One of the issues that puzzles me is the death of the small circle arts. You'd be hard pressed to find honest to god taiji, hapkido, small circle jujitsu, etc. in open competion. You come across it every now and then, but its certainly fallen out of favor. Now, one area where this is still prevalent is self defense, many instructors warning of the dangers of extended ground fighting on the streets. This is true even in BJJ circles. It is unfortunate, given the skill of your average student when it comes to wrist locks, standing armbars and the like.
What happened? I would submit that these arts never progressed, not because they became technically irrelevant, but because of the transition from JUDO to BJJ. The takedown reigning in Judo, its only logical that the Gracies would expand on the basic takedown to control strategy. What would have happened had they observed not judo, but BJJ?
What happened? I would submit that these arts never progressed, not because they became technically irrelevant, but because of the transition from JUDO to BJJ. The takedown reigning in Judo, its only logical that the Gracies would expand on the basic takedown to control strategy. What would have happened had they observed not judo, but BJJ?
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