My school is 9 out of 10, we are a martial arts school. We have a bunch of BJJ only coaches though but I kinda wanna move to another school because I don't feel like jiu jitsu gets the love it deserves at our place. They always push us to the side when they need space, and the place is a bit to yucky to my liking.
Never hurts moving to another school when necessary to meet your needs especially if it feels that way & you've communicated your concerns with them not being properly addressed. I left my old martial arts club for another school due to my old professor getting passive-aggressive when I began cross-training, also had some other reasons behind my leaving, the new place I'm at is amazing the fresh air I need. Be sure to weigh all your options in your area as it's normal to have a gym that meets a lot of things but fails in areas where you either need a whole new gym or see if they're actually fine with you cross-training if they aren't all traditional or super weird about it.
Disagree on the cage thing. A lot of the bigger gyms also offer mma classes. So it depends on whether the gym is primarily a bjj gym or an mma gym. Also instructors rolling depends on whether they are giving feedback and paying attention. If the instructor is watching and giving advice and adapting lessons based on what they see, it can be better than just rolling with the instructor. If the instructor just sits down looking at their phone and not paying attention. Then it is a huge problem with that gym.
Last about MMA we don't have a cage and we teach 90% Jiu-Jitsu but we do have striking class for our MMA athletes. We are good on all the other nine though.
Question : what do you think about the kind of rolling where you both slap a little bit to show your vulnerable in sime situations. It changes everything. Would it be better to do pure BJJ , or the kind that prepares you for a fight? (Slapping) . And are there schools where you can get belts that involves slapping? A lot of positions that are good in a bjj tournament would be bad in a fight because they would be raining down punches elbows and even head butts
Depends what you're training for. If you're training for a jiu jitsu tournament then that's not needed. If you're training for self defense it's not bad.
It's Bo Nikal's dad.
Dang, we're on fire! Come thru 10/10 10th Planet Jiu-Jitsu Newport
Might have to swing by.
My school is 9 out of 10, we are a martial arts school. We have a bunch of BJJ only coaches though but I kinda wanna move to another school because I don't feel like jiu jitsu gets the love it deserves at our place.
They always push us to the side when they need space, and the place is a bit to yucky to my liking.
Never hurts moving to another school when necessary to meet your needs especially if it feels that way & you've communicated your concerns with them not being properly addressed. I left my old martial arts club for another school due to my old professor getting passive-aggressive when I began cross-training, also had some other reasons behind my leaving, the new place I'm at is amazing the fresh air I need. Be sure to weigh all your options in your area as it's normal to have a gym that meets a lot of things but fails in areas where you either need a whole new gym or see if they're actually fine with you cross-training if they aren't all traditional or super weird about it.
Disagree on the cage thing. A lot of the bigger gyms also offer mma classes. So it depends on whether the gym is primarily a bjj gym or an mma gym. Also instructors rolling depends on whether they are giving feedback and paying attention. If the instructor is watching and giving advice and adapting lessons based on what they see, it can be better than just rolling with the instructor. If the instructor just sits down looking at their phone and not paying attention. Then it is a huge problem with that gym.
Yeah that's more what I meant about the instructor, if they aren't engaged in what's happening. If they just check out after teaching that's no good.
"God forbid karate" 😂😂
Great List! 👊
Libbies hate tucker 😂
Last about MMA we don't have a cage and we teach 90% Jiu-Jitsu but we do have striking class for our MMA athletes. We are good on all the other nine though.
Question : what do you think about the kind of rolling where you both slap a little bit to show your vulnerable in sime situations. It changes everything. Would it be better to do pure BJJ , or the kind that prepares you for a fight? (Slapping) . And are there schools where you can get belts that involves slapping? A lot of positions that are good in a bjj tournament would be bad in a fight because they would be raining down punches elbows and even head butts
Depends what you're training for. If you're training for a jiu jitsu tournament then that's not needed. If you're training for self defense it's not bad.
We rarely do that in our school but when we do we do it as fun rounds with trustable partners.
@@dgonzaga17 I wonder if teachers give out bjj belts that include slapping
Look what happened to Gary in his last fight
Start a school and teach me!!!
You I'll teach for free.
6 year old blue belts? Are we even still talking about Brazilian jiu jitsu?
60 year old blue belts*