never really found it to be fun though, I was doing it as a necessity. I got into it in my 20s, I had already been striking for 12 years by that point so I never felt the things that get people hooked
It was the same activity I'd already been doing but with different rules how to play
I think a big part of the draw is for a lot of men it's babbies first martial art or they were doing karate and punching the air so they get easily indoctrinated
>>253970
Yeah that sounded really lame
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
I believe I possess a superhuman resistance to strangulation, how do I find a gym to test this without them trying to send me to the psych ward? I don't want to spend a month working my way up to blood-choke-inclusive sparring, I want to get in, do my experiment, and get out on the same day. Should I expect to have to contact them ahead of time (I'd rather not so as to give them as little information as possible) or will many gyms just let you walk in?
>>
>>
>>254121
Idk how thin my neck is compared to the average for my height but I can strangle myself with both stick and cord, feel the blood choke in the form of tinnitus, tightness in the face and some other symptoms (air choke as well for stick, i’ve held my breath for comparison & know it’s both a blood and air choke), and yet stay conscious way longer than should be possible. Many dead man’s switches rely on people letting go of things upon falling unconscious so while garroting myself isn’t the safest thing in the world killing myself on accident is not the most likely outcome of falling unconscious.
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: steven seagal.jpg (56.5 KB)
56.5 KB JPG
>I believe I possess a superhuman resistance to strangulation, how do I find a gym to test this without them trying to send me to the psych ward? I don't want to spend a month working my way up to blood-choke-inclusive sparring, I want to get in, do my experiment, and get out on the same day. Should I expect to have to contact them ahead of time (I'd rather not so as to give them as little information as possible) or will many gyms just let you walk in?
>Idk how thin my neck is compared to the average for my height but I can strangle myself with both stick and cord, feel the blood choke in the form of tinnitus, tightness in the face and some other symptoms (air choke as well for stick, i’ve held my breath for comparison & know it’s both a blood and air choke), and yet stay conscious way longer than should be possible. Many dead man’s switches rely on people letting go of things upon falling unconscious so while garroting myself isn’t the safest thing in the world killing myself on accident is not the most likely outcome of falling unconscious.
>>
>>
>>254236
None atm. Got ringworm once from a shitty jeet-infested apartment gym, and staph from a shitty bjj gym with the puzzle-piece flooring that was likely never cleaned. Ringworm was way more annoying since it grew with humidity.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>254606
I shower immediately after training in the gym showers
Just got a scare because I thought I had a wart appear on my finger immediately after a nogi session where we were pulling away the opponents foot during back takes. But I think it turned out to be some dry skin
>>
>>
>>
>>254637
I wont train anywhere without working showers. I'd rather not train than have to go home covered in other people's disgusting sweat
What's worrying is I'm basically the only one who showers afterwards. Everyone else fucks off covered in dirt
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: 18x24_Mesh_Bags__24872.jpg (140.9 KB)
140.9 KB JPG
>>254702
I ordered the blue ones from laundrybags.com
>>
>>
>>
>>254766
>Can I learn to do a series of moves on my partner that will look really impressive and cool and brutal to onlookers but cause minimal harm to both of us?
Literally what chokes are. People think they are highly dangerous but actually the safest move you can pull.
>>
>>
>>254827
Chokes are very safe because you can not accidentally overkill (unless you are incredibly unlucky) like with punches, kicks or throws. Compared to most locks you also don't have the possibility to ruin joints.
Chokes visually look highly brutal but in comparison are one of the safest things you can do in a fight.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>254954
She let go of the triangle when she had it all but locked in, then when he got off her, she tried to do some weird inversion shit (which, to be fair, could work if she did it right and swept him to the ground immediately, even though it's obviously dangerous as fuck) instead of standing up and getting away from him
People need to realize that not everything they do in class has a 1:1 carryover to "the streetz"
>>
>>
>by applying even a gentle pressure to the prime meridians along the sides of the neck a Brazilian Jiu-jitsu practitioner is able to render their opponent unconscious in a matter of seconds, regardless of their opponent’s size or strength.
Do you people actually believe this shit?
>>
>>
>>
>small class with 2 black belts
>drilling guillotine
>get paired up with one of the black belts
>nice guy, bit of a joker
>get into position
>he taps immediately
>leg go
>he blows raspberries
>haha very funny
>he asks what happened
>yeah right good one bro
>other black belt talks to him
>he was actually out for a second
Wew lad