drop bear
Sr. Grandmaster
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- Feb 23, 2014
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Okay, I can see that. Would you say that's likely true (that they train the system, rather than training for MMA competition) at most/all MMA gyms? The descriptions I've heard in the past led me to believe that at least some gyms (I had thought it was common, but that may have been my misunderstanding) had "groundwork days" where they'd practice a subset of either BJJ or wrestling, or perhaps a blend of the two. Then they'd have "standup days" where they worked whatever standup style they were using. I'm having trouble imagining them practicing the floor starting position used in collegiate wrestling, for instance, even if the techniques are the basis of their ground game.
If MMA fighters do typically practice those approaches that don't apply to MMA when they are training at an MMA gym specifically for MMA, I'm curious as to why.
My view as to why is because it isolates areas that would otherwise be avoided.
So if you did BJJ and but flopped your way to victory. You may never need to learn how to properly throw someone. So then you make yourself do Judo or wrestling where you can only really throw people.
And you will get better at BJJ.
So this basically