I got my blue belt and am fighting the urge to be a lazy fuck and crutch easy rolls against white belts. Purples are sending it against me right now and heel hooking the shit out of me. I have to talk myself into going to the other side of the mat every night when I can just spam k guard triangles on white belts.
@sevourn3 ай бұрын
Getting so far up your own ass that you unironically refer to it as your ju-jitsu journey
@凸Bebo凸3 ай бұрын
@@jedsanford5065 Tapping out white belts over and over will make you better than getting beat by the purples. The only thing rolling with purples as a blue makes you better at is hip movement on the bottom, IMO.
@geraldduenas23913 ай бұрын
Im a 46 yo 4 stripe blue belt that’s been training since 2019. I’m 39-12 w 37 subs in all tournament matches combined (IBJJF, Naga, JJWL etc TCO..). Best midlife crisis ever🙏
@mikebasketball113 ай бұрын
Badass brother! Thanks for inspring me. Any tips for a white belt about to transition into blue in terms of mentality/how to improve? Awesome stats too man. Cheers.
@RicoMnc3 күн бұрын
Older, smaller blue belt here (63 130lbs). Having to switch schools about 1 year after receiving blue belt really helped me with the "only one way" trap. The training methodology and emphasis was different enough to get my attention and reevaluate my assumptions. What was good and solid from my first school was proven again and improved, with some of my weaknesses exposed so I could identify and focus on them. One example was what my first school called "wrestlers cross side". They considered it weak, and easy to escape. My new school also has a Judo coral belt instructor. Students who learned pinning and control from him take this a couple notches higher than I was used to and I have to learn how to deal with it better. I tend to be reactive, but not necessarily passive. I think of it as similar to the counter-puncher in boxing. I've learned quickly that the larger new white belts only need a few weeks of training before they learn how to use their size and strength against me better, with some technique, and I have to be more proactive or I will spend too much time working escapes or sweeps from under them, which wears me out faster. I now prioritize staying on top and not ending up there as much.
@TheDOS17 күн бұрын
Hobbyist for a decade with some breaks due to life. Was expecting to find this off putting and simplistic in some direction. Very pleasantly surprised. Really liked your conceptualization of your breakdown, spectrum and timeline. Great job, helpful mindset for an extremely broad perspective. E.g. currently my main impediment is age and lack of solo-free time. And I feel your framework is still helpful despite somewhat extreme restrictions.
@cherokeeoutlaw2.0113 ай бұрын
16 years doing jiu-jitsu I believe I've been all of these at one time
@paulolemos23203 ай бұрын
You definitely get more gears with time. I have 7 years of bjj, brown belt in the last year, and still do the mistake of going too reactive with the wrong person and paying the price for it. Yesterday I went with a white belt in BJJ that's a high level adult competitor of Judo black belt. I started being super reactive with him as he was just a white belt, but he went for the kill since the start. Almost blacked out from an Ezekiel before tapping to him. My first coach always said: "Going with someone you don't know, especially white belts, you always make them tap as soon as possible, than you dictate the pace of the rest of the roll, so they know who's in charge". Didn't follow that advice this time...
@oosik4113 ай бұрын
As a hobbyist I go in with a plan to try 2-5 things but I have to adjust based on my training partner. A passive white belt I can play more vs an aggressive white belt I’ll be more defensive to avoid injury. Then the athletic purple and blues goal is at least slow them down to give me time to think. Few people match pace which allows both of us to try new things where some people only do what they are good at.
@KazzArie3 ай бұрын
2.5 year veteran I like playing evens. Start off reactive, capitalize off the odd player’s mistake, then switch over to aggressive. Unless it’s a new white belt or visitor then aggressive until the first tap and switch over to reactive 😅
@billparris2102 ай бұрын
@KazzArie So you believe that you can tap all white belts being aggressive?
@KazzArie2 ай бұрын
@@billparris210 depends on their age mostly. Being a masters 3 I’m not trying to keep up with a high school or college wrestler, or the mid 30s roid bois Even if I don’t tap em, chance of them tapping me is relatively low - but never zero. That’s the thing about being a white belt, innit? There’s a tendency toward over committing to everything or being laser focused on potential traps. When that stuff gets corrected, they’re not usually white anymore.
@SIickTurtIe3 ай бұрын
i hope to one day be a grizzled hobbyist
@scripted443 ай бұрын
Amazing video. I dont even train jiu jitsu but the concepts extend to muay thai perfectly.❤️
@tededo3 ай бұрын
52, grizzled (early 2000s). My game in the last few years is patterned after Priit Mihkelson and Chris Paines. Both are so specialized at defense that most jiujiteiros feel their offense is BS. I dont also, flip, switch to offense with one major sweep, from there my top game is monstrous. My instructor noticed my style and handed e a licence to smash white belts at will and go full steam on em. If I wasnt grizzled, that would never be possible, but going from 0 to 100 on white belts ? Ok, cool. Never thought instructors could allow us to do that.
@blondequijote3 ай бұрын
With all the wrestlers who are white belts in my gym, that would make perfect sense as advice to purple belts rolling with guys half their age who tend to be more aggressive naturally and quite capable if they’re coming in with a grappling background.
@mikebasketball113 ай бұрын
Why would you want to smash white belts at will and go full steam on them?
@blondequijote3 ай бұрын
@@mikebasketball11 I think the instructor knows that OP doesn't intend to go full steam all the time, just as the need arises.
@mikebasketball113 ай бұрын
@@blondequijote That makes sense - my bad. In the context of being a gym shark/enforcer
@barrett52292 ай бұрын
@@mikebasketball11I’ve been at it about 7 years. I agree with you that comment sounded terrible. If I had to translate I’m thinking what he meant was his coach trusts him to be hard on the white belts without hurting them. It’s been my experience that the more experienced you get the less aggressive and spazzy you become and you can better demo the power of BJJ without a lot of the risks. With that said I’m simply giving my opinion so take it for what it’s worth… which isn’t much 😂
@BboyDaquack3 ай бұрын
Def a reactive player with 3 years in the game. But after a pretty serious concussion from bjj. I almost feel like i have to be reactive and more defensive just to protect my head from further injury. Hard to tap into that aggression i had before the injury.
@RollsNotRoyce3 ай бұрын
Same here man, i had post concussion for 5 months and just got back to training
@BboyDaquack3 ай бұрын
@@RollsNotRoyce yeah it sucks pretty bad. I had to take an entire year off. Really contemplated coming back or not at all. But now my entire goal of every class is to just leave uninjured
@gabrielaraujo62863 ай бұрын
May I ask how you got concussed from bjj? Did you land on your head while wrestling or something?
@BboyDaquack3 ай бұрын
@@gabrielaraujo6286 I can't 100% recall. But I believe I had a Dela Riva guard on a young highschool white belt, he tried to break my hooks and back step out. He backstepped and spun his heel straight into my face. Broke my nose and I ended up having to go on short term disability for work for a month. Basically non functional for a month with severe migraines. Been over 2 years since then and I still have headache and migraine issues unfortunately.
@billparris2102 ай бұрын
So why not proactive?
@barrett52292 ай бұрын
Ahh man gonna be at an ibjjf open on the 5th! Would have loved to watch the training. I think you’ve got a lot of great advice. 7 year purple myself
@glexx26553 ай бұрын
I find its easier to teach someone to be aggressive since theyre quite passive and flowly rather then the opposite. Ive been training 9 years actively and my biggest issue is how much i get dodged by the blue belts and some of the purples i usually just end up rolling other brown belts which is nice but i find only a handful of blue belts have the grit to roll brown belts. I even give the lower belts positions. I find the white belts are more eager to roll me i think blue belts have the mentality of knowing a lot when they know so little. Usually around purple people realise they dont know much and the game is complex. I think if someones passive they can learn to have gears a lot easier then someone who's trying to always push forward. momentum is easier to build then slow down possibly.
@nick04243 ай бұрын
This is gold, thanks!
@mkinghorn713 ай бұрын
I am an Academy owner. My Academy is about 3 years old. People come and go. But I've also seen a good core group of people stay. Britney kids or adults especially the ones that have been there for a while how do you mentally deal with the revolving door that an Academy can be at times? Especially when it has been someone that's been there for a good period of time.
@ChasenHill2 ай бұрын
Great question, and I can definitely understand how that feels. One way to mentally navigate the ‘revolving door’ is to focus on the impact you’ve made while they were with you. Even if someone leaves after a few years, you’ve played a significant role in their journey, and that’s something to be proud of. Additionally, nurturing and appreciating the core group that stays is key-those are the relationships that will help anchor the academy’s culture and make it a lasting, supportive community. Hope this helps 😊
@dragonballjiujitsu3 ай бұрын
A few things here: First of all by definition if you aren't one of the handful of people in the world that gets paid to compete in Jiu-Jitsu you are a "Hobbyist". So by Hobbyist you are talking about 99.8% of all the people who train BJJ. Second thing. Trying new things or different ways of doing things is good. Adding in stupid shit like inverting when you train for self defense is not good. You have to be able to tell the difference. You also have to have enough common sense to pass on the latest trends and focus on solid fundamentals. Third thing: Yes, people create new techniques every day. Most of it garbage because it is meant to be used only for sport against other people using sport BJJ. These techniques typically are not practical for self-defense and tend to fall apart quickly when strikes are involved. This is also the technique collecting phase that happens around blue belt and some never grow out of it. There is a reason we see the same techniques working in MMA and actual fights most of the time.
@ronbarrett27252 ай бұрын
Man I feel this 100% 3 year blue belt and I feel like I know nothing but same time I know more than most but applying things alot that I'm not good at
@carreromartialarts3 ай бұрын
1 year is a veteran??
@wingoreviewsboxingandmma36673 ай бұрын
They wouldn't be a rookie anymore
@esteban81832 ай бұрын
I think at the 1 year mark, you should know BJJ etiquette. Have somewhat of a game, know not to spazz etc.