This video seems to be sound advice in my opinion. Just from personal experience as a BJJ practitioner whose job requires regular exposure to violence. The organisation I work for has terrible use of force training, so BJJ is very useful, I'm a purple belt for what it's worth. My preference for takedowns are from upper body controls, I feel this is a safer option especially being in my 40s with shot knees, controls like 2 on 1/russian ties, collar ties or rear bodylocks are my go to. Snapdowns are very effective on the general population. As mentioned in the video elbow control is a priority. My role generally requires pinning after the takedown, prone is king and controls like leg riding/splitting and giftwraps (giftwraps on a wall, bed or chair are a go-to for me) are super effective for controlling people with minimal risks or need for pain compliance.
Your videos are great. Quality content on technique and mindset. It would be my luck though that the guy that breaks into my house has better leglocks than me 😂
I honestly think the best takedown is Osoto Gari. It's simple, involves upper body control, doesn't require you to turn your back or get low, and is extremely high amplitude.
I’m very thankful that I started with muay thai and had 3 mma fights, because the last thing I would do in Europe, is grapple with someone that wants to fight me. The chance of getting stabbed is just way to high, escpecially since in germany knife crime is skyrocketing right now (I wonder why)
Im surprised you didnt include foot sweeps. Would seem to be the ideal way to take someone down. Tyler Spangler had a video where he faces a girl with a rubber knife . He pretty much gets slashed to ribbons.
Great vid but pls dont be goin down the danaher route of spelling out the obvious like when you say breaking someones leg would be a "massive deterrent to the continuance of that fight"
Great content but you didnt mention the spinning spank-utari, works great in conjunction with the inverted speng-ugochi (and of course the tickled coochi).
Best for street is boxing and wrestling. You dont need to know any of bjj, any submission - 99,9 of times you wont use that. Boxing because you want to be on your feet most of the times and even against 2 people you can survive. Wrestling because this is the best grappling martial art - you want grapple for take down and quick ground and pound ( only against 1 guy ) or to stay on feet. BJJ is literally useless ( and im saying that as a bjj practicioner. But I was and I saw multiple street fights)
@@lubas88pl Your evidence for that is what exactly? Theory crafting. How is that different from an aikido or krav maga dork theory crafting? On footage of self defense scenarios, people use bjj just as much as wrestling and boxing. In MMA, you need bjj or some other background in submission grappling. And where are those wrestling clubs for adults? I have never seen any. Lethwei is probably great for self defense, but that's meaningless, bcs there is no Lethwei gyms.
I agree. I wouldn't say that BJJ is completely useless though; there are some skills that we should still own. But again, we should work to change the mindset though in BJJ. It's important to know how to escape a mount for instance, but we should be trying to get up to our feet instead of being satisfied to play guard.
This video seems to be sound advice in my opinion. Just from personal experience as a BJJ practitioner whose job requires regular exposure to violence. The organisation I work for has terrible use of force training, so BJJ is very useful, I'm a purple belt for what it's worth. My preference for takedowns are from upper body controls, I feel this is a safer option especially being in my 40s with shot knees, controls like 2 on 1/russian ties, collar ties or rear bodylocks are my go to. Snapdowns are very effective on the general population. As mentioned in the video elbow control is a priority. My role generally requires pinning after the takedown, prone is king and controls like leg riding/splitting and giftwraps (giftwraps on a wall, bed or chair are a go-to for me) are super effective for controlling people with minimal risks or need for pain compliance.
You found a way to make money doing BJJ! Congrats lol
Sounds like Catch Wrestling is the answer...
BJJ is gay and dosent work.
Now I’m going to go pick a fight with some guy so I can finally practice my kani basami
my man
Your videos are great. Quality content on technique and mindset. It would be my luck though that the guy that breaks into my house has better leglocks than me 😂
I honestly think the best takedown is Osoto Gari. It's simple, involves upper body control, doesn't require you to turn your back or get low, and is extremely high amplitude.
Thats what I was thinking, body lock Osoto is great too
I’m very thankful that I started with muay thai and had 3 mma fights, because the last thing I would do in Europe, is grapple with someone that wants to fight me. The chance of getting stabbed is just way to high, escpecially since in germany knife crime is skyrocketing right now (I wonder why)
Why? Because your government let too many arabs in.
Why do you think?
After being ‘flabbergasted’ on you TikTok I’ve now found you on here
That machete hip toss is from a film.
It's worked for me thankfully on the street I had full controll and was safe just a scuffed elbow is all
Thanks Josh
Make a video on cutting weight for competition
It's extremely effective.
Im surprised you didnt include foot sweeps. Would seem to be the ideal way to take someone down.
Tyler Spangler had a video where he faces a girl with a rubber knife . He pretty much gets slashed to ribbons.
too low % unless youre an absolute god at footsweeps
Any confrontation that results in a fight needs to be dealt with as quickly as possible
@@goodthanksbroa foot technique like Osoto Gari would be a better alternative
i used my wizardy and now the police are after me
Great vid but pls dont be goin down the danaher route of spelling out the obvious like when you say breaking someones leg would be a "massive deterrent to the continuance of that fight"
only if it's a kani basami
dude with small vocabulary scared of long sentences
@@goodthanksbrodude has a business to run and did answer. What else you want?
Great content but you didnt mention the spinning spank-utari, works great in conjunction with the inverted speng-ugochi (and of course the tickled coochi).
P.S. That Matt Serra incident took place in Vegas
Super helpful video!
What’s a thumb post single ? Any videos of the technique ?
Best for street is boxing and wrestling. You dont need to know any of bjj, any submission - 99,9 of times you wont use that. Boxing because you want to be on your feet most of the times and even against 2 people you can survive. Wrestling because this is the best grappling martial art - you want grapple for take down and quick ground and pound ( only against 1 guy ) or to stay on feet. BJJ is literally useless ( and im saying that as a bjj practicioner. But I was and I saw multiple street fights)
100% agree with you.
Bjj is useless.
I could literally win a street fight just using my wrestling and GnP.
@@lubas88pl Your evidence for that is what exactly?
Theory crafting. How is that different from an aikido or krav maga dork theory crafting?
On footage of self defense scenarios, people use bjj just as much as wrestling and boxing.
In MMA, you need bjj or some other background in submission grappling.
And where are those wrestling clubs for adults? I have never seen any. Lethwei is probably great for self defense, but that's meaningless, bcs there is no Lethwei gyms.
I agree. I wouldn't say that BJJ is completely useless though; there are some skills that we should still own. But again, we should work to change the mindset though in BJJ. It's important to know how to escape a mount for instance, but we should be trying to get up to our feet instead of being satisfied to play guard.
@@Kudulokachoke holds , leglocks are very effective in a street fight.
Kind of weird though if you say you haven't been in street fights and then explain what to do in a street fight?
As a bouncer im sure this dude has seen hundreds of street fights. It’s better to learn from others mistakes than to make them yourself.
Don't use 🐢 😂 - it was not mentioned
Learn pure striking e.g. Shinkiokushin and BJJ. Well rounded in wrestling, grappling, and striking is the essential for realistic combat situations
Wow you're grappling with him his mate comes and kicks your head in. Tough guys on the street never roll on their one cause they're not actually tough
1v1 it's effective. If someone tries to jump you, use the second amendment
Not knowing any grappling makes you immune to get kicked in the head?
Weapons will come in . Have played with BJJ BB and brown belts and a knife . They did not fair well
wow you're tough
@@HPUcoachingIt's a mentality thing mate, you wouldn't get it
@@MrOj59 There is exactly zero instances of "mentality" dorks defeating skilled fighers.
Guys just do MMA.
But i like jiu jitsu...
Makes sense. But I don't want the ongoing head trauma.
MMA isn't a style, it's a ruleset. If you go to an MMA gym, you're simply learning techniques from boxing, muay thai, wrestling and jiu-jitsu.
Bjj is a large % of mma ret@rd
@@biscobisco1882and what is your point?
what if im 260 though?