I’ve always liked jiu jitsu and judo. At our high school karate dojo we sparred with kids from both arts. The judo kids didn’t want to get punched and kicked, understandably haha. That took away our defense. So basically we just trained dodging and avoiding their grabs with Shotokan footwork. The jiu jitsu kids were ok with striking (light contact). But still, the opposite fighting style of Shotokan. They tried to get close, we liked to stay far and attack from long range. Very good to know what to expect from their arts and exchanging tips on footwork & throwing. And of course, made friends. Good times. Respect. Oss!
@@user-rq7ej3ij1h Martial arts are only about one thing……effectiveness in combat. After 44 years of training in martial arts, including Japanese jujitsu, BJJ, MMA, Muay Thai, Krav Maga, Systema, TKD, Karate, Judo, boxing, Olympic and catch wrestling, then applying it all as a street cop for 20 years in some of the most violent places on earth, I disagree with you. I can see what you are saying, yes, we can play a sport as a martial art and there is nothing wrong with that. My view and this is just language I am choosing to express myself, is that you can have a sport within a martial art, something that is a part of the overall practice, but it can never be a martial art if it is just a sport. A martial art must have a combat orientated objective. Sports BJJ is not a martial art, whereas Gracie Jujitsu is. What is depicted is in this video is more applicable to combat effectiveness than sports BJJ. The reason mostly being that it is more diverse and in a combat situation you don’t want to spend too long on the ground, there has to be a sense of urgency to win as fast as possible….of course in a controlled manner and not a desperate manner that exposes you to being swept or caught in a submission.
@@Haddomne That makes no sense whatsoever. Judo came after ju jitsu, so how can jujitsu possibly be a mix of judo and other things? And BJJ cam after judo.
@@jujitsuheroes 7. To deliver punches, strikes and kicks to the legs. 11. C. 1. To make attacks like kicking, pushing, punching, hitting the body of the opponent in a hard way. 5. To make straight punches or straight kicks towards the head. So it's like a Shotokan Karate with Judo?
@@deebo2932Bjj isn’t watered down it’s merely focusing on one single part of the art, if bjj is watered down then so is litterally anything that focuses on a specific part of something
I’ve always liked jiu jitsu and judo. At our high school karate dojo we sparred with kids from both arts. The judo kids didn’t want to get punched and kicked, understandably haha. That took away our defense. So basically we just trained dodging and avoiding their grabs with Shotokan footwork. The jiu jitsu kids were ok with striking (light contact). But still, the opposite fighting style of Shotokan. They tried to get close, we liked to stay far and attack from long range. Very good to know what to expect from their arts and exchanging tips on footwork & throwing. And of course, made friends. Good times. Respect. Oss!
Le jujitsu originel.
This is more realistic than modern sport BJJ.
they are not comparable, they have different rules
@@user-rq7ej3ij1h Martial arts are only about one thing……effectiveness in combat. After 44 years of training in martial arts, including Japanese jujitsu, BJJ, MMA, Muay Thai, Krav Maga, Systema, TKD, Karate, Judo, boxing, Olympic and catch wrestling, then applying it all as a street cop for 20 years in some of the most violent places on earth, I disagree with you.
I can see what you are saying, yes, we can play a sport as a martial art and there is nothing wrong with that. My view and this is just language I am choosing to express myself, is that you can have a sport within a martial art, something that is a part of the overall practice, but it can never be a martial art if it is just a sport. A martial art must have a combat orientated objective. Sports BJJ is not a martial art, whereas Gracie Jujitsu is. What is depicted is in this video is more applicable to combat effectiveness than sports BJJ. The reason mostly being that it is more diverse and in a combat situation you don’t want to spend too long on the ground, there has to be a sense of urgency to win as fast as possible….of course in a controlled manner and not a desperate manner that exposes you to being swept or caught in a submission.
Yeah like when the guy got choked out and then the referee stood them up and they continued, so realistic
The standup part totally looks like Shotokan karate.
Yes it does, because Ju Jutsu is a mix of Judo, japanese Jiu Jitsu and Shotokan Karate, invented by a german police officer
@@Haddomne That makes no sense whatsoever. Judo came after ju jitsu, so how can jujitsu possibly be a mix of judo and other things? And BJJ cam after judo.
@@kpopfan674 You are right, but this is the german Ju Jutsu, created by a german police officer, not the japanese Jiu Jitsu.
Ju Jutsu / Jiu Jitsu
Lorsque l'on regarde du Jujitsu ou du judo il faut couper les commentaires
Pire qu'un épisode de DERRICK
Quelles sont les règles du Jujitsu ?
Check them out jjif.sport/fighting-system/
@@jujitsuheroes
7. To deliver punches, strikes and kicks to the legs.
11. C. 1. To make attacks like kicking, pushing, punching, hitting the body of the opponent in a hard way.
5. To make straight punches or straight kicks towards the head.
So it's like a Shotokan Karate with Judo?
@@carlosbarreto4695 it's pretty much like this. It's semi-contact sport, do there are some limitations
@@jujitsuheroes are pulling guard and heel hooks legal?
@@Ema-nuel guard pulling is considered as being passive and is punished by shido, heel hooks are not allowed and punished with hansoku make
Looks like combat sambo
If only this type of Japanese Jujitsu was popularized rather than that watered down bjj
Western jujutsu, not Japanese
@@barontoad3637 It all comes from Japanese
@@deebo2932Bjj isn’t watered down it’s merely focusing on one single part of the art, if bjj is watered down then so is litterally anything that focuses on a specific part of something
@@PersonInThatMask BJJ is watered down from what it used to be. Karate has always been karate same as boxing