What are the rules to bjj. Is the goal to put people in hoods so they can feel pain and tap or is it to disarm a threat? I only ask cause there’s times I see people in arm bars and I for the life of me can understand why they don’t just break their opponents arms and shred all the ligaments in it. There’s a video with Gordon Ryan in an arm bar and I’m certain if his opponent approached the problem with the intent to rip his arm off he wins but the whole time it just looked like he was satisfied with holding on to the lock instead of really cranking on it
With a fully locked arm bar, it is nice to allow your opponent a moment to tap. It’s not required, and people do get their elbows popped. You referring to Gordon vs Jones, EBI overtime? The armbar looked fully locked, but Craig did not have great leverage. Gordon got to his side to elevate his shoulder. That makes the submission harder to get, because the elbow needs to be raised, with some force, above those huge, if pharmaceutically enhanced, shoulders. It was an amazing escape. Wouldn’t try it lol.
Depends on the competition rules, usually you are awarded points when you achieve a dominant position (for instance getting to mount). The end goal is to lock your opponent in a submission hold, leaving him no choice but to submit (tap). We dont want to injure our opponents; we respect them. In a self defense scenario, yeah, you can rip submissions or keep the choke locked in obviously
@@Josh-eb5vmI’ll admit I am trolling a little but I am genuinely curious why there isn’t more injuries around a sport that’s based on locking joints in compromising positions
Max Hanson the real deal✔️
Max is a beast!
4:43 Max got the cakes. Gotdamn!
Max Hanson vs Dante Leone wno!
Dante fucks me up in training on a daily basis dog 😂
Did he beat deandre?
He's 2-1 against me
@@megamaxiguy yeah. Tough matches, always fun to watch you both go at it.
I was curious bc I assumed he'd be the one from Standard going vs you
What are the rules to bjj. Is the goal to put people in hoods so they can feel pain and tap or is it to disarm a threat?
I only ask cause there’s times I see people in arm bars and I for the life of me can understand why they don’t just break their opponents arms and shred all the ligaments in it.
There’s a video with Gordon Ryan in an arm bar and I’m certain if his opponent approached the problem with the intent to rip his arm off he wins but the whole time it just looked like he was satisfied with holding on to the lock instead of really cranking on it
With a fully locked arm bar, it is nice to allow your opponent a moment to tap. It’s not required, and people do get their elbows popped.
You referring to Gordon vs Jones, EBI overtime? The armbar looked fully locked, but Craig did not have great leverage. Gordon got to his side to elevate his shoulder. That makes the submission harder to get, because the elbow needs to be raised, with some force, above those huge, if pharmaceutically enhanced, shoulders. It was an amazing escape. Wouldn’t try it lol.
Depends on the competition rules, usually you are awarded points when you achieve a dominant position (for instance getting to mount). The end goal is to lock your opponent in a submission hold, leaving him no choice but to submit (tap). We dont want to injure our opponents; we respect them. In a self defense scenario, yeah, you can rip submissions or keep the choke locked in obviously
2 people fell for the troll within 3 hours. nice work.
@@Josh-eb5vm😂😂😂😂
@@Josh-eb5vmI’ll admit I am trolling a little but I am genuinely curious why there isn’t more injuries around a sport that’s based on locking joints in compromising positions