r/judo • u/Wise-Self-4845 sankyu • Mar 27 '25
Judo x MMA Judo black belt Islam Makhachev with beautiful technique and execution
can you guys name all of these techniques? I got all except one hahah
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r/judo • u/Wise-Self-4845 sankyu • Mar 27 '25
can you guys name all of these techniques? I got all except one hahah
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u/powerhearse Mar 28 '25
Lmao and here he is, the cope specialist himself. Was wondering when you'd raise your head again
They certainly do. Muay Thai would have by far the most direct transferability to MMA, much more than Judo.
No martial art which is predominately gi based easily transfers to MMA. The entire gripping and off balancing system in Judo does not transfer at all, and the throws have limited transferability because they involve entering from a totally different range.
The only thing that transfers well is the weight distribution/base, the mechanics of the throws themselves, pinning (assuming the Judoka has gokd competence which most do not) and athleticism.
The submission game in Judo is more or less non existent and you know this perfectly well. Additionally, what submission game does exist is almost completely gi specific as the armbar entries & chokes that commonly win Judo competition are highly gi reliant
Wrestling transfers much better because the gripping is directly relevant, the pinning game is more prevalent and competent (and no gi, which is very different) and the entries for the highest percentage MMA takedowns (doubles and singles) are directly transferable.
Even no gi BJJ is more transferable because the core skillset more or less directly transfers (submission, control and using no gi grips) whereas a large portion of Judo's core skillset does not.
Coming from no gi BJJ you need to learn striking on the feet, entries and integration into wrestling, an MMA specific takedown game and some relatively small adjustments on the ground to utilise and defend grounded strikes
Coming from Judo you need to learn striking, entries and integration into wrestling, a large amount of bridging knowledge to apply the relevant points of Judo including a huge amount of gripping and adjustment to clinch strikes, then a large amount of ground bridging knowledge including using no gi grips, no gi submission entries and defence against grounded strikes.
There are simply more parts of Judo that are Judo meta specific.
Comments like this:
Are absolute cope and delusion, pure and simple.
The fact of the matter is that no matter your background, MMA is a huge adjustment. But wrestling and Muay Thai are by far the easiest adjustments because they both share the most directly transferable skillsets.
Realistically it's a meaningless argument because in any case the skillset gap is so enormous, but Judo is among the largest skillset gaps.
Yours sincerely, a judoka, BJJ black belt and former professional MMA fighter