
Originally Posted by
Richard Steggles
After watching the Henderson Vs Pettis fight...It provoked some thoughts regarding BJJ/Submission Wrestling...Pettis (a purple belt) submits Henderson (a black belt) with an armbar from guard a pretty straight forward and almost basic armbar....Does this prompt that in your JJ game you should always focus on the basics and the fundamentals?
BJJ is not anyone's game. But yes we should always focus on basics.

Originally Posted by
ScottRay
This happens all the time. Black gets tapped by purple in the cage. I could write a novel on this but I'm keeping it semi-short.
First: BJJ black belt = ????? Nogi. Bjj purple = ???? Nogi. It depends on how their game translates. If your a black belt specializing in collar chokes and spider guard, probably doesn't translate to nogi too well. If your a purple belt specializing in arm drags and the rnc/armbar combo from the back, you might have a great nogi game.
Second: There is a thing that happens when a color belt wins a UFC title belt. Even if his whole careers success comes from striking, the jjiujitsu coach feels the need to put a black belt on them.. I don't understand this.. It kinda makes me sick. Now, I'm a fan of Ben Henderson. But does he have black belt nogi skills? No. Is he a legit top 5 fighter at 155 ? yes. But what about that gets him a black belt? I would demote him... Sorry. But nobody above blue lets that happen. He made like 30 mistakes before and during that armbar. Looked like his first time being in one.
I agree in part to your point about how those gi skills translate to no gi with strikes.
But Bendo is a legit black belt. He does compete. Unless you've accomplished what he's accomplished (outside of the ring), you can't really say much about whether or not he's a legit black belt or not. Pettis caught him sleeping. He defended, but Pettis' attack was better than his defense.

Originally Posted by
Justin Patten
The gloves can make it very hard to get out of an armbar sometimes. Too bad. I remember the first time Henderson fought Cowboy Cerrone, Cowboy could not submit him. No matter how slick the transition or how tight the submission. Pettis just has his number.
That's what I'm saying, give Pettis some credit here. It's not so much that Bendo made a mistake. I'm sure Bendo's escaped 1000's of armbars. Pettis is just that good.

Originally Posted by
Rockanrollin
I agree with this Pettis has his number. Pettits lost to Clay G. In the UFC,
some match up better against certain types and style for sure.
I agree that Pettis has his number. But bringing up the Clay loss is a moot point. The Pettis camp made a strategic error. Pettis wasn't beaten because he couldn't stop the takedown or get back to his feet. He lost because he thought he could win off his back. Once he dropped two rounds, he realized that's a bad move and decisively won the 3rd, but it was too little too late. Bendo is a MUCH stronger and better wrestler than Guida, and Bendo has never been able to bully Pettis. Styles make fights and strategies break fights. But yeah, Pettis just has Ben's number.