I have seen PLENTY of fights NOT go to the ground.... so I am getting kinda tired of hearing that 95% thing... and where are you guys getting these numbers from anyway? I'm gonna go with you are fabricating them....
There really is no "better". They are similar and different. I do Jiu Jitsu but have rolled with Judo guys. I would say Judo focus's more on the wrestling side of things. Jiu Jitsu does the same stuff, but has more circular joint manipulation as well. You should try them both out and see what one you like for yourself.
2007-04-16 10:46:33
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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i can sum it up pretty well. Jujitsu was born from Judo. Its the evolution of Judo if you ask me, Judo is still very much a disiplined Martial Art, but Jujitsu itself evolved.
Above me the Bull said about how Jujitsu is better in a mixed martial arts enviroment and i will have to disagree with him.
See, The common misconception is that Jujitsu is the same as what the top fighters in MMA use which is usually a version of BRAZILLIAN jujitsu.
2007-04-17 16:55:41
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answer #2
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answered by Crocop 2
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Judo is throws and flips but jujitsu is also good for throws and flips and since 95% of all fights end up on the ground jujitsu would be better for it teaches much more ground techniques.The 95% thing your tiered of hearing about comes from watching fights a real street fight if you do not land a good first punch sucker punch or knock out blow will all most all ways end on the ground. I studied Tia Kwon Do, Jeet Keen Do, Shotokon,and was a bar room brawler with about 300 fights under my belt with about 250 wins not too impressive but never fought with some one smaller than myself and I,m a fairly big guy.
2007-04-16 16:25:52
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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from my experience bjj is way better than judo. It is way more usefull in the mma enviroment.
2007-04-17 13:28:26
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answer #4
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answered by The BULL 1
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in either style when you join your club your instructor can only teach you the fundementals-how good you are is up to you-so the answer to your question is: the effectiveness of a fighting art comes down to one thing-the practitioner.
2007-04-16 20:04:58
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answer #5
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answered by tony c 5
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both are good as a part of a martial artists repertoire.
2007-04-16 19:57:07
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answer #6
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answered by BUSHIDO 7
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taekwndo
2007-04-16 16:32:11
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answer #7
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answered by Amanda Sue 1
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YAWN #2!!
2007-04-16 16:27:25
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answer #8
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answered by JV 5
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