Without the ground game, Sanda develops different set of techniques than MMA does.
Do you think it's more fun to watch Sanda than MMA? Your thought?
Do you think it's more fun to watch Sanda than MMA? Your thought?
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I like both. Sort of like Tea and Water. Sometimes I want Tea and other times I just water. I don't think MMA is just going to dominate Sanda though. I would think that it may be more difficult to take down a Sanda fighter being that they spend a lot of their training on how to avoid take downs. We have already seen how that played out in MMAWithout the ground game, Sanda develops different set of techniques than MMA does.
Do you think it's more fun to watch Sanda than MMA? Your thought?
This is my concern. MMA seems ignore this part of training. If you are good in the ground skill, when I take you down, you won't have any desire to remain standing. Why should you? The ground game is where you want to fight me.I would think that it may be more difficult to take down a Sanda fighter being that they spend a lot of their training on how to avoid take downs.
I like both. Sort of like Tea and Water. Sometimes I want Tea and other times I just water. I don't think MMA is just going to dominate Sanda though. I would think that it may be more difficult to take down a Sanda fighter being that they spend a lot of their training on how to avoid take downs. We have already seen how that played out in MMA
The sport rule can direct how the sport will be trained. If head punch is not allowed, people will use head to block the punch.
I would like to see both MMA and Sanda exist. This way, some MA training can be maintained for the future generation.
This argument is true in different ways for just about every sport/style. You don't see kickboxers or MT guys go into MMA without crosstraining for the same reason. And you don't see pure BJJ guys in MMA for the opposite reason-no one art is really enough to let you succeed in MMA on its own.While I like Sanda, their lack of a ground game highly limits my enjoyment of the sport. Also if a Sanda practitioner were to go into general MMA, they would get bulldozed.
In MMA they are too willing to go to the ground and fight which is the opposite mindset of Sanda. Sanda trains not to be on the ground and in MMA they practically lay down on the ground for you, which I think gives the impression that it's easy to take people down. This leaves the question. Is it easy because MMA fighters don't mind being on the ground? Are MMA fighters training to remain standing or do they train to get the best position when going to the ground?This is my concern. MMA seems ignore this part of training. If you are good in the ground skill, when I take you down, you won't have any desire to remain standing. Why should you? The ground game is where you want to fight me.
I'm afraid that as long as the MMA is popular, people won't train how to
- resist against take down.
- remain standing after throwing.
Since in Sanda, when you throw your opponent down, if you
- remain balance, you will get 2 points.
- fall down with your opponent, but you are on top, you will only get 1 point.
This brings it back to my question above. Are wrestlers training not to be taken down, or are they training to have the best position on the way to the ground? Being that most wrestling is done on the ground, my guess is that they aren't training to prevent from going to the ground. After all how do you wind and score points in NCAA Wrestling? What is the main goal of an NCAA wrestler? To pin someone's shoulders to the ground. Which is all cases that I know of requires the person to be on the ground to do that. You can't win in NCAA by standing up. You have to go to the ground.If NCAA wrestlers can be taken down, anyone can be taken down, that's why everyone learns, and why Bjj coaches are brought into MMA gyms as grappling coaches.
This brings it back to my question above. Are wrestlers training not to be taken down, or are they training to have the best position on the way to the ground? Being that most wrestling is done on the ground, my guess is that they aren't training to prevent from going to the ground. After all how do you wind and score points in NCAA Wrestling? What is the main goal of an NCAA wrestler? To pin someone's shoulders to the ground. Which is all cases that I know of requires the person to be on the ground to do that. You can't win in NCAA by standing up. You have to go to the ground.
So back to my question. Are they really training not to go to the ground or are they training to be in the best position for when they go to the ground? How many BJJ practitioners can win by remaining standing? What is the possibility that BJJ practitioners can win with the same skill sets while standing up? If their chances of winning improve greatly when on the ground, then what sense does it make to train not to be on the ground?
I would differ on this one. A Sprawl is a better position as you are going to the ground. A Sprawl is not "remaining on your feet" When you do a sprawl, you are not actively standing on your feet. When you do a sprawl you are just in a better position while on the ground. 3 different people doing sprawls.A wrestler is trained how to stop a takedown (the sprawl being one such example), because when you’re taken down, you’re under the control of your opponent unless you can reverse the takedown, which is very hard to do.
For most martial arts being taken down while your opponent is still standing is a bigger loss.For a wrestler, getting taken down is potentially a loss, so they are masters at avoiding it,
The only thing that tells me is that the other fighter should have increased the distance forcing the BJJ Champion to either stand back up or take a defensive position on her back. In the video the other fighter recklessly falls on top of the BJJ Champion in hopes to ground and pound. That's not the plan I would have worked with.Once that gets locked in, there’s very little you can do to stop the takedown into joint lock. Listen to the fight commentary, that tells you the view of ground fighting in MMA
I would differ on this one. A Sprawl is a better position as you are going to the ground. A Sprawl is not "remaining on your feet" When you do a sprawl, you are not actively standing on your feet. When you do a sprawl you are just in a better position while on the ground. 3 different people doing sprawls.
Yes, they stopped the takedown, but they did so by going to the ground, not by standing on their feet. Which goes to my question. Are they really training not to go to the ground or are they training to be in the best position for when they go to the ground?
With Sanda, you are actually training not to go to the ground.
For most martial arts being taken down while your opponent is still standing is a bigger loss.
When your opponent takes you down but remains standing then you are a great risk for this.
This is one thing that Sanda works on because that's how they score the points, so for them being take to the ground leads to a loss, unlike MMA where being taken down doesn't always mean that you lose. I could take down a BJJ practioner and still easily lose the fight. In Sanda, you don't get get an opportunity to change that out come. You don't get a chance to "fight out of it."
The only thing that tells me is that the other fighter should have increased the distance forcing the BJJ Champion to either stand back up or take a defensive position on her back. In the video the other fighter recklessly falls on top of the BJJ Champion in hopes to ground and pound. That's not the plan I would have worked with.
This is possible to do in SC or Judo tournament.I'm also saying that the belief that you can snuff takedowns with some sort of "iron body" training is nonsense. If you can really do it, I recommend you contact a gym or promoter and get ready to make millions of dollars coaching MMA fighters how to stop takedowns while still standing.
The fact that you make this statement of "getting back to their feet" pretty much falls into line with "being on the ground". If someone is already on their feet then "get back to their feet almost instantly." The only Sprawl that wouldn't fall into this category is a standing sprawl where the practitioner sprawls but still remains standing.I wouldn't consider that the ground, since after a sprawl, the grappler can get back to their feet almost instantly
We've have already been looking at application. That's what the other videos were. But I'll analyze your video.Instead of putting up theory, let's look at application;
I have used "downward pulling" and win in tournament many rounds. If you put both of your hands on the back of your opponent's neck, you then use your whole body weight on top of it, no matter how strong your opponent is, he will be down. You just have to move your leading leg back fast enough.The only Sprawl that wouldn't fall into this category is a standing sprawl where the practitioner sprawls but still remains standing.