Joe Rogan on Why Jiu-jItsu Guys Should Know Judo



Taken from JRE #1445 w/Andy Stumpf: https://youtu.be/OlFJm2wK7eo.

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40 thoughts on “Joe Rogan on Why Jiu-jItsu Guys Should Know Judo

  1. why do so many bjj guys look like borderline cavemen, unshaved, hoodie, baseball cap … joe rogan experience is filled with those types … that's not how a martial artist is supposed to look, and certainly not how a martial artist is supposed to behave

  2. Taking a Judokas back is basically completing the most difficult part of a throw for them. If you take a half decent judokas back they will basically just throw their feet backwards between your legs and drop to their knees and lean forwards. Boom! a drop knee Si O Nagi

  3. I just had my judo sparring after 50 years. I am 69 now. Years back I was in national development squad. Still pretty effective in tai-otoshi from a faked osoto-gari into half turn tai-otoshi. So much fun – felt a teen for a while…

  4. bjj came from judo. The gracies were too weak to throw people so they took that out, said they invented a new style, and that it was unbeatable. Masahiko Kimura, a judo guy, came and smashed them so hard with a move they named it after him. Notice no judo guys were invited to ufc 1. The gracies are great scammers.

  5. Judo is great martial arts for street fights. You know how to fall and when you throwing someone on to concrete is much more effective than going for a strike.

  6. Judo+Jiu-jitsu +Wrestling is deadly. Sambo too, but that's not grappling only and a lot of it is from judo and wrestling. Wrestling to get in, judo to trip, wrestling and Jiu-jitsu to secure position and submit is my preferred combination after 8 years of grappling now.

  7. The first Time I ever properly defended myself was with judo, learned it at 16 and let's just say it's nice that you can drive somebody through the ground if you need too and through technical skill not have to worry too much about size / strength (it helps though!)

  8. Yeah I'm surprised at the lack of takedowns and stand up control with BJJ, it's such a gaping weakness. Everything starts standing up so it seems illogical especially considering it's origins in Judo and Japanese Jiu Jitsu.

  9. Judo comes from ju-jitsu it’s the gentle way of fighting, it great for defence not for fighting I have used judo for defending it brill 23 years working it’s the public Hackney driver out numbers but I have always came on top

  10. Basically just reversing the separation between tachiwaza and newaza.. GJJ and of course BJJ is literally judo but with a focus on ground fighting, learning both bridges that gap again.

  11. If you don’t cut corners and don’t hop on the train of Gracie hating and actually learn from those guys, you will learn a ton of takedowns that are all street safe. If you’re a snarky, snooty “you need to learn what works on trained killers mahn” instead of “you need to learn the basics of GJJ.” You don’t need to learn judo for self defense. You need to learn Gracie jiu jitsu. You do need the basic judo techniques to defeat some skilled opponents though and this is why they are in fact taught between blue and purple belt.

  12. Best "real world" self-defense you learn from judo is learning how to fall. If you wipe out while skiing or snow boarding, or fall off your bike, trip on the curb or even get tackled in a football game, knowing how to fall and being used to taking a fall are the things that will protect you more than anything else. And those things will happen to you much more often than you will get into a street fight.

  13. I don't understand why there's a massive hype around BJJ and plenty of respect for Judo, but very few people are into traditional Ju Jitsu, which is where Judo, BJJ and Aikido took their techniques from. I am aware of the fact that since Judo, BJJ and Aikido are respectiveley focused on throws, ground fight with big joints levers and small joints manipulation, those martial arts can go deeper in their own field. Despite that, I think if there's a martial art able to tie all these skills together, it is superior. Just my opinion 😉

  14. Wrestling is the transition from striking to ground jujitsu. Wrestlers do well with grappling on feet and ground but have to learn striking and submissions but we are very good at handling being tied up on our feet and getting you to ground

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