They have since became friends and have competed 6 times in local tournaments. The little guy is 4 and 2 with all wins via submission while the larger kid has 2 wins by points. They are fun to watch... "Iron Sharpens Iron"
Yea how I felt a couple of days ago in class when I got annihilated by someone who was previously easy for me to submit. All because I got lazy and took 3 months off. Both kids here are very good! Me; not so much 😞
These kids are amazing. Being so dedicated, disciplined, and locked in at an early age will set a great foundation for the rest of their life. Kudos to the parents they must be proud.
Adults have a nice and tolerant attitude, they let children be children and don't dramatize when they act as children, it is good to see. Those kids are already terrifying warriors.
Safety. The kid who lost was put into a belly down armbar and the ref was unable to see how vulnerable the arm was so the ref made a decision to stop the match or risk injury. Right or wrong its best for these kids that refs step in early. The kid who lost is very tough and proud and never wants to lose so sometimes these kids don't tap fast enough. Here is a match up of the same 2 kids 2.5 years removed from this video. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-fRjx2_sAi60.html
@@2717watt I’m sure the two boys have great coach’s that being said the parents should shut up and let them coach. I heard some parents talking over the coach giving random instructions like knee on belly when it made no sense at all. There were so many parents talking I couldn’t even hear the coach’s instructions. My comment wasn’t meant to be directed at any of these kids coaches or Professor. It was more or less directed to the parents that shouldn’t be talking at all during the match. Both boys did a great job!
@@michaelsingJiuJitsu Understood. You mainly heard his twin sister but there were 5 other matches going on in the same room. Spectators were literally sitting within leaning back distance of the coaches