drop bear
Sr. Grandmaster
I assume the worse thing that happened is he tapped. (Just had a look. And it was the worlds friendliest arm bar)More like, you should know what you're getting into when you sign on the dotted line.
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I assume the worse thing that happened is he tapped. (Just had a look. And it was the worlds friendliest arm bar)More like, you should know what you're getting into when you sign on the dotted line.
My real approach would have been to simply lower my stance like I always do. My understanding of Ninjitsu is that it's an assassination art. Which means going head to head in a grappling match is playing outside of the purpose of Ninjitsu. Sort of like saying. BJJ vs a Fencer. Rules are: No swords allow. BJJ wins. Fencing sucks. From what I've read about Ninjitsu and from what I've seen from documentaries. Ninjitsu was never created from sport perspective. It was designed to sneak around and snuff people out or to gather intel.This is sarcasm right? Sometimes it's hard to tell.
My real approach would have been to simply lower my stance like I always do. My understanding of Ninjitsu is that it's an assassination art. Which means going head to head in a grappling match is playing outside of the purpose of Ninjitsu. Sort of like saying. BJJ vs a Fencer. Rules are: No swords allow. BJJ wins. Fencing sucks. From what I've read about Ninjitsu and from what I've seen from documentaries. Ninjitsu was never created from sport perspective. It was designed to sneak around and snuff people out or to gather intel.
If I were to fight a "real ninja" my guess is that I would probably get a knife in my side once the grappling started. It's the same thing I would expect from an elite military team that is designed to do similar tasks "sneak around and snuff people out or gather intel." Just the design of the weapons pretty much show what their focus was.
Now in modern times. People try to adapt those techniques into a competition sports and for the most part it's just boils down to skills of one vs another. So much is taken out of context with the style vs style.
It actually takes less time to achieve a blue belt in Bjj. Usually only about 1-2 years of continuous training.
Unfortunately. I mean it's good that no one is freelancing jobs like that, but it would be nice if the functional part was still trained so that their is some historical context and knowledge that remains. At the very least turn it into a simulated competition where two teams are given the task of simulated assassination or Intel retrieval, without the lethal side of things. Give them a time table a spy cam and some room cameras. Start the game off where one or two people on the team are spies but no one knows who that is. Give them a week to perform the task, get some video edits add some history and hopefully it would be a nice history based "game show" that would highlight the difficulty in what Ninjas actually had to do.Modern ninjitsu is more of a perfomance art or demo art rather than a sport art.
A grappling tournament where only two competitors have BJJ and judo backgrounds? Sounds like serious competition.They talk about that in the video info:
"This was the championship match in the gi-division. It was a 5 minute match / NAGA Rules. Nik and his brother Jeremiah were the only competitors at this event that were trained in Brazilian Jiu-jitsu and Judo. As far as we know, all of the other competitors were black belts in Hapkido, Ninjitsu, and Japanese Ju-jutsu. Many of us have not seen a style-vs-style tournament since the early days of the UFC, so this was a very interesting event. The gentleman Nikolas Collier faced in this video told us he won the championship match last year with a score of 35 to 0. Even though there were various styles and backgrounds competing at this event, all the participants showed great courage and sportsmanship."
So yeah....
Unfortunately. I mean it's good that no one is freelancing jobs like that, but it would be nice if the functional part was still trained so that their is some historical context and knowledge that remains. At the very least turn it into a simulated competition where two teams are given the task of simulated assassination or Intel retrieval, without the lethal side of things. Give them a time table a spy cam and some room cameras. Start the game off where one or two people on the team are spies but no one knows who that is. Give them a week to perform the task, get some video edits add some history and hopefully it would be a nice history based "game show" that would highlight the difficulty in what Ninjas actually had to do.
Not sure if something like that would attract viewers though. People tend to like these ninjas. And not someone that was dressed in everyday Japanese fashion blending in with a crowd.
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The struggle snuggle?From what position do you think something like that would work?
Really?
I appreciate that each academy operates a bit differently, but I don’t know anyone at my academy who trains 2 times a week to get blue belt that quickly (people who train every day - sure)
A grappling tournament where only two competitors have BJJ and judo backgrounds? Sounds like serious competition.
A grappling tournament where only two competitors have BJJ and Judo backgrounds... and only one of them made the Championship Match.A grappling tournament where only two competitors have BJJ and judo backgrounds? Sounds like serious competition.
A grappling tournament where only two competitors have BJJ and Judo backgrounds... and only one of them made the Championship Match.
We call those sorts of situations "first round finals"Ever stop to think that the Bjj player beat the other Bjj player?
It happens.![]()
There is other footage from this same tournament where the same "kid" beats a 6 th dan Hapkido . Again, no age category, no weight category, no rank category. Curious how it is under NAGA rules.Stop style-bashing Frank!![]()
Uh, 2 years is a long time as a white belt, and going twice a week for 2 years is a decent amount of practice for a hobbyist or non-competitive martial artist. The average time it takes to achieve black is 10 years, which is a very long time considering that in most MAs you reach black in 3-5 years. 3-4 years as a white belt would make many people quit the system. That's like getting a stripe a year, which is absurd. Not to mention that there's still Blue, Purple, and Brown to get through, and most people quit while blue because it's an abyss all of itself.
Also just because its twice a week doesn't mean you're not doing a lot of Bjj. You could be taking 2-3 classes per session along with home practice, seminars, and privates. If you train everyday and you're extremely competition-driven you'll probably reach Brown in 5 years and black in 6-7 years.
There is other footage from this same tournament where the same "kid" beats a 6 th dan Hapkido . Again, no age category, no weight category, no rank category. Curious how it is under NAGA rules.
It was the result of Ali negotiating a very restrictive rule set and still getting messed up by inoki. The entire event is in YouTube and is a cool look back at a bizarre spectacle from the 70s.You mean the fight where the dude lays on his back the whole fight and kicks Ali's legs?
Not sure we can call that wrestling...
Uh, 2 years is a long time as a white belt, and going twice a week for 2 years is a decent amount of practice for a hobbyist or non-competitive martial artist. The average time it takes to achieve black is 10 years, which is a very long time considering that in most MAs you reach black in 3-5 years. 3-4 years as a white belt would make many people quit the system. That's like getting a stripe a year, which is absurd. Not to mention that there's still Blue, Purple, and Brown to get through, and most people quit while blue because it's an abyss all of itself.
Also just because its twice a week doesn't mean you're not doing a lot of Bjj. You could be taking 2-3 classes per session along with home practice, seminars, and privates. If you train everyday and you're extremely competition-driven you'll probably reach Brown in 5 years and black in 6-7 years.