even though spreading your legs abit is not a big issue i would advice you to keep both your legs within the with of the uke,,, sry for fail english gj btw hope you passed
nice, Thedrock420 is obviously an expert in jiu jitsu, and likes to let people know this, you did good, keep training, one day you might be as good as drock,
P.S i know what the 420 means so it explains a lot
the bald guy uses his upper body too much thats why he got beat during sparring. he should try bending his knees more when throwing to lower your center of mass and produce more torque.
@mattperry65, Have you ever trained in Japanese jiu jitsu , I think your far wrong and ignorant in what your last comment, it all depends in the person i.e some people will feel comfortable in apply locks and throws in which they would use in street situations, i train in Japanese jiu jitsu and we are a full contact club, so less of the nonsense talk.
@mattperry65, Have you ever trained in Japanese jiu jitsu , I think your far wrong and ignorant in what your last comment, it all depends in the person i.e some people will feel comfortable in apply locks and throws in which they would use in street situations, i train in Japanese jiu jitsu and we are a full contact club, so less of the nonsense talk
Where is the lineage??? Ryu Ju Jutsu disappeared over 100 years ago, so WHO passed this down? ANSWER: NO ONE! Ju Jutsu NEVER included striking. Traditional Japanese Ju Jutsu?? NOT. Carlos Gracie was taught Ryu Ju Jutsu and Judo. He and his younger brothers, especially Helio Gracie transformed it, and it continues to evolve into what is now known as BJJ. Maeda did not teach BJJ because it took decades to make it Brazillian Jiu Jitsu. Show me the pedigree and lineage and I'll admit I'm wrong!
@herbiesnerd Okay, while Koryu Jujutsu did not put an emphsis on striking(atemi-waza) as much as grappling, it did include atemi waza as part of its curriculum, and Takenouchi Ryu is the oldest koryu Jujutsu school currently in existence, dating back to 1532. Kodokan Judo also has stirking, otherwise, the term "atemi waza" wouldn't be needed. Carlos Gracie learned Judo from Mitsuyo Maeda, who was trained by Judo founder Jigoro Kano. Maeda had also studied Sumo, but never took Koryu Jujutsu.
Good grading similar to ours but with minor differences but hey it's all good , can't believe the diagreements on here judo bjj and jujitsu are one and the same they all derive from one art , judo is all traditional jj made safer by Kano to great effect and bjj was created by a judoka going to brazil . If you have actually trained in them all you will see the similarities , some should stop being 1 dimensional and see the bigger picture
I actually sparred with some traditional jui jitsu guys the other day,and I gotta say I have a new respect for trad jui jitsu,the guys were better on the ground than I expected,I do however think Bjj is better in that area but I deffianately have more respect for trad jui jitsu
People make me laugh who think that Bjj is just about going to the ground,you can take someone down quite effectively and break there limbs it doesn't take that long,Bjj and judo are probably 2 of the most effective martial arts on the street there is,put those with boxing and that's a pretty lethal combination,as for Japanese jui jitsu don't make me laugh!
@colby7538 go n wank urself off to the last samurai in ur gi ya prick! And Ticosexy whatever the hell ur name is I really didn't understand that sentence? I am a fan of mma yes,naturally tap out no,I do judo and Bjj the only people who would be tappin r the guys who study this garbage
thats not the traditional japanese jiu jitsu i was taught. seems like it was really commercialised. then again, my instructor was taught by a ex japanese military guy....
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
I personally think Japanese or traditional ju jitsu the way it is taught is a complete waste of time,sparring with a none resisting opponent is useless it teaches u how to do some nice locks n throws but in reality against a fully resisting opponent u wouldn't be able to do the majority of it,judo or bjj is 100 times better,ur constantly sparring with a fully resisting opponent,which gives u great grappling skills and alot more confidence in a real life situation,this to me is a waste of time,j
@matperry65 There is lots of sparring in traditional jiu jitsu, watch a sport jiu jitsu match. These techniques in testing are merely how you learn the basics. Judo and BJJ both came from traditional JJ.
@matperry65 im a blue belt in this and look THERE GRADING FOR THER YELLOW BELT... wen i did my grading they got the biggest guy there to lift me up (cuz im only 147 lbs he was 280) and start pushing me around and i neck cranked him theyr not gunna expect that for someone goign for there yellow. Also dont judge a fighting style until youve done it for a long time, its like the same at the gym dont judge someones workout until youve done. one more thing no art is greater than another there equal.
@matperry65 right so let me get something straight when you're attacked or in a fight on the street you're going to go down on the ground and leave yourself wide open for another guy to plant a kick straight into your face......great plan doud.If you ask me judo or bjj is purely a competition sport i know because my friend got the shit bet out of him when he used bjj, a second guy ran over and started to kick him in the face (because he was on the ground doing a lock on a guy who attacked him.
@matperry65 Training in the kata of jujutsu gives one a deep understanding of theory. A deep understanding of theory allows one to have more various in application. The kata preserve techniques and allow them to be taught from one generation to the next. Jujutsu also does free sparing. However, if one trains in only free sparing then that person will have far less understanding of theory and will have a harder time teaching the next generation.
@matperry65 Ok, well when you get into a fight with somebody who knows ju jitsu, then you can judge. Watch another video of ju jitsu throws ad you will see why it's useful. The whole point of Ju jitsu is to use your opponents strength against them. Weather they are resisting or not, if they throw a punch or kick, there will be a lock or throw you can use to counter it perfectly. If they resist, it will hurt them more. It is a very, very effective way to deal with a confrontation on the street.
man these are the stupid "McDojo" schools that take your money and dont teach you shit. they dont really care for your wellbeing. best way to go is with an underground trainer . i take private lessons and only pay $100 a month which is pretty good considering those gracie guys charge a lot more. I get the individual attention too. and it takes me a lot longer to get my belt because my instructor doesnt want to give me a false sense of confidence by just handing me a belt.
HI, Blackshinobi is right, you should bring your feet together, if you had that during sparing you could trow him, just a tip from a green belt jiu jitsukaXD
looks totally different to my yellow belt exam... our school does traditional(locks, throws, counters eetc), with some ground work appreciation as sensei calls it.... but i only recognized one escape from a ground strangle in those techniques.... and we were told our hip throws should be done by rotating anti clockwise(from head punch) until back is against opponents front, legs together n knees bent, then use the legs to lever opponent up and round your hips. interesting differences though....
looks totally different to my yellow belt exam... our school does traditional(locks, throws, counters eetc), with some ground work appreciation as sensei calls it.... but i only recognized one escape from a ground strangle in those techniques.... and we were told our hip throws should be done by rotating anti clockwise(from head punch) until back is against opponents front, legs together n knees bent, then use the legs to lever opponent up and round your hips. interesting differences though....
shouldnt 1:50 be a body drop throw since the 2nd back strangle escape is a hip throw its cool to see differant techniques since at my dojo we defend from the same attacks but the technique is more complex and usefull but this is still a good style
@TheDRock420 Doesn't look that way to me. Especially when it came time for sparring. When you widened your stance for a hip throw, but since your hips aren't stable enough to become a fulcrum for the hipthrow. He easily countered you. Now maybe if you were doing a throw like Tai otoshi. That would be a nice stance to take while throwing, but even then you still want a stable leg to stand on. With that stance you have no leverage to throw, since you can barely support your own weight.
@BlackShinobiShozoku there was no hip throw attempt in the sparring. I forget the name of the throw I was even attempting, i just didn't go at it fast enough, learned it like the day before. are you seriously suggesting with your legs shoulder width you can just barely support your own weight?
@TheDRock420 Your legs were more than shoulder width. And it's better to have them closer. It looked like you attempted the same Koshi Nage in this video /watch?v=NxlU0_7TkXI
But since you spreaded your legs past his. Your hip was no longer a fulcrum and you stopped him with your body. That is what it looked like to me. You would of had to be super strong to pull it off at that point.
@TheDRock420 what al lame excuse that you coulnd't preform the hip throw properly becauce you learnt it the day before, i needed to preform a thow i never did before at my yellow exame and i've done it right and you have enough support whit your legs shoulder width for your own weight and your opponents
Thats not true. for all hipthrows you must have a shoulderwhite stance, because of balance, specially in sparring! when you have your legs together its so easy to counter you with any legsweep like ashi barai. look at older videos from masters like hirano or mifune, they have NEVER their feets together!
Actually it is true... you want your legs supporting your hips.
/watch?v=nrzxjDcsbL4
Please watch that demonstration from a Judoka Black Belt.
You do not want your stance wide like displayed in this video or you won't have any support to the hips. Now maybe if he decides to go into Tai Otoshi with it... That will be different story.
In regards to the hip throw, you're absolutely right with them being shoulder width, but you widen yours a little too much so it's more of a horse stance. Keep it at, and try not to bend over when you throw, because when you get a stage five clinger in a real fight, he(or she!) can easily pull you over with their momentum and weight. Keep your back as straight as possible!
Been studying for eleven years myself, and still learning new things every day. =)
hey awsome clip dude i study traditional japanese jui jitsu myself its cool to see a similiar style on youtube with the majority being bjj.our gradingds are similiar aswell with all the breakfalls and single and double arm lapell break outs very kul man cheers for posting
well done! my grading was very different no ground work and fewer throws but lots more in the way of wrist locks and strikes to vital parts of the body. good to see what over types of ju jitsu are up to :) oss
@unianthony All depends on the school, some include the orange belt syllabus into the yellow belt exam since the orange has a lot to it. Definately isn't Brazilian as I train in that also.
It may be possible but highly unlikely, traditional "Jiu-Jitsu" is not strictly ground oriented. If a person trained exclusively in Kosen Judo the answer would be yes if they dedicated their time and energy. It is primarily a ground based form of Judo not usually taught outside of Japan.
@infojanitor You are completely stupid, I have trained in "traditional Jiu jitsu here in Australia for year, it is NOT a ground oriented martial art at ALL. Please, if you have NO idea what you're talking about, DON'T POST
@MAlimurung Again depends on the school. Some schools do a lot of ground work, especially with the popularity of MMA, some stick exclusively to throws and locks. We tend to do a bit of everything at my school. The gym itself is a Muay Thai/ MMA gym so there are classes for Muay Thai, BJJ, Japanese Jiu Jitsu and Boxing.
I do this every Tuesday night it's great glad I started doing it again I got my yellow belt 2 years ago I could be orange by now :L
TylerLav118118 1 week ago
even though spreading your legs abit is not a big issue i would advice you to keep both your legs within the with of the uke,,, sry for fail english gj btw hope you passed
TheObelix876 1 month ago
the art of falling!
hoodstarx1 1 month ago
if this is traditional jj why are you using a blue gi?
drux186 2 months ago
That dojo is huge compared to mine! Nice job though, fun to watch =)
purpleponiez414 3 months ago
i do brazilian jiu jitsu
GoArmy23100 3 months ago
order of ranking ?
blusuck 4 months ago
nice, Thedrock420 is obviously an expert in jiu jitsu, and likes to let people know this, you did good, keep training, one day you might be as good as drock,
P.S i know what the 420 means so it explains a lot
musubironin 4 months ago
i watched only 20 seconds: WHY do you stand up WITHOUT using your hands? You can easily be thrown off balance by a five year old...
Nittarwor 6 months ago
Notice the Illegal Throat and groin strikes. Street practicality at it's finest. TMA's, this is what they were built for.
HairofSteel555 6 months ago
Filipino Flag on the back !! <3
jocelianne 8 months ago 3
This has been flagged as spam show
Respod to this video ...
Take a look my club's videos : . Our Jiu Jitsu club is from Serbia, and we train traditional jiu jitsu ...
dusankrang 8 months ago
the bald guy uses his upper body too much thats why he got beat during sparring. he should try bending his knees more when throwing to lower your center of mass and produce more torque.
capitandelfuego 8 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@mattperry65, Have you ever trained in Japanese jiu jitsu , I think your far wrong and ignorant in what your last comment, it all depends in the person i.e some people will feel comfortable in apply locks and throws in which they would use in street situations, i train in Japanese jiu jitsu and we are a full contact club, so less of the nonsense talk.
scotsdavy 9 months ago
@mattperry65, Have you ever trained in Japanese jiu jitsu , I think your far wrong and ignorant in what your last comment, it all depends in the person i.e some people will feel comfortable in apply locks and throws in which they would use in street situations, i train in Japanese jiu jitsu and we are a full contact club, so less of the nonsense talk
scotsdavy 9 months ago
Congratulations!
dorianizm 9 months ago
Where is the lineage??? Ryu Ju Jutsu disappeared over 100 years ago, so WHO passed this down? ANSWER: NO ONE! Ju Jutsu NEVER included striking. Traditional Japanese Ju Jutsu?? NOT. Carlos Gracie was taught Ryu Ju Jutsu and Judo. He and his younger brothers, especially Helio Gracie transformed it, and it continues to evolve into what is now known as BJJ. Maeda did not teach BJJ because it took decades to make it Brazillian Jiu Jitsu. Show me the pedigree and lineage and I'll admit I'm wrong!
herbiesnerd 9 months ago
@herbiesnerd Okay, while Koryu Jujutsu did not put an emphsis on striking(atemi-waza) as much as grappling, it did include atemi waza as part of its curriculum, and Takenouchi Ryu is the oldest koryu Jujutsu school currently in existence, dating back to 1532. Kodokan Judo also has stirking, otherwise, the term "atemi waza" wouldn't be needed. Carlos Gracie learned Judo from Mitsuyo Maeda, who was trained by Judo founder Jigoro Kano. Maeda had also studied Sumo, but never took Koryu Jujutsu.
44excalibur 8 months ago
@44excalibur Thank you!
herbiesnerd 8 months ago
Comment removed
bigmanoooo1 5 months ago
m8 there is no japanese jiu jitsu, just put it into ur head, there is jiujitsu all everything are variations
alezyz 9 months ago
Good grading similar to ours but with minor differences but hey it's all good , can't believe the diagreements on here judo bjj and jujitsu are one and the same they all derive from one art , judo is all traditional jj made safer by Kano to great effect and bjj was created by a judoka going to brazil . If you have actually trained in them all you will see the similarities , some should stop being 1 dimensional and see the bigger picture
gerardjohn123 9 months ago
I actually sparred with some traditional jui jitsu guys the other day,and I gotta say I have a new respect for trad jui jitsu,the guys were better on the ground than I expected,I do however think Bjj is better in that area but I deffianately have more respect for trad jui jitsu
matperry65 9 months ago
People make me laugh who think that Bjj is just about going to the ground,you can take someone down quite effectively and break there limbs it doesn't take that long,Bjj and judo are probably 2 of the most effective martial arts on the street there is,put those with boxing and that's a pretty lethal combination,as for Japanese jui jitsu don't make me laugh!
matperry65 10 months ago
@colby7538 go n wank urself off to the last samurai in ur gi ya prick! And Ticosexy whatever the hell ur name is I really didn't understand that sentence? I am a fan of mma yes,naturally tap out no,I do judo and Bjj the only people who would be tappin r the guys who study this garbage
matperry65 10 months ago
thats not the traditional japanese jiu jitsu i was taught. seems like it was really commercialised. then again, my instructor was taught by a ex japanese military guy....
Daedalus294 11 months ago
@Daedalus294
JJ is varied from place to place each dojo has it's own unique spin on techniques
Konartwist 10 months ago
philippine flag lol
theniceAZNguy1 1 year ago
Good exam!
PoopClown 1 year ago
Thanks for posting this video!
yyekcim 1 year ago
The Higher the belt, the more resistance. This is a solid exam
kalsion 1 year ago
Good job. Looks solid for yellow belt.
mbattlecoder 1 year ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
I personally think Japanese or traditional ju jitsu the way it is taught is a complete waste of time,sparring with a none resisting opponent is useless it teaches u how to do some nice locks n throws but in reality against a fully resisting opponent u wouldn't be able to do the majority of it,judo or bjj is 100 times better,ur constantly sparring with a fully resisting opponent,which gives u great grappling skills and alot more confidence in a real life situation,this to me is a waste of time,j
matperry65 1 year ago
@matperry65 There is lots of sparring in traditional jiu jitsu, watch a sport jiu jitsu match. These techniques in testing are merely how you learn the basics. Judo and BJJ both came from traditional JJ.
TheDRock420 1 year ago 12
@TheDRock420 are you sure Judo came from jujitsu?
JESUSISGREATEST 10 months ago
@JESUSISGREATEST Where else?
ticosexy22 10 months ago
@TheDRock420 Do you know of an insturctional dvd of traditional Jiu-jitsi? I keep on looking for
one in all I find is B.J.J.
ken162008 3 months ago
@matperry65 Your so fuckin ignorant shut up
colby7538 1 year ago 4
@matperry65 im a blue belt in this and look THERE GRADING FOR THER YELLOW BELT... wen i did my grading they got the biggest guy there to lift me up (cuz im only 147 lbs he was 280) and start pushing me around and i neck cranked him theyr not gunna expect that for someone goign for there yellow. Also dont judge a fighting style until youve done it for a long time, its like the same at the gym dont judge someones workout until youve done. one more thing no art is greater than another there equal.
ForsakenedPain 11 months ago
@matperry65 HAHAHAHA MMA fan don't you?, naturally, tap out kid
ticosexy22 10 months ago
@matperry65 right so let me get something straight when you're attacked or in a fight on the street you're going to go down on the ground and leave yourself wide open for another guy to plant a kick straight into your face......great plan doud.If you ask me judo or bjj is purely a competition sport i know because my friend got the shit bet out of him when he used bjj, a second guy ran over and started to kick him in the face (because he was on the ground doing a lock on a guy who attacked him.
BinaryBandit628 10 months ago
@matperry65 Training in the kata of jujutsu gives one a deep understanding of theory. A deep understanding of theory allows one to have more various in application. The kata preserve techniques and allow them to be taught from one generation to the next. Jujutsu also does free sparing. However, if one trains in only free sparing then that person will have far less understanding of theory and will have a harder time teaching the next generation.
koryubugei 9 months ago
@matperry65 shut up rude cunt
EllyEri96 9 months ago
@matperry65 I'm a brown belt in Japanese Jujitsu and you definitely have to do full strength randori with each other later on in the belts.
Viktir666 9 months ago
Traditional jiu jitsu is meant for killing its not a sport t@matperry65
eza1 9 months ago
@matperry65 yeah you should really hire 2-3 thugs to try and kill you for an hour each day... lol
dorianizm 9 months ago
@matperry65 lol i guess you have never heard of randori then?
bigmanoooo1 5 months ago
@matperry65 Ok, well when you get into a fight with somebody who knows ju jitsu, then you can judge. Watch another video of ju jitsu throws ad you will see why it's useful. The whole point of Ju jitsu is to use your opponents strength against them. Weather they are resisting or not, if they throw a punch or kick, there will be a lock or throw you can use to counter it perfectly. If they resist, it will hurt them more. It is a very, very effective way to deal with a confrontation on the street.
2rok334 2 months ago
@matperry65 it worked in hundreds of years for the Samurais plus i've once befor got my ass kicked by a ju jitsu White belt.
ShadowIrOnIcz 2 months ago
2:36 what throw is that?
eman6538 1 year ago
man these are the stupid "McDojo" schools that take your money and dont teach you shit. they dont really care for your wellbeing. best way to go is with an underground trainer . i take private lessons and only pay $100 a month which is pretty good considering those gracie guys charge a lot more. I get the individual attention too. and it takes me a lot longer to get my belt because my instructor doesnt want to give me a false sense of confidence by just handing me a belt.
Daedalus294 1 year ago
@Daedalus294 damn maybe someday ill be able to afford private lessons
jcracker 11 months ago
HI, Blackshinobi is right, you should bring your feet together, if you had that during sparing you could trow him, just a tip from a green belt jiu jitsukaXD
it6me 1 year ago
this shit just blows compared to bjj
fabe169 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
looks totally different to my yellow belt exam... our school does traditional(locks, throws, counters eetc), with some ground work appreciation as sensei calls it.... but i only recognized one escape from a ground strangle in those techniques.... and we were told our hip throws should be done by rotating anti clockwise(from head punch) until back is against opponents front, legs together n knees bent, then use the legs to lever opponent up and round your hips. interesting differences though....
framac77 1 year ago
looks totally different to my yellow belt exam... our school does traditional(locks, throws, counters eetc), with some ground work appreciation as sensei calls it.... but i only recognized one escape from a ground strangle in those techniques.... and we were told our hip throws should be done by rotating anti clockwise(from head punch) until back is against opponents front, legs together n knees bent, then use the legs to lever opponent up and round your hips. interesting differences though....
framac77 1 year ago
What lineage of Japanese Jujutsu is this?
BlackShinobiShozoku 1 year ago
shouldnt 1:50 be a body drop throw since the 2nd back strangle escape is a hip throw its cool to see differant techniques since at my dojo we defend from the same attacks but the technique is more complex and usefull but this is still a good style
dudesrock2 1 year ago
Where is that academy ?
TherealS4X5 1 year ago
why dont you have your feet together when doing hip throw ?
boris999222666 1 year ago 6
@boris999222666 Less stable that way, are supposed to be shoulder width
TheDRock420 1 year ago 2
@TheDRock420 Doesn't look that way to me. Especially when it came time for sparring. When you widened your stance for a hip throw, but since your hips aren't stable enough to become a fulcrum for the hipthrow. He easily countered you. Now maybe if you were doing a throw like Tai otoshi. That would be a nice stance to take while throwing, but even then you still want a stable leg to stand on. With that stance you have no leverage to throw, since you can barely support your own weight.
BlackShinobiShozoku 1 year ago
@BlackShinobiShozoku there was no hip throw attempt in the sparring. I forget the name of the throw I was even attempting, i just didn't go at it fast enough, learned it like the day before. are you seriously suggesting with your legs shoulder width you can just barely support your own weight?
TheDRock420 1 year ago
@TheDRock420 Your legs were more than shoulder width. And it's better to have them closer. It looked like you attempted the same Koshi Nage in this video /watch?v=NxlU0_7TkXI
But since you spreaded your legs past his. Your hip was no longer a fulcrum and you stopped him with your body. That is what it looked like to me. You would of had to be super strong to pull it off at that point.
BlackShinobiShozoku 1 year ago
@TheDRock420 Also btw, what lineage of Jujutsu is this?
What is your schools name?
BlackShinobiShozoku 1 year ago
@TheDRock420 what al lame excuse that you coulnd't preform the hip throw properly becauce you learnt it the day before, i needed to preform a thow i never did before at my yellow exame and i've done it right and you have enough support whit your legs shoulder width for your own weight and your opponents
MrAnimefreak153 6 months ago
@BlackShinobiShozoku
Thats not true. for all hipthrows you must have a shoulderwhite stance, because of balance, specially in sparring! when you have your legs together its so easy to counter you with any legsweep like ashi barai. look at older videos from masters like hirano or mifune, they have NEVER their feets together!
Heidenreich18 1 year ago
@Heidenreich18
Actually it is true... you want your legs supporting your hips.
/watch?v=nrzxjDcsbL4
Please watch that demonstration from a Judoka Black Belt.
You do not want your stance wide like displayed in this video or you won't have any support to the hips. Now maybe if he decides to go into Tai Otoshi with it... That will be different story.
BlackShinobiShozoku 1 year ago
@TheDRock420
In regards to the hip throw, you're absolutely right with them being shoulder width, but you widen yours a little too much so it's more of a horse stance. Keep it at, and try not to bend over when you throw, because when you get a stage five clinger in a real fight, he(or she!) can easily pull you over with their momentum and weight. Keep your back as straight as possible!
Been studying for eleven years myself, and still learning new things every day. =)
MykRedfield 8 months ago
@TheDRock420
Not what i've been taught? Obviously a little discrepancy is fine but in the video they are online with the Ukes which isn't the best way tbh
djeq721 1 day ago
Good job guys you should good heart when you were tired.
Keep up the good work!
Have fun.
KyleMac92109 1 year ago
hey awsome clip dude i study traditional japanese jui jitsu myself its cool to see a similiar style on youtube with the majority being bjj.our gradingds are similiar aswell with all the breakfalls and single and double arm lapell break outs very kul man cheers for posting
indistructable1 1 year ago
well done! my grading was very different no ground work and fewer throws but lots more in the way of wrist locks and strikes to vital parts of the body. good to see what over types of ju jitsu are up to :) oss
ZaphodUk1 1 year ago
wtf this is brazilian ......... japanese one is evan more difficult.
unianthony 1 year ago
@unianthony All depends on the school, some include the orange belt syllabus into the yellow belt exam since the orange has a lot to it. Definately isn't Brazilian as I train in that also.
TheDRock420 1 year ago
@unianthony This also isn't the entire test, was just a few parts of it, the test was 2 hours.
TheDRock420 1 year ago
does it mather what you wear? blue and white gi
BJJdenis 1 year ago
@BJJdenis Not really, all depends on the school.
TheDRock420 1 year ago
that backward roll was nuts
BloodXSweatXGuitars 1 year ago
No neck throws?
kegs666 1 year ago
It may be possible but highly unlikely, traditional "Jiu-Jitsu" is not strictly ground oriented. If a person trained exclusively in Kosen Judo the answer would be yes if they dedicated their time and energy. It is primarily a ground based form of Judo not usually taught outside of Japan.
infojanitor 1 year ago
@infojanitor You are completely stupid, I have trained in "traditional Jiu jitsu here in Australia for year, it is NOT a ground oriented martial art at ALL. Please, if you have NO idea what you're talking about, DON'T POST
Aussiecamper 1 year ago
@Aussiecamper Actually traditional japanese jujutsu does a lot of groundwork from seiza position.
BlackShinobiShozoku 1 year ago
Just in your opinion, do you think someone who trained exclusively in Japanese Jiu-Jitsu could have a pretty nasty ground game for MMA?
MAlimurung 1 year ago
@MAlimurung No
JKT6 1 year ago
@MAlimurung Again depends on the school. Some schools do a lot of ground work, especially with the popularity of MMA, some stick exclusively to throws and locks. We tend to do a bit of everything at my school. The gym itself is a Muay Thai/ MMA gym so there are classes for Muay Thai, BJJ, Japanese Jiu Jitsu and Boxing.
TheDRock420 1 year ago
Congrats! Keep going!
brandonscj 1 year ago