nice techniques.i did not realize that gracie jiu-jitsu had self defense
moves like this.every time i see bjj its ground fighting geared more to
competition.being an older person the self defense aspect is more
attractive.the moves are excellent,you end up hitting your attacker with
the hardest object around,the ground! it would be great if a lot of the bjj
schools offered just street self defense classes as a seperate curriculumn.
@peltiersupporter You have a valid point but if you cannot run immediately
the last thing you want to do with multiple attackers is go to the ground.
I think that is what the person is saying. You don’t always have the option
to run right away, you may have to fight your way through someone blocking
your path first.
Well the counters are good except for those headlocks. I’ve been in a fight
and it is really difficult to escape head locks. It is your neck that is at
stake. If the neck breaks your dead meat.
Why, for making an informed observation? The techniques shown here are
standing jointlocks and takedowns, are they not? Japanese Jujutsu is known
for those techniques, are they not? BJJ is known for its primary focus
being nezawa/ground techniques taken from Judo, is it not? I was surprised
to see Gracie techniques on this vid that more closely resemble standing
grappling and joint locks that are similar to Japanese JJ, that’s all.
Actually it is the opposite. It is about skill instead of strength. ‘BJJ
promotes the concept that a smaller, weaker person can successfully defend
against a bigger, stronger assailant by using leverage and proper
technique, taking the fight to the ground – most notably by applying
joint-locks and chokeholds to defeat the other person.’
No, actually BJJ comes from Judo, which is a composite of several Jujutsu
styles. It was Judo master Mitsuyo Maeda who was a student of Judo founder
Jigoro Kano who came to Brazil and began teaching Judo to students under
the name “Kano Jiu Jitsu” as most westerners did not know what Judo was at
the time. Maeda taught Judo to Carlos Gracie and his brothers, and younger
brother Helio is the one who focused on newaza techniques he learned from
Carlos to create BJJ.
Not really. BJJ came from Judo, not Japanese Jujutsu(correct spelling).
Jigoro Kano created Judo after studying several styles of japanese jujutsu,
not Samurai. One of Kano’s students – Mitsuyo Maeda – brought Judo to
Brazil under the name “Kano Jiu Jitsu”(an early romanization) since
westerners were unfamiliar with Judo. Carlos Gracie studied under Maeda.
Carlos’ younger brother Helio learned from his brother and later created
BJJ, focusing on ground techniques(newaza).
Keep in mind on the headlocks that if the guy is not punching, then we have
to see if the legs are wide or narrow which thus results in different
techniques.
no don’t go pick a fight and try “youtube kung fu” lmao. If you are
interested in jiu jitsu I would find a local gym in 6 months you’ll have
little problem controlling a larger opponent(within a reasonable limit)
remember Helio Gracie weighed around 140 pounds and beat trained fighters
of up to and over 100 pounds heavier then himself
Heh @ 1:32. I wouldn’t wanna *throw* a guy who’s got an arm wrapped around
my neck :)
That headbutt was vicious though ;D
Is this japanese jiu jitsu or brazilian jj
nice techniques.i did not realize that gracie jiu-jitsu had self defense
moves like this.every time i see bjj its ground fighting geared more to
competition.being an older person the self defense aspect is more
attractive.the moves are excellent,you end up hitting your attacker with
the hardest object around,the ground! it would be great if a lot of the bjj
schools offered just street self defense classes as a seperate curriculumn.
Bjj need more moves like this
Dam, I thought his arm broke at 0:43 xd
#freddiemercury
He looks like a spanish Tom Sellick……
@peltiersupporter You have a valid point but if you cannot run immediately
the last thing you want to do with multiple attackers is go to the ground.
I think that is what the person is saying. You don’t always have the option
to run right away, you may have to fight your way through someone blocking
your path first.
How come? Is it better?
Love this and I train this
Cool!
@MDIS why do you assume that GJJ has no striking? the reason you don’t see
it is tournmanets don’t allow it but the self defense portion will use it.
Jiu jitsu is better then taekwando in my opinion
Well the counters are good except for those headlocks. I’ve been in a fight
and it is really difficult to escape head locks. It is your neck that is at
stake. If the neck breaks your dead meat.
@peltiersupporter classical jujutsu is different. you are talking about bjj
True story. I’m 5ft 3, 15 years old, and a purple belt.
Why, for making an informed observation? The techniques shown here are
standing jointlocks and takedowns, are they not? Japanese Jujutsu is known
for those techniques, are they not? BJJ is known for its primary focus
being nezawa/ground techniques taken from Judo, is it not? I was surprised
to see Gracie techniques on this vid that more closely resemble standing
grappling and joint locks that are similar to Japanese JJ, that’s all.
who in their right mind watches this shit?
-I agree… I had black belt training in tkd, but I always gravitated
towards jiu-juitsu. Now that I’m older and less flexible it makes perfect
sense.
Good stuff
I followed the techniques and it worked on my sister.
thumbs down for all the damn pop ups
Impressive, most impressive. Thanks!
Actually it is the opposite. It is about skill instead of strength. ‘BJJ
promotes the concept that a smaller, weaker person can successfully defend
against a bigger, stronger assailant by using leverage and proper
technique, taking the fight to the ground – most notably by applying
joint-locks and chokeholds to defeat the other person.’
what if they are faster than you ?
katarantadohan nyo mga gago
felt SO GOOD when i beat up my sister
@MDIS that’s where Krav Maga military come sin mate
jiu jutsu the sport for hugging people:)
No, actually BJJ comes from Judo, which is a composite of several Jujutsu
styles. It was Judo master Mitsuyo Maeda who was a student of Judo founder
Jigoro Kano who came to Brazil and began teaching Judo to students under
the name “Kano Jiu Jitsu” as most westerners did not know what Judo was at
the time. Maeda taught Judo to Carlos Gracie and his brothers, and younger
brother Helio is the one who focused on newaza techniques he learned from
Carlos to create BJJ.
me personally would recomend AMERICAN JU JITSU,
hahahahahahaa
I’m actually thinking about doing jiu jitsu
I feel like “groin Kick” would be a very effective defense in each of these
scenarios.
Not really. BJJ came from Judo, not Japanese Jujutsu(correct spelling).
Jigoro Kano created Judo after studying several styles of japanese jujutsu,
not Samurai. One of Kano’s students – Mitsuyo Maeda – brought Judo to
Brazil under the name “Kano Jiu Jitsu”(an early romanization) since
westerners were unfamiliar with Judo. Carlos Gracie studied under Maeda.
Carlos’ younger brother Helio learned from his brother and later created
BJJ, focusing on ground techniques(newaza).
The whole point of gracie jiu jitsu is to be able to put technique over
strength and fight people 2 your weight
i will try these move on 6 years old kids
Keep in mind on the headlocks that if the guy is not punching, then we have
to see if the legs are wide or narrow which thus results in different
techniques.
What level of difficulty are most of these techniques in the scope of jiu
jitsu in general?
I’m not convince with the counter move on the front headlock. Give many any
Black Belt BJJ practitioner. I can break their neck once I head lock them.
lmao
If you don’t know Gracie self-defense, then you don’t know Gracie Jiu-Jitsu.
This is GOLD. A self defense video by the legendary Rickson Gracie himself!
Thank you very much for uploading.
I have only heard of american an brazilion
Rorion looks legit with a mustache
Interesting …Thank you!
Most of these techniques are in the Gracie self defense book, but it’s neat
to be able to see them in motion picture. Thanks for posting.
no don’t go pick a fight and try “youtube kung fu” lmao. If you are
interested in jiu jitsu I would find a local gym in 6 months you’ll have
little problem controlling a larger opponent(within a reasonable limit)
remember Helio Gracie weighed around 140 pounds and beat trained fighters
of up to and over 100 pounds heavier then himself
basically just judo