Rhadi Ferguson Judo Match arm break.flv
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All Comments (149)
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@JRR12100 I am sorry Keyboard Samurai I disagree with your comment. Have a nice day.
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@wolfhammer2010 hey retard, he was in that hold for about half a second. can you think that fast to tap?
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@sylverdrag this may be 3 months ago but i couldn't help but say i agree completely. Unfortunately not many other people will, cuz everyone is so bent on winning that this is acceptable. This is not what Judo was intended to be like.
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That was bull shite he fuck up his arm. Race had something to do with it
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that was fuckin slick. i didnt even see that comin... damn. n it was tight as fuck. fuckin perfect right there.
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silly black man
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@americanbadass911 If by "able" you mean "allowed", then the answer is "of course". Where do you think those submissions come from in the first place?
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@mjm05010 If something crack, you can feel it. Not letting go immediately is not acceptable behavior, and I don't care what the competition is. An accident, perhaps - I still don't think he should have gone this hard. Holding after the elbow popped however...
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@sylverdrag I don't do the belly down arm bar, 'cause its very difficult to do it "nicely". The way he had it, had he not gone right for it, he could have easily lost it. At a high bb level, in competition, you enter knowing that this outcome is possible. That said, from the video there did seem to be quite a bit of ego on both their parts, that lead to the break. I feel that he was in the right to crank as he did, but the video doesn't make clear what level of sportsmanship he displayed after.
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@wolfhammer2010 This is not what happened here: The other guy never had a chance to tap, as Rhadi pulled real hard immediately. Great technique, but it was careless and violates the spirit of Judo. Playing to win is one thing, going full strengh on an armbar sucks. big time.
This issue I find happening in many grappling compeitions is that an opponent will choose not to tap due to submission and rather try to fight the submission. Many breaks happen because of this stubborn mentality. I have competed with individuals who choose not to tuck there chin and accept the throw. They try to "kip" out of the throw and end up busting the forehead open on the mat. Its only a game. Leave your ego at home and keep your body entact.
wolfhammer2010 1 year ago 7
An armbar is designed to snap the arm at the joint so he exacuted the move perfectly. If he were to hold back on the move his opponent could have got out of it and he may lose the match so you can't really blame him for doing his job.
Saif434 1 year ago 3