Donkey,
I read about the first twenty six pages of this thread. Thanks, it's awesome.
You mentioned that Rolls and Rickson were two of the very best ever and that both personally cross-trained in BJJ, Judo, Sambo, Freestyle wrestling, and Greco Roman wrestling.
#1) You didn't mention if they trained in Catch wrestling. Wasn't Sakuraba a Catch wrestler? If so, do you think the failure to cross-train in Catch wrestling hurt their students (the ones that lost in Pride) and more generally the art of BJJ?
#2) Has BJJ since adapted to deal with Catch wrestling as it has adapted to deal with the other disciplines mentioned?
#3) Do you feel BJJ had a weakness at that time (the Pride era), or was it specifically poor match-ups (qualities of the individual fighters that made the difference)? For example, if it were Rickson who fought Sakuraba would BJJ have succeeded?
#4) Obviously we will never know as the fight didn't take place but has Rickson stated what BJJ techniques existed that the Gracie's failed to implement in their fights with Sakuraba, or did he admit that BJJ had a flaw that needed to be fixed?
I don't understand the big deal? Does he still claim to have an undefeated record?
2- There is no weakness in BJJ.
1. They didn`t. Actually, they were great rivals of the CACC descendant schools in Brazil, here named Luta-Livre. I believe that not cross-training helped make BJJ the art of the smaller man, by emphasizing position over submission. However a lot has been lost in terms of submissions such as neck cranks, and positions not usually found in judo, like many of those in CACC.
2- Nowadays grappling is grappling, thanks to the widespread competition against fully resisting partners and rules that favor any style, we see less and less distinction between styles and more and more plain grappling with whatever works.
2- There is no weakness in BJJ. Sakuraba is a genius. Possibly splits the title of greatest grappling genius to ever set foot on an MMA ring with Rickson and Nino Schembri, and Roger Gracie. Also, the only Gracie who was an actual grappling standout that Saku fought was a much smaller Royler. Renzo, Ryan, and Royce were good fighters in their own right, but none exceptional and none a grappling phenom. Saku, on the other hand, is nothing short of magnificent on the mat. It wasn't a match between styles so much as a match between fighters of unequal skill levels.
4- Rickson basically claims that any loss using BJJ is a loss caused by taking risks and leaving point zero. His belief in his ability to remain in a perfectly defensible position at all times until his opponent makes a mistake is why he believes he might have a chance against great fighters of today, including Fedor. As he says " I might not win, but I will not lose."
I enjoyed this thread so much that I put it in my Sherdog sig so everyone can come and see it.
So what does Rorion think of the other Gracies like Roger? Also what did Rickson think of Vitor? Was Vitor really adapted by Carlson? I heard he was going to be adapted by him in a book, but family problems and what not.
Say what!?!?!??!!?:icon_conf
SOE Jinn right here at Sherdog adds to Saku's lineage issue:
Karl Gotch, a Catch Wrestler, came to Japan and opened up a gym and had many famous Japanese students. His Japanese students started the Universal Wrestling Federation (UWF), Pancrease, and Shooto in Japan. Sakuraba can trace his influence back to these Japanese students of Karl Gotch.
I believe that's the connection. Saku can't be more than 2 generations away from Gotch himself.
I knew that would get some attention!
When I say there is no weakness in BJJ, I mean the principle behind BJJ, not the techniques themselves. It is basically the same zen approach of Aikido or Jeet Kune Do:
an opponent can't beat you if you dont leave openings. It is possible to defend yourself without openings but it is impossible to attack without leaving openings, therefore,in principle, the attacking man is always at a disadvantage.
If two "perfect men" fought, the one attacking would lose immediately upon attacking, because the other would be able to fully explore the opening.
That is the philosophical principle of certain martial arts which require the safety of the smaller, weaker man, as a necessity for victory instead of focusing on aggressiveness.
Of course, there are no perfect men, and it is unlikely that there will ever be a man who has the perfect defense , or point zero, but as a mental attitude and a fighting principle, it is solid and self-coherent.
Now, whether you believe Rickson is absolutely safe in his defense as he claims, as Morihei Ueshiba claimed, as Miyamoto Musashi claimed, then that is a different story.
I would not speculate on this, I have no opinion on the subject. I would like to see Rickson fight and see if he is able to "not win, but certainly not lose", as he put it. I am not otherwise interested in the philosophical aspect of his martial art insofar as it relates to Rickson.