The point was to not base anything on a blue belt
Not sure why some are trying to prove the exception to the rule
This thread ended when da Zog spoke
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Herzog, devil's advocate here, we're talking about a comp, so there's not much to save him from. A couple tapouts early in his career aren't that big a deal. And I have a lot of trouble with the notion of any instructor, no matter how great, having the final say on anything I do in my life. Teaching is a partnership. I'm paying you to teach me and advise me, but ultimately I make choices. When I make dumb ones, you might have known better, but I will have learned.
That said, the real issue here is what kind of instructor do you have? Will doing your own thing risk your training relationship? Is that worth more than one single tournament?
I was just playing off of Zog with the very common white belt know it all types. Not directed at you personally. As an assistant to the instructor myself I have seen many of them. But I wouldn't pay and stay at a place if it didn't meet my expectations either. You should value the service you pay for. It's your money!
Ah, my bad. It's still too early to tell. I've been going here for almost 4 months 2-3 times a week. I see a lot of inconsistency and I think it's because of his TKD background and he's only a purple belt in JJ. I'm going to give it a solid 6 months and reevaluate. I have visited the machado school and love the organization and teaching method, but it's more expensive and farther away. So I will keep using the forums to help me out.
If you've competed in nogi before at a higher level AND been successful then IMO it is sandbagging.
Last year I was in the same postion. I signed up for intermediate in NoGi and Whitebelt in Gi. There were no problems. (Grappling Industries)