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Heel Hook Hunter
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Posted On:
9/03/2012 12:22pm -
Light Heavyweight
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Posted On:
9/03/2012 12:56pm -
Registered Member
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Posted On:
9/03/2012 1:00pm
Style: Ninjutsu--
I do a lot of drills with heavy medicine ball tosses in between sprawls. Like rounds of it while moving in a circle from right to left randomly. It got my sprawl timing down pat, it simulates wearing you out in the fight and still being able to drop down quick and rise with your hands guarding your jaw, etc. Maybe all you needed was some good sprawl drills. I agree though, doing any art at full force with resisting opponents naturally increases it's percentages of efficiency against an art that doesn't. Sorry for the delay, I'm defending the failures of the Bujinkan in another thread. The only issues I've ever really had with wrestlers were them being able to hide their take downs which eventually I began to understand the reasons behind that and a quick sprawl saved my ass during the times where I couldn't counter.
Last edited by Gigatron; 9/03/2012 1:11pm at .
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Heel Hook Hunter
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Posted On:
9/03/2012 1:25pm--
A good sprawl will only help against a beginner. Once you encounter a wrestler that can chain head snaps, Russian ties, arm drags to setup their takedowns a good sprawl is not enough to save you. Once you encounter this with someone that can pass your guard at will due to their BJJ training, You realize there is no answer to a good wrestler than learning to wrestle. After 11 years of training in JJJ, Judo and now BJJ it's a lesson I learned on multiple occasions.
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Posted On:
9/03/2012 1:31pm
Style: Ninjutsu--
I apparently have not had the pleasure to roll with someone very skilled in wrestling then. I will definitely try to make that happen and see where my weaknesses are in regards to dealing with that type of territory. The guard thing I do know about, using your elbow tips to dig into thigh kyushos to split their leg grip and dropping your knee over the same spot while crossing over is an awesome example of breaking the guard to pass it.
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Heel Hook Hunter
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Posted On:
9/03/2012 1:35pm -
Senior Member
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Posted On:
9/03/2012 1:39pm
Style: BBT/BJJ/CJKD--
Quoted for truth. This is an evolution I've seen a number of ex-ninjers take.
As Booj techniques are trained with more aliveness, it begins to look very much like sloppy Kyokushin and Judo mixed together. Emphasis on "sloppy." Cleaning that up entails training more and more in a decent striking art (take your pick Kyokushin, Muay Thai, boxing...) and a decent grappling art (Judo or BJJ). Most people I've seen realize this begin to spend more and more time practicing those arts and drift away from Booj. The folks who wanted some "dirty tactics" picked up some kind of Combatives training along the way too.
My Booj training group is slowly undergoing this metamorphosis (as a group) right now. It is no longer pure Booj. Probably the only reason we remain so firmly fixed on a Booj identity is we have an excellent relationship with a senior teacher whom we like and respect a great deal. But all the instructors and seniors are ranked in other arts. And we all started on ranking in other arts because we felt there were "gaps" in the Booj training methods.
I will agree with Gigatron that all the concepts are present in Booj. I have yet to encounter a new principle or idea in my non-Booj training. But Alive systems produce better practitioners because they have drills that increase comfort with using skills against resisting opponents rather than drills that allow one to endlessly admire a concept. It's practical versus theoretical.
If your training really is working for you, Gigatron, more power to you. I look forward to video.Last edited by Styygens; 9/03/2012 2:01pm at . Reason: I wasn't clear...
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My grandfather's high ball glass
Posted On:
9/03/2012 12:16pm
Style: BJJ, wrestling