The Future of Jiu-Jitsu (Rickson Gracie, Pedro Sauer, Ryron & Rener Gracie)
Jiu-Jitsu has reached a critical point in it’s evolution. On one hand, it is one of the fastest growing sports on the planet, on the other hand, it is at risk of losing its identity and suffering the same fate that has negatively affected nearly all other martial arts. What made made jiu-jitsu famous in the 80s and 90s was its unprecedented effectiveness in real fights, yet today, most jiu-jitsu academies do not teach the elements that make the art applicable in a real fight.
In this groundbreaking gathering, Rickson, Pedro, Ryron and Rener sit down to discuss the current state of jiu-jitsu and the critical steps that must be taken to preserve its original identity as a complete system of self-defense. Acknowledging that the formative years are most critical for any jiu-jitsu student, Rickson discusses his vision for the “perfect blue belt“ and the critical roll of a structured curriculum in preserving this path.
To fully align themselves with the Jiu-Jitsu Global Federation, and Rickson’s vision for the
1 view
497
140
4 weeks ago 00:08:10 1
AI Agents Will Create MILLIONAIRES in 2025 – Are You Ready
4 weeks ago 00:03:02 1
SPX Options Trading : Strategies for Big Gains!
1 month ago 00:26:03 1
Why I Voted For Donald Trump
1 month ago 00:19:33 1
Славуцкий и Крихели. Еженедельный прогноз движения котировок аграрных фьючерсов на 46 неделю.
1 month ago 00:11:19 1
10 Integrative Approaches in Plastic Surgery | Episode 10 of SurgiMind Podcast | Plastic Surgery
1 month ago 00:11:43 1
AliExpress Is DEAD!? (FASTEST Shipping option)
1 month ago 00:52:53 1
Insane futuristic Metal & Electro Music Mix
1 month ago 00:23:30 1
Uudet tuulet puhaltaa
1 month ago 00:02:10 1
Glockenspiel - “Corpse Bride Theme“ Lesson by Project Musica 🎶
1 month ago 01:12:37 1
НАШЫ ИГРЫ 2024: Первое в мире шоу русских игр
1 month ago 00:00:00 1
Live: Blast in Pakistan | 24 people killed and 25 injured in bomb blast at railway station in Quetta
1 month ago 00:08:45 2
TXT Answer The Web’s Most Searched Questions | WIRED