
Originally Posted by
Eddie Bravo
This is the best points format so far, but I don't like the emphasis on takedowns and the frowning on guard pulling with point deductions. Fights can very easily end up looking like Rafa/Cobrina in 2013 ADCC, just a takedown battle for 20 minutes.
I don't know how many times on ebr and jre I talked about how if I was forced at gun point to create a points based tournament that subs would count way more than a sweep or pass. I said if a pass is 3 points then a legit sub attempt would be 7 points. Been trying to get NAGA and GQ to adopt this format.
It's a great thing that Rickson is making it happen but again, point deductions for guard pulling are not good IMO. Look at how many fights Marcelo & Jean Jacques have won by submission that started by guard pulling. Paul Sass anyone? Big Nog vs Tim Sylvia? If guard pulling is suicidal then why is it so hard for guard masters in MMA to do? Think about it. Guard pulling, when you have a dangerous guard, is a fantastic 3rd option in MMA.
The main problem is gonna be people stalling when they are up by a sweep point, so it's back to the same problems IBJJF has.
I believe his idea is re-inforcing street applicable jiu jitsu. I'm not pulling guard on concrete. That's probably a flawed basis for him to come from because this is sport jiu jitsu, but I think that's his base thought. I'm with you though, I don't enjoy watching poor wrestling for 20 mins.
That being said, I think you're going to have to give a whole hell of a lot more than negative 1 to a guard pull to discourage it. Just think of how many more sub opportunities you have from guard. Pretty much the only option you have from top before passing his guard is diving on a leg. Guards are so unpassable at the top level these days. By the time the top guy manages to pass the guard, if he ever does, the bottom guy is going to have had so many options for a sub attempt and likely have racked up a high score. I just see guards getting a huge advantage with this format. Just think of how it works with ibjjf rules right now, the guard player wins by advantages from sub attempts and never letting the opponent pass whereas the man on top wins on points by securing a pass. The whole battle is there in that pass. If the guy on the bottom is scoring points the whole time too, the advantage for top is gone.
For example, I get a guy in my full guard. I could throw up a million sub attempts on him in a short amount of time, but if he gets out of all them, manages to eventually bust out of my guard and then scores a pass, he wins in IBJJF. In jjgf, he has no chance, he'll never catch back up. I haven't watched the Budo videos other than the one in OP, probably should've before forming an opinion, but it seems to me the guard would end up having a huge advantage.
Outside of that, the other huge problem is how do you know when they're close enough on a sub to give points? You're basically going to have a bunch of Brazilian judges with an incredibly subjective scoring system leaving many of the wins fully in the judges hands. Are these judges even going to call out sub attempt points for newer subs? Truck attempts? Twister, Barato, hindulotine.. Sometimes it can be hard to know when the guy is even putting in a sub. And if you haven't seen much of the sub before, it will be very subjective to call when it's close enough to give points. The judging will be incredibly subjective.
But, it is an attempt to make the sport more entertaining and offer something different. And that's great. We'll learn a lot from it's success or it's failure.