Balto, you made some excellent points on this thread, your participation has brought up many quality points for discussion. Thanks for joining it.
I don`t think you should take it as an insult, and neither should today`s top competitiors take it as an insult, when Rickson insinuates that the x-guard and 50-50 are far from what GJJ originally focuses on. That is true.
What a guy said up there about GJJ having been "diluted", that is true also for Brazil. Remember, jiu jitsu is now a SPORT. A SPORT is trained. A sport that is still closely similar to the martial art that it comes from, which makes it still very effective and real life, no doubt, but a sport nonetheless. With sport techniques, that can`t be applied in real life. That is what happened to karate, judo, all martial arts that became non-full contact sports.
Now, as for what is being trained all over the world, I assure you it is not different from GJJ, just with a different focus. In a sense, BJJ is to GJJ what BJJ is to Judo. Same things, different focus. Even so, many things are completely forgotten and aren`t taught.
Case in point, I invite thread members to reply:
1- When was the last time you had full contact sparring, with strikes, at your BJJ gym during BJJ class?
2- When was the last time you trained striking defense from the guard, half-guard, and mount?
3- When was the last time you trained striking and submission combos?
4- When was the last time you trained: stomps, standing elbows, low kicks, double legs without knees on the floor, and self-defense moves?
Should a person be learning x-guard when they have never trained, at least, striking defense from the guard? I don't think so. Neither do most people I know.
Balto, you're right: it is hard to agree with what Rickson says about crosstraining. I can see you take that as a huge problem. Honestly? I can't argue for him there. I don't see what he sees, but I respect his opinion: he has earned the right to have his opinion be respected, especially when he expresses it so candidly. And he does. Rickson is very aware of the weight of his words, and he has taken extra care in making his negative points as lightly and delicately and politely as possible, most of the time.
As far as Rickson crosstraining, the fact is he did do that, they all did that following the leadership of Rolls. But not only did they compete in those arts in order to try to prove the superiority of JJ as a martial art, they also sought to absorb those arts into their own, which they did. Essentially, JJ includes wrestling, and sambo, and catch, and anything they find there. It wasn't, and isn't, a closed and fixed art. Jiu jitsu is not a set of techniques, jiu jitsu is a principle "the smaller man can defeat a larger man by staying safe and achieving dominant positions from which they can incapacitate the opponent".
The 3 principles of jiu jitsu: Safety. Position. Incapacitation.
Since BJJ was NHB grappling, anything goes and anything that is useful , wherever it is found, is absorbed into the system. It isn't the same as crosstraining into striking arts.
Also, remember that Rickson is not concerned with competition, he is mostly concerned with character development and self-defense for the weak.
I also think you made your other points, especially on this last post, very well. So
Last but not least ,Balto, there really is nothing shrouded in mystery in Rickson's JJ. It is Gracie Jiu Jitsu. That's all.
You are right in that his martial art philosophy has transcended into the taoistic principle of point zero that we have seen already in internal martial arts ( Aikido, Tai Chi, Kendo) and which even Bruce Lee sought. "The art of fighting without fighting", "The art of winning without drawing your sword", "When a man tries to strike me, he has already lost" etc.
Can he prove it? I don't think he will. Which means that for us, like you said, it doesn't matter that much: pick your teachers and your paths as you can and are willing to follow them. Guys like Rickson really aren't meant to be followed, they simply aren't even the same as us to begin with.