I do a lot of Greco Roman (i didn’t in high school or college, I found the one adult wrestling gym in the US and wrestle near every day) wrestling and only recently started doing judo and no gi judo is cool in concept but you’d need some rule changes to make it make sense as a sport
The reason Greco Roman works as a sport is because you are forced to pressure into someone, I cannot possibly lat drop someone unless they’re trying to push me off the mat (which they get a point for doing) . I can’t belly to belly suplex someone unless their momentum carries them forward and up in the air once I get double under hooks
Judo replicates that pressure using the gi, instead of us both agreeing to a restricted ruleset where we have to be pushing forward and active judo people can grab gi the scream “get over here!” And use that as the forward pressure that the Greco rules create
Disagree. With all the ashi waza and the directions that you can throw, no gi judo works generally fine. When standing up in no gi bjj, I find that all my favorite techniques work fine when the situation presents itself.
Greco Roman only needs these type of rules because it explicitly does not allow for ashi waza or leg grabs of any kind
Well I think no gi BJJ is a bit different because people in BJJ uh suck ass at upper body wrestling. Like I’m absolutely launching people during our ‘warm up’ wrestling rounds. But the ability to grab their legs is a big thing to, I can shoot make them sprawl and then launch them on a follow up as they stand back up from the sprawl but without leg grabs in judo it’s a bit weird.
We actually do a lot of “Greco with trips” , so basically no gi judo (and no ref to enforce action/ push forward) at our gym and it’s good to train with but I’m not sure how well it would work as a spectator sport because you’re going to generally lack the massive spectacular throws that Greco has.
Yeah bjj guys suck at standup but even going against real judoka without the gi, all the techniques are available to you. It’s just harder because they know what they’re doing
They are available but them just being available doesn’t make for a good spectator sport really, if you want the big throws to happen consistently the rules need to be changed a bit.
Even with the rules the way they are Greco Roman matches often end 1-0 with no throws because it’s just hard af when both wrestlers are good
I don’t get this obsession with making the sport “spectator” friendly. Grappling never has been and generally will never be spectator friendly because it’s so technical and the key windows of opportunity are so small and fast. I actually love the unlimited overtime in judo. Punish stalling, yes, but overall just let the fighters fight
Yeah but that’s because there are more programs for it outside the US. I’ve talked to so many people who did it growing up in their school phys ed programs. More participation = more popularity. But no one is going to go watch an IJF grand slam event who doesn’t have a direct connection to the sport like that.
Even if you look at UFC, the vast majority of UFC spectators hate when the fight goes to the ground (unless they train as well). You can tell by the booing. They just want to see people get kicked and punched in the face because it’s so much easier to understand.
As a guy with only like 8 months of judo training with no other grappling experience who also goes to no gi BJJ open mats on a weekly basis, I can not agree with this take at all. During stand up, BJJ guys can’t really do much against me at all. The only time I’ve ever struggled is if they have past wrestling experience
I'll hit 2 decades in grappling soon. Mostly BJJ but also been doing Judo since i was a BJJ brown belt. I've done quite a lot of gi and no gi grappling with a lot of BJJ guys and Judoka
Admittedly most of that experience has been fairly local, though I have trained BJJ and MMA in a few places around the world including Singapore (including Evolve MMA), Korea, Thailand and a little bit in the US
Generally speaking I've found BJJ guys across the spectrum of ranks will have a better grasp of no gi standup than most Judoka. However, admittedly most of the BJJ places I've visited have also had an MMA program attached so their wrestling may be stronger than usual
If you're talking BJJ white belts vs Judoka with <1 year experience then the Judoka will likely have the advantage just due to spending more time trying to stay upright while people try to un-upright you than the BJJ guys have. But that changes as you go up the ranks. Judoka tend to be more specialised and in a method which involves a totally different gripping system and even engagement distance
We could very well just have different experiences, I’m located in the US but I’m fortunate enough to have access to one of the better judo schools (in my opinion) contrast to other American schools. It’s not uncommon for us to have different olympians from Japan and Europe come and train with us for a few weeks. I learn a lot from them, especially during randori. I’m sure you’re well intentioned, but you seem to kind of downplay judo as a grappling system and I don’t always think your assessments are always totally fair.
Like you left a comment on this thread saying most judokas overestimate the transferability of their skills to no gi. And while I don’t argue that it is in fact a transition that needs to be made, and that it’s also contingent upon the individual and their style of judo, I think that comment kind of implies that the art of judo itself can’t be just as useful without the gi. I look at the gi in judo like boxing gloves to a boxer. You take the gloves off completely or put 4oz MMA gloves on, there’s things you can’t do anymore like shell up and absorb punches on the gloves with a high guard. You’ll have to make tweaks to your defense but the punch mechanics and overall striking principles still remain largely the same. Similar to judo. The throw mechanics and overall grappling principles are still largely valid regardless of the rule set, but now you have to replace the gripping system with hand fighting and be aware of leg attacks
I’m sure you’re well intentioned, but you seem to kind of downplay judo as a grappling system and I don’t always think your assessments are always totally fair.
I certainly don't downplay Judo as a grappling system, I'm absolutely in love with Judo and wish I'd started earlier. But I do find many Judoka arent realistic about the transferability of their skills to no gi
Like you left a comment on this thread saying most judokas overestimate the transferability of their skills to no gi. And while I don’t argue that it is in fact a transition that needs to be made, and that it’s also contingent upon the individual and their style of judo, I think that comment kind of implies that the art of judo itself can’t be just as useful without the gi.
Of course Judo is useful without the gi. But it can't be AS useful without the gi. If you spend all your time using gi grips to establish control then of course you will be less effective when you are forced to use a gripping system you are unfamiliar with.
Thats not to say you can't throw people no gi having just done gi Judo. Of course you can. You just can't expect to be competitive with someone who has spent much more time learning no gi gripping systems.
You've likely experienced how good gripping will completely shut down your offence. That will happen no gi if you don't learn the gripping system specifically.
a boxer. You take the gloves off completely or put 4oz MMA gloves on, there’s things you can’t do anymore like shell up and absorb punches on the gloves with a high guard. You’ll have to make tweaks to your defense but the punch mechanics and overall striking principles still remain largely the same. Similar to judo.
As someone with experience competing in both boxing and 4oz MMA gloves, I can tell you that this comparison is not valid. When you transition from boxing gloves to 4oz gloves the system is almost identical. Good defence with boxing gloves actually translates fine to 4oz, even shelling up. It's just slightly less effective. I still use an active shell style defence as a method of entering the clinch in 4oz gloves.
There are effectively no technical differences between striking with boxing and 4oz gloves; only minor strategic differences.
The difference between gi and no gi is far larger than that. Your engagement distance changes significantly and your entire gripfighting system becomes irrelevant. This is the case going no gi -> gi as well as vice versa. The entire system is different.
Throw mechanics do stay the same mostly, though significant differences exist in some cases. With sasae for example, while the body mechanics are mostly the same, what you do with your grips gi vs nogi are very different because the angle at which you offbalance downwards with a no gi grip such as necktie or overhook is very different to that used in the gi. And at a different range.
The skills transfer of course, but it takes more work than you seem to think
I’ve never competed in MMA but I watch a lot of MMA (not like that’s credible) but I have competed in boxing as well and judo. I don’t really see how anybody can shell up bare fisted or with 4oz gloves. Your fists aren’t big enough to cover the entire surface area of your face/head, unless we have different ideas of what shelling up is. Your opponents fists would just find the openings in your high guard, usually by just looping around unless you’re moving forearms in anticipation of the punch to block, but then it’s not really “shelling up” anymore. Unless you adjust it to some sort of Dustin Porier style of high guard where you have to bring your elbows in the equation to make it accurate. Maybe if your palms are open that would allow for a larger surface area to be covered? But even then, you should still try to catch and parry those punches or else your hands are getting punished. Not sure if I’m making sense here.
If someone puts in a decent amount of time training no gi alongside judo, why can’t judo be as useful without the gi as well? I often times don’t hear Greco Roman wrestling go through the same scrutiny that judo does. And if we’re being technical, judo has a wider array of possible attacks because we’re allowed to use techniques which use our legs. Funny enough, I got absolutely beat up by someone with 11 years of Greco Roman wrestling experience yesterday at open mat. Man, that guy kicked my ass. He shut down all of my offense (couldn’t get a throw, trip or sweep on this guy to save my life) and he just rag dolled me on the ground. He’s also a 4 stripe blue belt. On the bright side, he said I surprisingly had some pretty good ties. That’s my moral victory for my bruised ego, lol.
Are you by chance familiar with Travis Stevens? John Danaher in an interview said that Travis and GSP did quite a bit of MMA sparring and Travis actually did very, very well against GSP, which in my opinion speaks volumes because GSP is arguably the MMA goat. It’s no secret Travis’ base and speciality is judo.
You seem like you know what you’re talking about. So let me ask. Is it REALLY that big of a difference between grip fighting and hand fighting system? I personally like to get a back grip and a sleeve grip by the elbow. In no gi, this almost directly translates into a collar tie and tricep grip/under hook. And I tend to feel pretty strong in that position and it’s only a matter of time until I foot sweep or throw a BJJ guy (unless they have prior wrestling experience)
I went into the BJJ gym to train it, and I have done some no-gi with my Judo in general.
His gym thinks he is. He footsweeps everyone, except the coaches and their best guys. The average practitioners there were not at all a match for me. The most difficult guys are just the ones that actually refuse tie ups and go full on with leg grabs- zero upperbody wrestling.
Mind you I am not saying no-gi guys can't have good stand-up, and the serious competitors would do whatever they want to me. But to say the average BJJer is better at upperbody wrestling than us, even no gi, is absurd to me.
Mind you I am not saying no-gi guys can't have good stand-up, and the serious competitors would do whatever they want to me. But to say the average BJJer is better at upperbody wrestling than us, even no gi, is absurd to me.
I mean its been my experience that the average no gi BJJ guy will be better no gi standing than the average Judoka. Most no gi BJJ guys have an understanding of the no gi gripfighting which most Judoka do not have. There is no upper body wrestling without effective gripfighting
The average practitioners there were not at all a match for me. The most difficult guys are just the ones that actually refuse tie ups and go full on with leg grabs- zero upperbody wrestling.
My experience wrestling with Judoka is that you're actually better off engaging the upper body gripfighting prior to shooting. You may be different having spent some time doing no gi Judo, but most Judoka do not understand how to manage distance and off balance with no gi grips (except for your occasional Judo underhook lover)
I've had an interesting journey with it. I was a BJJ brown belt (predominately no gi) with an MMA background when I started Judo. Gi gripping standing was fairly new to me and I struggled to adjust to the gripfighting and distance
Having learned over a few years i then began implementing that Judo back into my no gi standing game. I found that even with a no gi background prior to Judo it took a significant effort to make the Judo which works for me in the gi transfer to no gi
It is even more difficult to do that with no prior no gi experience. One of my experiences that led to me starting Judo was doing a bunch of rounds with a Judo brown belt my weight (who got his Shodan during this period), both gi and no gi. He was also a BJJ blue belt with some no gi experience.
His gi game was so beautiful, I absolutely loved it. I got ragdolled and it was great. No gi though he had almost no transfer technically speaking. Even without shooting i landed a couple inside trips off a dominant underhook. That was prior to doing Judo and he had some understanding of no gi gripping. Not that it was super easy, he certainly had excellent base and that much Judo meant he was difficult to off balance.
Since then I've had many more experiences training standing no gi with Judoka and they've all been the same. And I'm a mediocre wrestler tbh.
You mention you tend to attend places with MMA programs included. The places I went to lacked that, but also in Australia we don't do wrestling and probably lack that sort coaching quality for the average no-gi guy, even if the sport is kicking off. From what I've seen a lot of no-gi guys with interest in standup tend to go for MMA or Judo.
I think the performance of the Judoka would vary a lot though. The ones that strictly train gi, and fight very orthodox Judoka would tend to suffer most. I suppose in hindsight... yeah I suppose the average judoka is simply not as competitive or athletic as a lot of no-gi guys tend to be, at least Anglosphere wise.
I personally came into Judo with the specific intent of trying to no-gi it. Used to do a lot of uchi-komi using underhooks, overhooks, armpit grips and etc, and sparred in that fashion too... which I think was a bad idea, but I got the grasp of how different it felt and could even throw in that fashion. I think being good with Harai Goshi and Tani Otoshi helped too- I consider those to be excellent for no-gi.
As I developed more, I also ran into different Judo styles. A regular partner would constantly impose the underhook, so I had to learn how to break him down with a whizzer. Another would crush me with a big overarm grip, so I had to learn how to make underhook actually mean something. Then training with Mongolian Judoka and their style gave me some more awareness of how to work close up. Then no-gi sparring came and it continued to develop me... so I suppose I'm not necessarily the average Judoka in that way?
I think this all kind of helped me in no-gi tie ups, but because no one was trying to stay out of range, my handfighting was very weak and literally just slapping my hands away was enough to throw me off. Maybe that's what you mean by upper body wrestling? I might be associating that strictly tie ups, not handfighting. I'll have to concede that a less prepared Judoka would struggle a lot more then.
Greco Roman does not even work half the time, its painful to watch because nothing happens.
And Judoka can create that forward pressure quite fine actually. Leg trips and sweeps are things you guys don't even think about but something we deal with. The way to defend them is to literally lean into it... and potentially into a forward throw.
Yes? I think Greco and sumo are super super similar. And I think Greco and no gi judo are super super similar. So I mean all 3 of them are pretty similar tbh
i do folk style, and partially due to me sucking at the lat drops, suplexes etc, the most success i have had was either uchimata or tomoe nage from single leg defence, most of which could be enabled by underhooks and over hooks.
Kind of to play off of this but when people talk about judo for BJJ, I think a lot of this applies as well.
Not to say that some judo doesnt work in BJJ. But I think that the usability of turn throws in Judo is greatly influenced by the ruleset. Namely that you are, in some way, forcing people to exchange with each other.
In BJJ, I've found that ashi waza works the best mostly because many people are predisposed to retreat quickly when threatened on the feet. Falling back to guard is 2 points yes, but its better than getting launched into side control.
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u/MysticalMarsupial Jun 07 '25
There should be no-gi judo. Would save so much laundry...