I saw something that looks just like this on tv, full contact but with no gloves and no punches to the head. anyone know what that is? seems intresting
jujitsu utalizes grappling and striking. brazilian jujitsu is submission grappling. real jujitsu fighters actually fight. these guys scrap like no other. mma evolved into a similar and arguably more effecent form of real jujitsu. jujitsu was invented by samurai to defeat armored opponents. "if i break this guys arm, he can't stab me" the armbar. jujitsu is the father of bjj, karate, judo, and a slew of other martial arts. you need to learn about real martial arts before criticizing them.
There is no correct way to pronounce something. Different languages and accents will produce different pronunciations naturally. In Brazil, it's joo-jeet-soo. In the US it's joo-jit-soo. Maybe in Japan it's pronounced juh-juht-soo like you seem to think it is, I don't know. It means the same thing and we can all understand that we mean when we say it.
@victordibono this is an open competition ruleset, not a style. There are fighters from multiple different disciplines in this video (including BJJ).
Most "real" jujitsu is fucking crap these days, it's a dead style for the most part. If you get a school that trains and fights like these guys do you're very lucky.
@iforippon actually I do train in a school that teaches specifically the combat format shown in the video. We do full judo curriculum, full contact karate (knockdown/kyokushin rules for sparring with shotokan techniques for belt gradings, no katas) and also some aikido locks for self defense scenarios (ikkyo, nikkyo, kote gaeshi and shiho nage mostly). Gradings are brutal because of the number of techniques. Injuries are very common. Approx. 3/4 of practicioners here are in military or police.
in real ju-jitsu you learn striking, locking, throwing, holding. Just cos the style of kicking/punching looks like another martial art, does not make it any less ju-jitsu; in many schools there is not a huge emphasis on striking (because it was originally meant to be used against armoured samurais - or nowadays, riot police lol), but it should be taught nonetheless because striking usually knocks people off their balance, even if not a KO
I saw something that looks just like this on tv, full contact but with no gloves and no punches to the head. anyone know what that is? seems intresting
veshkeat 1 year ago
It looks more like MMA than ju-jutsu
yoggli 2 years ago
jujitsu utalizes grappling and striking. brazilian jujitsu is submission grappling. real jujitsu fighters actually fight. these guys scrap like no other. mma evolved into a similar and arguably more effecent form of real jujitsu. jujitsu was invented by samurai to defeat armored opponents. "if i break this guys arm, he can't stab me" the armbar. jujitsu is the father of bjj, karate, judo, and a slew of other martial arts. you need to learn about real martial arts before criticizing them.
victordibono 2 years ago 5
@victordibono
You do realize it's pronounced Jujutsu?
BlackShinobiShozoku 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
"You do realize it's pronounced Jujutsu?"
.
There is no correct way to pronounce something. Different languages and accents will produce different pronunciations naturally. In Brazil, it's joo-jeet-soo. In the US it's joo-jit-soo. Maybe in Japan it's pronounced juh-juht-soo like you seem to think it is, I don't know. It means the same thing and we can all understand that we mean when we say it.
Ljenkins9000 1 year ago
@victordibono this is an open competition ruleset, not a style. There are fighters from multiple different disciplines in this video (including BJJ).
Most "real" jujitsu is fucking crap these days, it's a dead style for the most part. If you get a school that trains and fights like these guys do you're very lucky.
iforippon 1 year ago
@iforippon actually I do train in a school that teaches specifically the combat format shown in the video. We do full judo curriculum, full contact karate (knockdown/kyokushin rules for sparring with shotokan techniques for belt gradings, no katas) and also some aikido locks for self defense scenarios (ikkyo, nikkyo, kote gaeshi and shiho nage mostly). Gradings are brutal because of the number of techniques. Injuries are very common. Approx. 3/4 of practicioners here are in military or police.
IkkYgg 1 year ago
in real ju-jitsu you learn striking, locking, throwing, holding. Just cos the style of kicking/punching looks like another martial art, does not make it any less ju-jitsu; in many schools there is not a huge emphasis on striking (because it was originally meant to be used against armoured samurais - or nowadays, riot police lol), but it should be taught nonetheless because striking usually knocks people off their balance, even if not a KO
uberduke 2 years ago
yon can find it in a longer version on emule with same title
kakuto17 3 years ago
I saw a longer version of this video a few years ago, does anyone have it?
OMGFFSLOLBBQ 3 years ago
NiCe
pilladacz 3 years ago
good fights
olujja 3 years ago