here's an issue that i've been thinking about for some time, & i'm interested in getting everyone's feedback, grapplers & others as well.
some grappling arts have a direct lineage just like any other martial art. jujitsu for instance. this was part of a samurai's military training, which later became available to a wider group through the advent of judo. judo & jujitsu have ranks, schools, teachers, etc.
folk wrestling styles have always been a little different, simply because it's exactly that--a folk art. there might be clubs or schools, & it might have been part of a military tradition as well. but it is first & foremost transmitted on the mats, in competitions, & even in backyards.
so the question i've been considering is this: at what point do you practice one style of wrestling as opposed to another? do you have to have extensive, formal training in a folk style of wrestling in order to lay claim to being a practicioner of it? or is it simply a matter of training & competing under that rule set?
it's my opinion that wrestling is wrestling, & in a sport context, the rules make the style. if you are a freestyle wrestler who starts competing in judo tournaments, guess what, you're a judoka. you may not have rank in judo, you may not have lineage to kano, & you may not have a right to teach judo, but you certainly "play judo" just like any other judoka. at the end of the day, you either have an understanding of how to leverage an opponent or you don't. everything else is just rules & costumes.
please share any thoughts,
jf
some grappling arts have a direct lineage just like any other martial art. jujitsu for instance. this was part of a samurai's military training, which later became available to a wider group through the advent of judo. judo & jujitsu have ranks, schools, teachers, etc.
folk wrestling styles have always been a little different, simply because it's exactly that--a folk art. there might be clubs or schools, & it might have been part of a military tradition as well. but it is first & foremost transmitted on the mats, in competitions, & even in backyards.
so the question i've been considering is this: at what point do you practice one style of wrestling as opposed to another? do you have to have extensive, formal training in a folk style of wrestling in order to lay claim to being a practicioner of it? or is it simply a matter of training & competing under that rule set?
it's my opinion that wrestling is wrestling, & in a sport context, the rules make the style. if you are a freestyle wrestler who starts competing in judo tournaments, guess what, you're a judoka. you may not have rank in judo, you may not have lineage to kano, & you may not have a right to teach judo, but you certainly "play judo" just like any other judoka. at the end of the day, you either have an understanding of how to leverage an opponent or you don't. everything else is just rules & costumes.
please share any thoughts,
jf