So BJJ god Rickson Gracie is starting his own jiu jitsu federation with a stark contrast in rules compared to the existing monopoly that is the IBJJF. Rewarding points for submission attempts above all.
The news has the community divided. Killer instinct types are all for it. Position freaks are not amused. The irony is that no one will doubt that you need position before submission for the most part, yet there's still division. There's a point in which the philosophies splinter off. That is where the question is asked: which is more important? Positional dominance and control, or submission threats?
The negative comments I've read are about how guys will just spam fake subs to rack up points. All day I've thought they were right. But then I saw this highlight video of the 05 Budo challenge under these JJGF rules.
Not only did most of them end in submission as a result of that "spamming," but the fights were much more exciting that the double guard tug of war that is positional points based jiu jitsu. So honestly, who cares? I'd rather see two guys spam submissions than two guys scissoring for 10 minutes.
This is why I believe the JJGF is gonna be important. If it can garner the same appearance of prestige as the IBJJF name, it's going to bring the conflicting philosophies to the forefront. It's going to show which is most entertaining. It's going to come down to a vote of sorts. Which one will people compete in more? This could potentially reshape the next generation of BJJ players.
The news has the community divided. Killer instinct types are all for it. Position freaks are not amused. The irony is that no one will doubt that you need position before submission for the most part, yet there's still division. There's a point in which the philosophies splinter off. That is where the question is asked: which is more important? Positional dominance and control, or submission threats?
The negative comments I've read are about how guys will just spam fake subs to rack up points. All day I've thought they were right. But then I saw this highlight video of the 05 Budo challenge under these JJGF rules.
Not only did most of them end in submission as a result of that "spamming," but the fights were much more exciting that the double guard tug of war that is positional points based jiu jitsu. So honestly, who cares? I'd rather see two guys spam submissions than two guys scissoring for 10 minutes.
This is why I believe the JJGF is gonna be important. If it can garner the same appearance of prestige as the IBJJF name, it's going to bring the conflicting philosophies to the forefront. It's going to show which is most entertaining. It's going to come down to a vote of sorts. Which one will people compete in more? This could potentially reshape the next generation of BJJ players.