jacobm Wrote:I'm new to the forum but have been a Jack fan since reading The Tomb when it was first published. Has anybody mentioned Gerard Butler as a Jack option? He has not done much big screen stuff (would that be good or bad?) and sort of fits the profile I think...
Maggers Wrote:Welcome to the board, jacobm!
Butler has a heavy accent, as T4 noted. He was in "Timeline," which most everyone hated, and he played the Phantom in the film version of "Phantom of the Opera." I saw only a clip from "Phantom," but it was enough to turn me away. Ye gads! The man can't sing. Why in heavens was he cast as the lead in a musical!
He's not bad, but he wouldn't get my vote for Jack.
law dawg Wrote:Brazilian ju-jitsu (BJJ), muy thai and jeet kune do (JKD) with a smattering of kali and silat and old school beat down (OSBD).
And yeah I have used it in the street.
A guy picking a fight in a bar probably has done this a time or two before. He would get cleaned in a dojo but in the street he knows the rules - hit first and hit hard.
law dawg Wrote:In the scenario you mentioned I would have tried to take him down on the ground and choke him out or pound him when his head was pinned to the ground (dramatically increasing your effectiveness). Or else I would have run!
This is a good discussion I think. Plus it shows some of the differences between fiction (RJ) and how things really work.
t4terrific Wrote:Matt Hughes is a freak of nature. He's one of my favorite fighters. I wish he'd learn a little more about submission (he's been easilly submitted twice that I've seen). Training with Pat Militech has done wonders for the pure Wrestling athlete. Don't kid though, Matt Hughes trains harder than anyone. The thing about him is a lifetime of Wrestling at a high level. Lifelong Wrestlers are usually the strongest fighters anywhere, that's a big part of their success.
t4terrific Wrote:I spend the majority of my time training in grappling. At The Welcome Mat Judo Club, in Kansas City, we train in Judo, Jujitsu, Sambo, and Wrestling. I train, a little, in boxing, on my own, but don't have any really good trainers. I've tried Kung-Fu and Tae Kwon Do. I don't like them at all. I'm interested in Kempo and Mui Thai, but don't know any good coaches locally. To me, the most important part of striking is punching. Punching is the safest, quickest and most effective way of putting someone down. Kicks, while they have their place, often leave you vulnerable to takedowns and counterpunches. Knees, from a Mui Thai clinch are great (they too, leave you vulnerable to takedowns) and don't need a whole lot of practice. I really want to develope my bread and butter, which is my mat game before I try to go on to a competitive level. At that time, I'd spend serious time on striking.
Current UFC Heavyweight Champion, Andre Arlovski started in the UFC as a champion Sambo player (grappling, speciallizing in arm and leg locks, choking and striking is illegal). He had zero experience in MMA. He won his first fight, via Juji-Gatami (straight arm bar), in less than a minute. Over time he became the most powerful heavyweight knockout artist in MMA history. He knocks out everyone. He's now a true smasher. It's funny to think that 5 years ago he was a true submission grappler, a Sambo player.
On the street, I avoid trouble. I don't have a profession that puts me in the line of fire. I've been in some bad areas regularly, but have just been lucky never to have been a target. I stay away from bars and drunks. That's where most trouble comes. I don't want trouble. I never want to injure someone and I definitely don't want to be injured.
As a kid I got in a lot of fights. That's where I started grappling. If a kid would start getting the best of me, I'd grab him, wrestle him to the ground and bang away. I always thought of my trechnique as cheating, but better than getting beaten up. I was a big Pro Wrestling fan, and would always roll around on the floor, or in the yard, with my friends trying to be the "Champion Wrestler". We even had a Weight belt that a kid wrot, with a sharpie, "World Heavyweight Champion". I never really realized that was a true fighting style until the UFC came along. I said "Holy Shit!! I used to do that stuf just to stop from getting beaten up. Those guys try to do that from the start!"
The Mad American Wrote:I have been wanting to find somewhere to train in BJJ but haven't had any luck with anyone in my area that is anything other then a talker. I have trained for years and years in Muay Thai and Muso Kai Tae Kwan Do, do I got the stand up game down. But I am not a very good grappler. I have no illusions of ever fighting again (in an organized setting) as I am a little past my prime and the injuries would seriously effect my ability to pay the bills.
Ossicle Wrote:A friend of mine who's a fighter is fortunate to have been studying BJJ for the past year or two in NYC under (ha ha!) one the co-author of these books (Danaher):
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0736044...s&v=glance
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1931229...s&v=glance
My friend loves it, it's now his favorite style and he's a real proponent.
-o
t4terrific Wrote:Remember, BJJ (or more appropriately Gracie Jujitsu, since they designed it) is a very incomplete grappling style. Wrestling and Judo are much better with takedowns, Sambo is better with leg submission (Jujitsu doesn't even allow it)They are all incomplete styles. You need a good blend of training. I'm lucky. I train with a group guys who have competed and coached in all 4 grappling styles. We blend them all seamlessly.
t4terrific Wrote:Remember, BJJ (or more appropriately Gracie Jujitsu, since they designed it) is a very incomplete grappling style. Wrestling and Judo are much better with takedowns, Sambo is better with leg submission (Jujitsu doesn't even allow it)They are all incomplete styles. You need a good blend of training. I'm lucky. I train with a group guys who have competed and coached in all 4 grappling styles. We blend them all seamlessly.Leg submissions are not allowed? Since when? We certainly use them? I don't know of many MA that do not "allow" moves. I think you are confusing tournament stuff with MA techniques.
law dawg Wrote:Leg submissions are not allowed? Since when? We certainly use them? I don't know of many MA that do not "allow" moves. I think you are confusing tournament stuff with MA techniques.
But I do agree that a good blend of arts makes for a stronger fighter. No doubt about that IMO.
t4terrific Wrote:I don't train for a job. It's more like a hobby. The problem is, I'm not satisfied just to go practice once or twice a week and have fun and go home. I want to be great. I think everyone should try to be great at something. I've never had a career, or a relationship, that could really satisfy that part of me. Training does. I feel like I'm making my world better by making me better.
It also helps take away the guilt of being such a couch potatoe.