Most versatile and effective fighting style?

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Jiujitsu is most effective for the kind of battles you will fight as a girl. Most jiujitsu clubs have mma classes which is basically muay thai with grappling. Dont short yourself and disregard grappling. Its the future


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BJJ champion

Let me see her take down a Mutuombo ass 300lb croc wrestling NOLA gator bytch with just holds and grapples. :rudy:

The problem with BJJ is that it does not teach you acupressure points so when there is 100 pound weight class difference it becomes useless.

Now Wing Chun and other Chinese arts on the other hand...:smugbiden:
 

Mowgli

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Let me see her take down a Mutuombo ass 300lb croc wrestling NOLA gator bytch with just holds and grapples. :rudy:

The problem with BJJ is that it does not teach you acupressure points so when there is 100 pound weight class difference it becomes useless.

Now Wing Chun and other Chinese arts on the other hand...:smugbiden:
:mjlol:

Ill endure the pain of any pressure point on earth to squeeze the life out of someones neck. :mjlol:
 
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See the problem is I bet @Mowgli will check a YT video like this with a :obama: look on his face:



Come to find out and realize that the capoeira nikka in the video is extremely slow and weak and the BJJ practitioner simply has more years of experience than him :francis:

Now this vid is just a fukkin MEDIUM level capoeira fighter (not even a master, kid probably has like 5 years at best):



Haven't seen a good Mestre on YouTube to date. Capoeira is the same as TKD you need speed for it to be effective.

BJJ has a lower speed requirement and more emphasis on stamina and technique...

When faced with a striking practitioner with 10 years exp. and proper speed - BJJ will be at the disadvantage with the same years of exp....Period.:beli:
 

Mowgli

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See the problem is I bet @Mowgli will check a YT video like this with a :obama: look on his face:



Come to find out and realize that the capoeira nikka in the video is extremely slow and weak and the BJJ practitioner simply has more years of experience than him :francis:

Now this vid is just a fukkin MEDIUM level capoeira fighter (not even a master, kid probably has like 5 years at best):



Haven't seen a good Mestre on YouTube to date. Capoeira is the same as TKD you need speed for it to be effective.

BJJ has a lower speed requirement and more emphasis on stamina and technique...

When faced with a striking practitioner with 10 years exp. and proper speed - BJJ will be at the disadvantage with the same years of exp....Period.:beli:

You cant do capoeira into your 70s...... Its not a gentle art

Your knees and hips will blow out EARLY. THen youll start doing jiujitsu.
 

↓R↑LYB

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There's no way a female can master BJJ you'd have to get used to taking hits like these and still being able to maintain consciousness to pull off that arm bar:

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:rudy: Ain't happenin.

:mjlol: what gym you train at breh
 

joeychizzle

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For stand up, you should take boxing with muay thai/kickboxing (the dutch style is great), and perhaps a little capoeira or tkd or karate for something a little different. in the clinch, sharpen up on wrestling, some judo, and the thai plum.
on the ground, fukk with wrestling, sambo, and bjj.

bear in mind that all of the above require fine tuning to be applicable in mma. things they teach you in the pure form of each martial art will NOT serve you well in mma. like when you have a narrow, almost side on stance in boxing, it's great for reach and reducing your target area, but in mma you'll get kicked like mad.
same with wrestling. sometimes you'll see brehs give up the back then try and reverse the position or spin out or whatever. you can't give up your back in mma. ever. unless perhaps you're being punched out in full mount.

but fukk it breh, just take up classes and learn everything you deem useful.
 

KyokushinKarateMan

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You ask what is the most versatile and effective fighting style, yet, the nature of fighting arts generally doesn't allow for that dynamic to coexist at the level I suspect you're seeking.

For instance, Bruce Lee is famous for once saying, "Fear not the man who has trained 10,000 kicks, once- fear the man who has trained one kick, 10,000 times."

Simplicity is usually the best answer. Being versatile means having many different elements. Someone like a boxer, or a wrestler, or jiu jitsu practicioner, is not very "versatile".

They do not have a whole lot of versatility in what they ultimately end up doing to you.

But what they do have is effectiveness. They are, in fact, 3 of the most basic yet most effective/devastating things a person can learn.

While, on the other hand, another style of fighting may be more flashy and versatile.. yet.. cannot fight their way out of a wet paper bag with scissors in their hands. Not because they don't train hard, but because they haven't focused on any one aspect of fighting enough to prepare them for real life situations.
 
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