I trained on and off for about a year solely nogi, it wasn't until i started training gi, that I found a pace where I could slow it down to better understand positions and what was happening in rolls, and made me so much better for it (I'm still really bad, but now I can see why!!)
Honestly I prefer no gi. Since I live in Texas people only wear jackets as a fashion statement not because it's cold outside. Because it's never cold here and if it is it's a catastrophe.
if your opponent has a jacket, gi is superior (easy access). that being said, if you're asking in a youtube comment section, chances are high that you'll never need it in a real life situation
LMAO. Homie just made me never want to train Gi.
I trained on and off for about a year solely nogi, it wasn't until i started training gi, that I found a pace where I could slow it down to better understand positions and what was happening in rolls, and made me so much better for it (I'm still really bad, but now I can see why!!)
Pros were terrible 😂😂😂😂
Honestly I prefer no gi. Since I live in Texas people only wear jackets as a fashion statement not because it's cold outside. Because it's never cold here and if it is it's a catastrophe.
I find gi more fun but no gi is more practical
lol
Right
No gi is not more practical 😂😂
@@JEFFMAN90 do you know the definition of practical? Please know the definition before sounding uneducated
Which is more practical for real life situations?
It depends on the weather
if your opponent has a jacket, gi is superior (easy access). that being said, if you're asking in a youtube comment section, chances are high that you'll never need it in a real life situation
Its good to know both. Clothes can really mess with grappling, but reliance on clothes also messes with you.
studio.ruclips.net/user/videoDUSbNYJimXM/edit FULL VIDEO