Pareto Principle: How to Know Which BJJ Moves to Learn - Kama School Time
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- Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2024
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Because..... I have yet to master the guitar.
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Had to watch this video 3 time to finally realize I'm confused AF
Love the videos!
im a blue belt andI just focus (90%) on the basics. I can't be on the mat as long as most where I train so I try to make it count. i want a solid "fundamental" foundation. Thank you again for your great videos!
The actual definition of professor.
great explanation of the Pareto principle and great application to BJJ. Thanks!
Just recieved my kataaro belt today. I havent bought a new belt in 10+ years. The quality of their belts are by far 2nd to none! Iva had and seen many custom belts from japan/Okinawa etc. Kataaro is by far the best!
You’ll love it! Be careful of shrinkage when washing.
This is all making insanely good sense
I think you might have made way too much sense here. Seriously, dial it back a bit... You might ruffle some feather.
No but seriously, THANKS FOR THIS SIR!
You nailed it and explained it so well. TY
This is great stuff. Thanks!
You seem like such a nice guy too👍🏼
I appreciate that!
We use this in healthcare to identify issues to address... for those that are visual, Google pareto chart explained.
Hey Ryan,
Love the video. I can see what you're getting at with the Pareto Principle and the 80/20 rule you're describing. My one question is how can the 80/20 rule and the "Equalizer" (one of your videos that talks about training all techniques equally) work together, or is there a balance between the two?
I love the Pareto Principle, I use it all the time in work and life. I have actually been trying to use it in my BJJ. Do you have any suggestions, materials or references on identifying the 80/20 techniques and concepts?
I think the 80-20 method is good for self defense or in competition, but in the gym I want to work on what I suck at.
I'm torn between these two extremes. So, I go back and forth, haha
excellent! good clear explanation. Thanks
Beyond brilliant. Thanks for sharing coach.
My pleasure.
Man ... I like his point of view ... where I can find more about him ..
www.kamajiujitsu.com
Or email us at KamaJiuJitsu@gmail.com
It's a smart way to answer the question "what to train" when you have I think at least 6-12 months experience in bjj. For a brand new guy in bjj it's more difficult to know techniques that works because when you start, unfortunately, you are likely to not win often.
This may sound like a dumb question, but at what level should we start to apply this? Right out of the gate as a no stripe white belt or at say Blue Belt?
@@Wrahns I think at least 6 months, maybe ask him directly in the thread
truth be told, your instructor should be ONLY teaching your the "top 10%" techniques right at the get go. then maybe 6 mos to 1 yr in, expand it to the "top 20%" techniques.
i'll probably do a video explaining it in more detail on Kama Jiu-Jitsu's Patreon channel in the near future.
Great info
As a 2 stripes white belt - anything that allow me to escape side control (100 kilos). So much suffering.
We have it on Patreon.
Gracias
Devil's Advocate: If you are already good at something, wouldn't the time be better spent trying to improve on the areas where you are weak. This would make you more well rounded, but your best moves may not be as great as they could be.
Lets say you have 2 purple belts. One worked on his weaknesses and is well rounded, he has purple skills across the board in all techniques. But the other only worked on his best techniques all the time, so he has brown belt level mount and chokes, but his guard and everything else is blue belt level.
I think the better use of the Pareto principle is which specific techniques to train. I believe this is how Rener Gracie came up with the Combatives course. They picked out the 36 techniques that are used most often to win fights and focus on those.
on your last point, the specific concepts to train (the most important ones), are the 20%. the remaining 80% are "good to know," but not "need to know," like the first 20%.
as far as your purple belts examples. they average out to purple belt, but get to purple belt in a little different fashion. being "well rounded" is good... unless you end up in the spot where your opponent is extraordinary because you weren't able to put him in the spot where he was lacking first.
then you're done.
@@KamaJiuJitsu Thanks for the response, and good points.
Perhaps it's a personal thing. I would prefer to be well rounded myself. That's the reason for me learning bjj in the first place as my striking ability is pretty good from my other martial arts and bjj rounds out my ability with grappling.
The goal is to be well rounded. Reality is different, no matter how hard I try to convince students to be well rounded.
That being said, our students are as well rounded as I’ve seen.
At what stage of training should we start to apply this? Straight out of the gate as a brand new white belt or when we get to Blue Belt?
Instructor should just teach you those to begin with. Then, you should spend the rest of your time dialing them in.
But what about when I use the opponents belt and tie him up when rolling...I call it Turkey guard...it works in a very specific situation under very specific rules against someone with very specific deficits...shouldn't it be a new requirement for promotion from purple to brown belt? I mean what are we talking about here? If we follow this idea we might have competent blue belts, what are you trying to do, save BJJ?😉
I've always found that in life what you need to do is double and triple down on what you're bad at. I was a marine for 4 years, I'm 2 years through an engineering degree, ive been a calc tutor for a year and I've been doing BJJ for a year and a half. In all of those cases I've found that I improve the quickest by sucking it up and working hard on what I'm bad at. Is there a balance to doing this? Do you think there is a benefit to working hard on what you are bad at, do you think the gains from doubling down on what you're good at outweigh the gains from working on what you're bad at? Just curious!
I bring up all those things simply to demonstrate the different contexts in which I have discovered that working on the poor things works the best.
Good question. Not saying this is an apt analogy, but have you ever heard the expression, “don’t throw good money after bad?
@@KamaJiuJitsu I have not.
it's a a term we used in the investment community. says that a good investment should be allocated more of your money (resources, time, attention, etc) and not less of your money. if something is a bad investment, no amount of money can turn it into a good investment.
good fundamental jiu-jitsu should be allocated more time and energy. less efficient concepts and techniques should be abandoned.
@@KamaJiuJitsu interesting. Thanks for the response!
I submit, shouldn't the basics be a focus, regardless of how good you are? Triangle, arm bar, mount, escapes... shouldn't those be drilled like hell to ensure you're good even if you don't care for a particular position.... and then use the Pareto once you've established a solid base?
The principle applies to the base.
How do you buy one of your rash guards?
Thanks.
That particular design has sold out. They came out especially nice (we did them in both red and purple), but were $85/ea since they were made by Origin. Our KJJ rashguards are typically about half that price.
Ugh, math. Your still awesome though.
Hahahah
Pareto: 80/20 rule: 80% of problems caused by 20% of causes
His math basically says that, but the long way round.
Very Jordan Peterson
Lobster
or Stephan Molyneaux...
LP Jiu jitsu.