@kanguesso I think its more of Helio's side that thinks that BJJ has no weaknesses. A good number of people from Carlos' side have crossed trained in other styles. In the Carlson vs Waldemar Santana fight, Carlson is throwing kicks & punches.
Rolls Gracie trained in traditional judo, wrestling, & sambo. Renzo, Rolles, Carlson Jr., & Kyra have trained in and/or earned black belts in judo. Many have added muay Thai to their schools curriculum. Carlos' side seems a bit more open minded.
@migraine516 In theory yes.I'm a judo player and i have rolled in bjj classes and always find that they tend to go straight to their backs when i go to pin them.What i am saying is that in a real fight the last place you want to be is on your back and judo training installs this in you whereas bjj players to often fall straight onto their backs instead of trying to gain the on top advantage.
That was Luis Heredia!
SuperSneakySteve 7 months ago
what show is this from
Greatsocratesghost 1 year ago
That was a guard pass, not a leg lock.
theron1n 1 year ago 2
@theron1n yep, i was about to post the same
Tappedurassout 3 months ago
it hasnt led to any increased emphasis on striking as bjj contains no striking
billysue2 1 year ago
@billysue2 I agree with you and that's where it's biggest weakness lies. But don't tell that to a Gracie as they believe BJJ has no "Weaknesses".
kanguesso 11 months ago
@kanguesso I think its more of Helio's side that thinks that BJJ has no weaknesses. A good number of people from Carlos' side have crossed trained in other styles. In the Carlson vs Waldemar Santana fight, Carlson is throwing kicks & punches.
Rolls Gracie trained in traditional judo, wrestling, & sambo. Renzo, Rolles, Carlson Jr., & Kyra have trained in and/or earned black belts in judo. Many have added muay Thai to their schools curriculum. Carlos' side seems a bit more open minded.
barrettokarate 8 months ago
@billysue2 ....BJJ's greatest strength is that it allows you to always gain the superior position, so you can strike effectively.
migraine516 11 months ago
@migraine516 In theory yes.I'm a judo player and i have rolled in bjj classes and always find that they tend to go straight to their backs when i go to pin them.What i am saying is that in a real fight the last place you want to be is on your back and judo training installs this in you whereas bjj players to often fall straight onto their backs instead of trying to gain the on top advantage.
MrHadenough996 10 months ago