Can someone post a link to a vid that has the actual rules or a full event in English? All I've seen is highlights this the 1st match I've seen and didn't see any ne waza I just would like to know how the rules fit together it seems to me its almost like MMA in a gi if they'd let them keep fighting!
Two ways to win : 1. you scored more points than your opponent at the end of three minutes, 2. you scored a "full ippon" 1. You win if you scored more points than your opponent at the end of the three minutes. There's three ways to score : a clean strike/kick to the opponent (from belt to chin), a clean throw, and a submission on your opponent (locks, chokes, holds). A clean score = "ippon"(2 points), an unclean score = waza ari (1 point). 2. If you scored three ippons, you win instantly. For the rules : You can't throw a punch or kick when your opponent grabs you. No ground and pound. And you can't knock out your opponent in Jujitsu Fighting System(you have to control all your attacks) but some competitions allow knees, elbows, knock outs, grab and pound and ground and pound ( "Jujitsu Combat", "Jujitsu full contact"). You can watch a full event on International Jujitsu Federation's youtube channel. Sorry for the broken english
Garcia Gung Fu In Japanese ju-jitsu there are a couple of competition forms Random-Attacks, Groundfight, Duo-System and like you see in this video Fighting-System. In this competition form you can indeed see a mix of karate and judo but also not really because foot locks and etc. are also allowed
That's Ju-jutsu : strikes/kicks - throws - ground techniques - self defense against weapons (in this video we can only see the sport version, so no standing locks and no defense against weapon)
Can someone post a link to a vid that has the actual rules or a full event in English? All I've seen is highlights this the 1st match I've seen and didn't see any ne waza I just would like to know how the rules fit together it seems to me its almost like MMA in a gi if they'd let them keep fighting!
Two ways to win : 1. you scored more points than your opponent at the end of three minutes, 2. you scored a "full ippon"
1. You win if you scored more points than your opponent at the end of the three minutes.
There's three ways to score : a clean strike/kick to the opponent (from belt to chin), a clean throw, and a submission on your opponent (locks, chokes, holds). A clean score = "ippon"(2 points), an unclean score = waza ari (1 point).
2. If you scored three ippons, you win instantly.
For the rules :
You can't throw a punch or kick when your opponent grabs you. No ground and pound. And you can't knock out your opponent in Jujitsu Fighting System(you have to control all your attacks) but some competitions allow knees, elbows, knock outs, grab and pound and ground and pound ( "Jujitsu Combat", "Jujitsu full contact").
You can watch a full event on International Jujitsu Federation's youtube channel.
Sorry for the broken english
Nisei Bujutsu = Goju Ryu+Judo+ Kobu Jutsu+Aiki Jutsu+ Yoshitsune Jutsu+ Daito Ryu ****
Fabuloso Francisco
It's interesting, to me I see a cross between Judo and Karate.
Garcia Gung Fu In Japanese ju-jitsu there are a couple of competition forms Random-Attacks, Groundfight, Duo-System and like you see in this video Fighting-System. In this competition form you can indeed see a mix of karate and judo but also not really because foot locks and etc. are also allowed
That would be kudo
That's Ju-jutsu : strikes/kicks - throws - ground techniques - self defense against weapons (in this video we can only see the sport version, so no standing locks and no defense against weapon)
@@ciscokid1214 I had to look that up. Interesting
Not much ju-jitsu there.
Because is japanese ju-jitsu, not brazilian, although japanese ju-jitsu also contains brazilian ju-jitsu
This is the father of BJJ my friend
@@elmucio2181 Its opposite BJJ Contains some JJJ as they are both types of jujitsu but Japanese is older and traditional
@@jt8527 no, judo is the father of BJJ,
@@El_Cid_Campeador estas en lo correcto amigo