When you roll you're suppose to feel your opponents punch just graze the top of your head, that was definitely not grazing his head lol that roll was hilarious. This is how we learn though.
Parabellum yeah but I think joes point is that the video is heavily biased. A purple belt vs a one month trained boxer. Even in boxing that roll was terrible, imagine in a mma match, that’s an easy knee to the face.
@@user-ey4ut9uc8w the video description says the boxer has 4 years experience which imo is wild for the technique. Maybe he was nervous sparring without boxing rules? Maybe he’s only trained once a year? Idk, but I think MMA is the best example of how well BJJ works against striking, not a vid of a shitty boxer
@@migueltigrelazo this is only in competitive sport where the people u fight are similar height and weight. IRL ur most likely gonna fight someone taller and bigger who sees u as an easy target. By the time u try taking him down, hes kneeing or punching u in the face with his longer reach.
@Kevin Alvarado weight and strength would be too much even for the grappler. Thats why all these demonstrations are on people the same size and weight. Dont kno where u get all this from
@Kevin Alvarado let me see u take on a guy that has 40 or 50 lbs on u and tell me u dont need strength to take him down. Yea sure u can do it on a skinny guy but for a big dude, he'll just sock u in the face and its over. Im not saying boxing beats bjj, nah bjj beats boxing any day. Im saying in a street fight where anything goes? A knee or elbow to the back of the head as youre tryna tackle or grapple a guy that has weight and height on u is gonna be like ur little cousin attacking u, youll get destroyed in a street fight where anything goes. I wouldnt even attempt to get close in a street fight, they might even have a weapon
Yep jajajjaj 😂 that's funny, I don't think that guy is a "boxer" he doesn't know basics like: rythm, guard, basic movement, pivots, of course he cannot roll, I don't think he can slip tho, he don't know how to throw jab or cross as I see, he overreact, he telegraph his "punches"... Definetly he isn't a boxer, like who the fck throw an overhand at that distance? He doesn't go in to throw the punches and that's a common mistake that beginners do a lot.
fr just walks around lifting his hand up and down, gets a really wide base for some weird ducking movement?? then throws the most telegraphed overhand right i think ive seen lmao aint no way this kid is a "boxer"
I would hesitate to throw punches at BJJ guy in sparing too..they rarely know to defend or take good punches... I stopped sparring with Grapplers since lot of times I had chance to uppercut the crap out but naah
‘Boxer’ drops with a giant bend at the waist, drops both his hands during it, loses his balance, throws 0 jabs and one messy overhand right that was reaching.
@Rangus Pure boxers aren't taught to punch like that, he also had a lot less control of the one punch he did throw then most have with jabs and other punches.
@@AOMartialArtsBoxing he did ok, He was manuvering his body ok, he just didn’t get the punch, I say he did somewhat ok for a boxer, I been boxing since I was 6 so I easily knew he was the boxer her just based on his body movement.
bro you calling him a boxer just to be nice right? cuz the first (and really only) shot he throws here is that winging overhand...in small gloves no less...yeah be careful with that guy, seems like the kind of partner to just wing it 100% when panicking.
Yeah went back to that over hand right and it had enough power to ko someone if they werent looking. U can even see it in the purple belts faces hes like: oh hell no boy (takes him down right away)
The purple belt has some great plays here. Saw that when he’d get close the boxer would lean back opening up the single leg. Great transition from side control to OPPOSITE side armbar? Homie got great great skill under his belt.
100%. That's why I immediately aggressively took him down. I talked to him about it after and probably won't be sparing with him again. Definitely avoid techniques like that in sparing.
@@jedaaa47 The thought certainly crossed my mind, but I believe a swift fight ending submission most effectively illustrates the efficacy of jiu jitsu.
Total disrespect with the overhand. Ma boi tried to put you down to sleep. Respect tho, that you didn’t respond with agression and handled it cool, that’s what bjj is about.
Total disrespect to that guy as a fighter, he has begginer level skill after 4 years, doesn't have control, and lacks basic knowledge like how far someone can hit you from
@@sebasdavis8081Beginner level? My man everybody who watched a single boxing match in his life will beat this guy. 0 jabs thrown. The only punch was an amateurish overhand.
Alright thats fun and stuff, but check out my real StreetFight video, where I fight against a purple belt Grappler and Knock him out as a Karate fighter with 4 years of experience only⁉️😉 Karate VS BJJ: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-DI6RcYKMevs.html
Thats what I like to see, 2 experienced different styles fight each other with out any miss matches, you knocked him down with a face kick, and than ground and pounded hes face in like Khabib style, good job kido 😂
@@seanchristiansen4982 Oh nice, I can see your passion for Jiu Jitsu is really showing! I would have definitely bought if I were apart of the club! haha.
Keep training bro .When I was younger I use to get bullied by my older cousins, (which by the way they’re really into lifting weights and strength) When I had 1 year training one of them challenged me to a match because they knew I had started training bjj, right before we started, still been super cocky like always told me to try and do my best against him. ( just to mention I’m a small guy and he’s pretty lean and cut) . Long story short I totally dominated him and put him in several basic submissions. Keep training bro and you’ll dominate mostly everyone who has no grappling experience!
The relative goodness of any fighter is always subjective and thus keyboard warriors and "analysts" come out of the woodwork any time the art they prefer doesn't win out to state the fighter isn't all that good. He trained four years and seemed on par with other boxers. Also, you probably didn't see a whole lot from him because I took him down in
He is not a boxer foot work sucks head movement is completely stiff and how he bends over or what ever the fuck that was a trained boxer even only 5 months f training knows not to do that
@@thre4087 that wasnt a wide hook... it was an overhand right... should follow some jabs maybe... shouldnt be thrown with 4 ounce gloves while sparring imo.
0:05 - 0: 07 sry but you can not call him as a boxer. Freetime boxer yeah! You never get your back foot to the side.. And then go without a guard so down like here... 0: 07 you're crazy but everything is progress keep working hard.
Indeed, no disrespect to anybody’s effort but we need to keep it real in order for BJJ and boxing to improve. This fella was a white belt in both BJJ and boxing, not really relative or insightful sparring.
i replayed it a few times to watch it closely. i liked how he tucked hit right knee into his opponents body before taking the full mount to keep the space tight. then straight into S mount while controlling the arm. clearly a combo he'd practice many times before.
To be honest guys, if that was a boxer of 10 years and even 20 kilos heavier. The result would probably be the same... If the boxer has no takedown defense then what could possibly stop a pure boxer from going to the ground?
a simple uppercut would hurt like a mofo if the boxer stood hes ground and not back off when the bjj guy went for the takedown and gave him a nice suprise it would be a longer fight then 30 secs
Dude have you ever seen a real boxer punch while going backwards ? Or a vicious uppercut. Its obvious that boxing is an incomplete fighting style, just as bjj ...
Some things to have in mind are that boxer uses shoes and don’t fight on grappling-mats. A grappler will always take a standing fighter down and even more so in a soft mat made for grappling. Where you fight can matter a lot. Take a great head kicker (taekwando fighert) and let him fight in a winter street whit jeans on and it will matter. So does it matter in this case
Lmao I've done boxinf sparring in mma gyms barefoot, and in a ring with shoes, and it doesn't make much difference. This dude is no kind of boxer. Looks like he's trained a couple weeks at most, and that's generous. (Bjj guy seems more legit.)
This one of the most perfect examples of all time of why grappling is the best style to train. I don't care if that guy was a pro boxer for 10 years, his reaction to getting taken down would have been exactly the same, just having absolutely ZERO idea what you're even supposed to do.
How is grappling the best overall style? Boxing lack of grappling technique doesnt make Grappling as a style the best. What even is that argument. Any dude with 1-2 years of anything really, mixed with takedown defence will fuck up a straight up grappler. Just like any MT dude will fuck up a tkd user 99% of the times. You thinking that grappling is omnipotent when in reality its all a game of rock paper scisors. Stop trying to bullshido ppl into your fav style just cuz you lack information on most of them apparently.
@@graveyardstudio3503 you're telling me I don't have an argument while making that entire comment 🤣 any style mixed with takedown defense is no longer that style, it is now mma. Muay thai beating tkd most of the time is an even lamer argument. They're two striking arts. The rock paper scissors argument is so dumb that I just got dumber. That's a game of chance. An Olympic wrestler shooting in and slamming you on your head is not a game of chance, that's a game of you're about to enter a world you didn't even know existed. Which leads into "1 to 2 years of takedown defense".... so many problems with that but I'll focus on the main one. 1 to 2 years of anything is a stupid argument. What works at the highest level? (Meaning not a single year of training in case that doesn't register). Grappling works at the highest level. Something like 90% of ufc champions have either wrestling or bjj as their first and main style. Guess nobody in the ufc has considered taking a year of take down defense classes. To call grappling bullshido shows how little YOU know about martial arts. And the most clear and obvious point overall is that at the end of a day there are these things called legs. You can throw a punch and j walk away. You can throw a kick and I walk away. You can shove me and I walk away. But you grab me or tackle or anything like that, and I'm connected to you, I can no longer just walk away. But if at that point you haven't trained judo or wrestling or bjj... its gonna be a bad day for you.
@@graveyardstudio3503 "takedown defense" problem is, when there are no rounds or refs to stand it up if the action slows down.. 1 takedown, and if you end up in side control or mount, it means you're on the ground until the end of the fight. In mma fights you get to stand up with the bell. But if it were one 25-minute round like the old days, generally it would stay on the ground after the first takedown.
Gonna put my two cents in here living with a highschool top 5 in nation Greco-Roman and prestigious university collegiate coach for nearly a decade and I being a martial artist striker - He is 5'5 170 wet but in insane shape - I am 6'0 nearly 200 in mediocre shape. Do not be confused with someone who knows EXACTLY how to take you to Earth. You do not get to decide your outcome unless your reach/sprawl is huge in comparison. This man can toss 6'2 240lb men like they are sand bags. The reason you dont see it in professional fighting is because it has too much risk with not enough damage potential due to the ring or mat. Imagine there was only concrete - Wrestling opponents would be TOSSING people and DESTROYING them.
I love how jiujitsu always drop videos about how they can take advantage of inexperienced people who clearly have no real training when it comes to combat sports like 👍 cool you can break someone’s arm nice that’s cool break my arm you bully I’ll use the other to call my lawyer and sue you lol
@@seanchristiansen4982 Whose to say I don’t tske bjj myself? I still stand by what I said. Some students don’t understand the concept of being slammed in concrete. Or getting stomped by your opponent’s buddies.
he isn’t even at the level of one months worth of boxing training, -back hand is stiff guarding the chin most beginners do that -he crosses his legs -dude almost tripped from rolling his head
I was surprised when the guy in the green and black shot for the takedown because I thought HE was the boxer with that footwork and more better positioning.
Pay attention to this from now on. Every boxer says 'oh a boxer wins everytime' or every bjj says 'oh bjj wins everytime' same for judo same for Hapkido same for muay thai. The truth is, it all comes down to how disciplined you are in your practice and the amount of heart your pour into your performance everything else is just shit talk. Bjj doesn't beat the boxer, it's who doesnt want to lose.
People are shittalking him too much. His footwork is not bad, some gyms teach you to close your legs first when you step in order to remain bladed. Him misjudging the distance is not a misjudgement, MMA fighters do this because you can't use traditional punching and punching ranges when grappling is involved. He lost his balance when rolling however, so he could work on that. Most critic are undeserved.
The "boxer" in front of him is definitely not a boxer, both in terms of his footwork and his style of avoiding punches.Just to satisfy his ego, he pitted a random guy in the gym against him as a boxer and fought him.