chris_มวยไทย;694691 said:
hi , ive always wanted to do some kind of grappling art besides jujitsu , and i have recently become a wrestling fan so if anybody could please give some info on different styles and how they are diferent from eachother that would be great!
thanks for any posts,
chris
I assume by grappling you mean submission grappling as opposed to wrestling for a pin.
The major distinction between the major submission wrestling styles is simply what emphasis they place on the different positions. Which one you want to study will depend on your physical traits and what is available to you. I have put the arts in the order of most bottom game focused to most top game focused, although I should point out that different training halls may train with a different emphasis.
1.
BJJ. BJJ focuses on the bottom guard and half guard games much more than do other styles. Noguera is the top MMA exponent today.
2.
Shootfighting. Shootfighting is what Catch wrestling became when it went to Japan. It is basically simplified catch wrestling with an increased emphasis on the bottom positions. Sakuraba is probably its most promient proponent.
3.
SAMBO. SAMBO is sometimes called "Russian Judo" although it actually encompasses the entire corpus of techniques from Judo, western freestyle, greco roman and several traditional russian wrestling systems. SAMBO practitioners tend to focus more on side control and leglocks relative to other submission grappling styles. Fedor is the SAMBO champ.
4.
Judo. The father of BJJ and SAMBO, Judo places a high emphasis on the top mount and on submitting people quickly. Be warned, leglocks are banned in competition and most dojos don't practice them, although some do. Yoshida is the top Judoist in MMA.
5.
Catch wrestling. Catch wrestling is basically what pro-wrestling was before matches were rigged and people started acting like they were in a circus. It places a very high emphasis on the top mount and has relatively little bottom game compared to other styles. Josh Barnett is the top proponent in MMA today.
6.
Modern Submission wrestling. Basically freestyle wrestling with submissions added on. Quality of gyms varies widely. Mark Coleman is the most prominent proponent in MMA today.
I have no idea what is available to you; happy hunting.