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Armbar4you Says:
Dec 3, 2008 - are you doing brazilian jiu jitsu?
judorican Says:
Dec 12, 2008 - you are right!! japanese ju jitsu is the father of judo bjj karate aikido!!
xKaRiSmA Says:
Dec 15, 2008 - 10th planet all day
barnhartwill Says:
Dec 21, 2008 - This isn't jiu jitsu, its some kind of HIYAAAAA kirate tournament lol....
FGOD03 Says:
Dec 22, 2008 - it's like disney show... broadway show... vegas show
kappanisan Says:
Jan 4, 2009 - What ju jutsu school is this? is a Ryu-ha from Japan? like Kito-ryu or Ten-jin-ryuu?
jyri94 Says:
Jan 11, 2009 - hokytoryu jujutsu is the best !
romulostilojjitsu Says:
Mar 1, 2009 - jiu-jitsu brasileiro!!!!!
idontbelieveok Says:
Apr 28, 2009 - nah, wrong
idontbelieveok Says:
Apr 28, 2009 - this is how the original jujitsu is supposed to be. you're probably taking classes that only focus on grappling, and if you're in the states you're probably learning bjj.
hungmanhtran Says:
May 7, 2009 - this is how it looked when it considered for the Olympics. i don't know if it ever got got full medal status. anybody have any insight to that?
pepi296 Says:
May 18, 2009 - fuck this
theISAACsilly Says:
Jun 1, 2009 - its jujitsu not jiujitsu.... =)
rhshoss07 Says:
Jul 8, 2009 - Except that Judo came from JJJ, which is why I said BJJ came from JJJ. A lot of BJJ is based around having rules and sport fighting. A good JJJ school teaches groundwork, but also includes many other forms of attack and defense because it is based on an actual military art used by the samurai. Some will say it had roots elsewhere as well, but for JJJ specifically, it was designed for combat situations. However, in sport, you cannot just go snap a wrist, or punching someone's throat to set a move
Robopencil Says:
Jul 8, 2009 - Have you ever watched a karate tournament? In training, they teach a lot of fancy blocks. But in the actual tournaments it's not uncommon to see competitors just trade punches and kicks, blocking maybe 1 out of 10 attacks. BJJ is used by multiple militaries, including the US btw.
Robopencil Says:
Jul 8, 2009 - I understand this. I trained with a JJJ black belt. He said that he was at our BJJ club because he wanted to improve his ground game. He taught us a bit of standup, and to be honest it didn't come across as effective. The techniques look nice, but in a real fight, the first thing to go is fine motor control. You need exaggerated, simple, and effective techniques. Not fancy arm waving techniques that require reaction times that almost no one is capable of.
rhshoss07 Says:
Jul 9, 2009 - Of course, you can always find some useful move in any art, but JJJ was used as combat training for the samurai. Meaning that was their fighting. The actual point I was making is that JJJ is used for a variety of situations because real fights are much more dynamic then two guys in a ring.
Robopencil Says:
Jul 10, 2009 - "Was" used in combat. JJJ is in the same boat as Judo and BJJ now. BJJ took all the effective ground elements from Judo (which took the most effective throws, trips, and ground elements from JJJ) and incorporated them into a single system (that has evolved to surpass Judo and JJJ on the ground). I have to say that I've never seen a street fight that is as dynamic as a mixed martial arts fight. How many street thugs practice boxing, muay thai, brazilian jiu jitsu, and wrestling 6 hours a day?
nixondelima Says:
Jul 21, 2009 - bjj doesnt come from judo, man.. get back to the books..
Robopencil Says:
Jul 24, 2009 - Yes it does. BJJ came from Kodokan Judo.
nixondelima Says:
Jul 25, 2009 - u have no idea what u saying, get a reality check
Robopencil Says:
Jul 26, 2009 - You're talking out of your ass. Go read an article, any article on the origins of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Mtsuyo Maeda was a Kodokan Judoka. He emmigrated to Brazil and taught all that he knew to the Gracies. The Gracies took the techniques that he gave them, and altered them to require less strength. They changed techniques, and added new ones. BJJ evolved from Judo. You're the one who has no clue what he is talking about.
vincespell Says:
Sep 10, 2009 - It did not come from Judo, Jiu-Jitsu came from Jiu-Jitsu. You people say anything on here. JIgoro Kano was a Jiu-Jitsu expect who created Judo from Jiu-Jitsu. Did you understand that part Kano a Jiu-Jitsu Master created Judo from Jiu-Jitsu, Not Jiu-Jitsu from Judo. He borrowed from Jiu-Jitsu to create Judo, his contribution to Judo was the throws, most of the other techniques came from Jiu-Jitsu. A lake can come from a River a River can't come from a Lake.
vincespell Says:
Sep 11, 2009 - Jigoro Kano was a Jiu-Jitsu Expert that created an art form from Jiu-Jitsu. He borrowed many techniques from Jiu-Jitsu because that was his discipline. Depending on what you read it tells you that Kano added throws to Jiu-Jitsu creating Judo, not Judo creating Jiu-Jitsu but records will also tell you he incorporated joint locks from Jiu-Jitsu into Judo. People assume that the Joint locks came from Judo because that's where they are seen most.



XMMAFANX Says:
Nov 21, 2008 - How many styles of jiu jitsu is there, and I thought there was no striking, ive been taking jiu jitsu for three months but my dojo doesn't do striking.