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Conditioning is very important. After that, each individual should be developing a strategy for themselves, based on their preferences.
At my school, we have a heavy emphasis on wrestling, guard passing and topside transitions, so we drill that a lot.
Practice comp rounds are ideal as well, preferably a little longer than what you will actually compete under, this will drain you has tank more.
James, as much as I appreciate the over time to build cardio, I wonder whether this gives you a false sense of patience. I guess that's what coaches are for, to point out how much time is left, or offer positive advice, but the way I see it, you should train in the constraints of what you will compete in.
just some food for thought.
I do see what you're saying - but if you can go full pace for a slightly longer round often, you won't really ever have to worry in a regular round - and I have always found that knowledge comforting.
I do believe it could lead to many becoming a bit complacent, for sure.
In hilo Jay would often spend the last 20 - 30 minutes of class on non stop 5-7 min matches with either a 30 sec or 1 min rest in between. This method addresses both of our concerns, but I can see and agree with answering that question within your own mind to be able to push that extra minute or two. one thing i was told in hilo was that I had lazy jiu jitsu, and that even though i was game to go all day, I was asked if I was genuinely trying to win the whole time on the mat. It really changed my perspective on how I approach timed rolling sessions and competitions in particular.
I also like how eddie talks about time as an investment. Whether it be training, or in the match itself, you wanna invest in your time wisely to increase the percentages of your success rate. Meaning, if you're not a wrestle, why even bother standing on your feet, or if your specialty is top game, it may be wise to supplement it with strong wrestling or takedown defense. that was another strategy that has always stuck out and made an impact on me.
I love this topic...ttt
Well I can give my thoughts has a fighter and as an Instructor.
Has a Fighter: i'm looking for atleast 2 hrs a week on cardio, plus a good diet to get my weight wear it needs to be. I work takedowns for 2 yrs a wk also. For ground work I'm putting reps into my go to moves from each position. Whatever time is left i'm rollin on the mat atleast 3 nights of the wk. My gym plan is pretty much the same for every event but I might change 1 or 2 things based on the rules. I've put a lot of time into an attacking system that sets me up for top position or a sub. Game plan is huge not to mention the right mind set. Are just as important as an being able to defend a choke.
Has a Coach:
I spend time watching my students roll and see what they are hitting in class. I take that and find ways to build off of that, and i spend time with all of them before and after classes to fine tune things. Class format changes by add situation drills, takedowns into matwork, lots of movement drills. I try to get my students on a string of positive things when we start getting ready for tournaments also, to help with mind set. It starts off simple with drills like stopping takedowns in drills. By the end They hitting subs or transition they couldnt do before.
Just some thoughts, hope it helps. I may add more when I have more time!