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One is Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and the other is Japanese Jiu Jitsu
I wish there was a dislike button you cheeky rascal
One is Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and the other is Japanese Jiu Jitsu
So apparently JJJ is mostly geared towards learning self-defense techniques rather than sports competition.It is insane how the bjj people shit on jj!
Traditional Japanese Jujitsu is practically useless in an actual fight. People just give it a lot of respect because it has the word "jujitsu" in it and Judo/BJJ gets its lineage from it. It's the training methodology more than the techniques that make Judo/BJJ superior. and Judo/BJJ gets its lineage from it.
What the fuck is that on a first page google? Send out Sakuraba again! Slaughter them all! The bjj trademarkers are disgusting and everyone is beating up slimy Gracies left and right! BJJ as a trademark needs to die. What the fuck did bbj ever do to jj?
Sorry! I made it confusing getting into a drunken rage. What you read was what google tells you if you search for jj instead of bjj. It is all bullshit!So apparently JJJ is mostly geared towards learning self-defense techniques rather than sports competition.
If by actual fight you mean a street fight, why would a system of self-defense techniques be practically useless?
If you meant to say BJJ is practically useless in a real fight, though, I think Ryan Hall and Polyana Viana would beg to differ
Alexey Oleynik is a Black Belt in it, and has 46 Submissions on his record...so he must have learnt a thing or two
And the practitioners always suck.Japanese Jujitsu is taught everywhere. Before BJJ became popular it was just called Jujitsu(or Jiu-jitsu)
a lot of the ones that say they're meant for the street basically means that they aren't regularly tested in actual competition since people aren't getting in street fights regularly(and likely wouldn't be fighting trained competition)So apparently JJJ is mostly geared towards learning self-defense techniques rather than sports competition.
If by actual fight you mean a street fight, why would a system of self-defense techniques be practically useless?
If you meant to say BJJ is practically useless in a real fight, though, I think Ryan Hall and Polyana Viana would beg to differ
The reason is that it's not a combat sport, it's a martial art, and UFC fighters are training for a combat sport.Japanese Jiu Jitsu is mostly a McDojo art. Now I’m sure that someone who’s never trained before will come out and tell me they know some guy and it’s effective but there’s a reason why fighters largely aren’t training it.
I trained in it in the 70s, and have used it to great effect in real life situations. The techniques and philosophy don't really fit well with organized MMA. One of the things I learned that has stay with me even though I'm getting too old to fight, is strategy. My sensei earned his title/belts in Japan, no McDojo.Japanese Jiu Jitsu is mostly a McDojo art. Now I’m sure that someone who’s never trained before will come out and tell me they know some guy and it’s effective but there’s a reason why fighters largely aren’t training it.
I trained in it in the 70s, and have used it to great effect in real life situations. The techniques and philosophy don't really fit well with organized MMA. One of the things I learned that has stay with me even though I'm getting too old to fight, is strategy. My sensei earned his title/belts in Japan, no McDojo.
Japanese Jujitsu is taught everywhere. Before BJJ became popular it was just called Jujitsu(or Jiu-jitsu)
I wonder if there was a different style of JJJ taught in Russia/Ukraine...one more blended with sambo and better suited to MMA? Oleg Taktarov also studied JJ along with judo/sambo. No one in the U.S. from a JJJ background had the submission skills that Oleg or Oleynik were demonstrating in the 1990s.Alexey Oleynik is a Black Belt in it, and has 46 Submissions on his record...so he must have learnt a thing or two