This video is so important! Especially so for the over 40 crowd like myself. I've had so many arm bars pulled hard and fast with barely time to tap before my elbow is injured. Slooow down the submission to give your partner time to tap. Also, be mindful of their ability to tap. If you have both arms wrapped up and a choke applied so tightly they can't speak, the only thing left to indicate a tap is their feet which can go unnoticed pretty easily.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
Yepp and those applying submissions should be fully aware of the situation. Whether or not you're trying to tap, if you're potentially hurting your self, whether or not you're asleep etc.
@Hangar1318
3 ай бұрын
I am almost 40. I used to go very hard and now have a shoulder injury from a kimura that never really fully healed in almost a year. I tap early now to kimuras, arm bars etc
@cjanquart
2 ай бұрын
I rolled with a guy that has two years and I'm brand new, cranked my arm and I told the the guy, 'damn, not so hard man.' Then he did it again and I walked off the mat, which caused him to be an odd man out. Couldn't train for a couple weeks and I'll never roll with him again.
@davidsimmons4731
2 ай бұрын
Great video. Im 42, a veteran, and started bjj 5 months ago and definatetly worry about all these things, as well as not hurting anyone because im bigger tham most others at my gym
@Euvelux
3 ай бұрын
What’s even more dangerous is random creators showing these moves on social media as a “cool” way to takedown or submit someone, without declaring how dangerous it can be. Just imagine a bunch of beginners stumbling across these kinds of moves and trying it without knowing the danger. Injuries suck, and it deters people from wanting to train. This video needs more views.
@leondelicato4638
3 ай бұрын
during my last tournament I almost put my opponent to sleep in a baseball choke. When I felt the choke having a good bite, I waited for him to either tap or his body losing tention, the second I realized he was about to take a nap, I stopped. The Ref asked whats going on and I told him he is pretty much gone, my opponent admitted this after a few breaths finding his way back to our planet. But the ref and bystanders said I should never stop unless the Ref tells me to. And yep thats never going to happen. None of us are paid like some UFC fighters or make their living off competing. So I would NEVER EVER intentionally hurt someone.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
You've got the right mentality. Most people are competing as a hobby. High level competition / MMA it's much different.
@Leopar525
3 ай бұрын
What a useless ref. Good move by you mate
@tartopomme8946
3 ай бұрын
I disagree with that. In your gym ofc you let go even if your partner refuse to tap. But in comp, everybody know what they signed for. If you refuse to tap, im applying more and more pressure until you tap. If you dont and something snap, thats on you, you made your chose. And im a guy who partly stopped comp for my own safety because i was the one refusing to tap. I almost broke my arm and i went to sleep, yet i never blamed anybody but myself. If youre choking me and you release pressure, ill considere i made it out of the choke and the fight will go on, because i didnt gave up yet and you didnt respect my chose. Thats how the game is
@maciejbak7300
3 ай бұрын
@@tartopomme8946 is right. Competions cannot be friendly when the aim of everybody is win. If someone want chill then dont take part in tournament or go light and tap. There are many people who want to develop, dream about be professionals and why they shoud let go submission. They should only give time for tap and slowly intense pressure
@leondelicato4638
2 ай бұрын
@@tartopomme8946 well there still is the factor "spaziness". if you are experienced and fight someone experienced, this might apply. But just recently a clip went viral with a guy I know. He was put to sleep in a triangle and got his arm snapped afterwards. The ref didnt step in. The opponent didnt let go. Even though he is a black belt too and by the way he was holding him in that really really deep triangle, he should have known his opponent is not getting out of there. Ah and FYI he tapped before getting choked out, and still no ref, no stoppage whatsoever until his ellbow was completely dislocated. I wouldn't want to put my health or others' at risk, relying on a ref who might not even is paying attention.
@brianc9603
3 ай бұрын
Super important stuff that everyone needs to know. Thank you for putting this out there!
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm hoping it gets a lot of views. Not for my own sake, but because I want a lot of people to learn from it.
@eddie919
3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video Jordan. I rolled with an aggressive partner who injured me. It was a 7 am class and his aggression for a morning class took me completely by surprise. I now have no problem saying no to assholes who are aggressive.
@ronaldt1932
Ай бұрын
Bum
@axeltheysset6204
11 күн бұрын
Cheh
@stanislav3114
3 ай бұрын
this video should be shown at every white and blue belt gym member, once a month at least
@Seaofjitsu
3 ай бұрын
Extreme bummer about the Aikido guy Rokas. He's always super positive about his martial arts Journey. It really is CRITICAL to only roll at safe gyms and with the best people. Excellent video!
@Barilochismo
3 ай бұрын
This is so true. Some instructors encourage "ego sparring (no tapping)" and pamper their aggressive students. I had to change dojos a couple times to get away from that kind of a-holes. As time goes by, I realize it's been the best decision I ever made.
@aplus1080
Ай бұрын
And I'm sure they're just winning worlds and adcc all the time 😐
@Barilochismo
Ай бұрын
@@aplus1080 nope.
@Barilochismo
Ай бұрын
@@aplus1080 follow me here: one of those a-hole instructors permanently injured one of his own students who "wouldn't tap". The instructor had the student on a pretty hard "biceps slicer" and forcefully detached the guy's muscle from the bone (thus ending his own student's career...). In his own words, the student said he didn't want to tap because he was trying to prove himself before the instructor. And the worst part of it was that the a-hole instructor wasn't even remorseful, he was actually "proud" because he "demonstrated the effectiveness of his technique".
@aplus1080
Ай бұрын
Such a waste.
@Barilochismo
Ай бұрын
@@aplus1080 absolutely.
@ЕкатеринаШишкова-о1р
Ай бұрын
Bjj white belt here. I started only in February this year and overtrained myself because I was basically “too obsessed and involved” in training. Plus I didn’t really know about the preps and how to treat your body so you wouldn’t receive any injuries. I was also too excited and often didn’t control my strength. After I had an old injury relapse (got it in judo in 2017) and couldn’t train because of my knee, I decided to change my routine and strategy in general to avoid injuries, also to become the better person and find out what kind of things my body can do if I train using science. To avoid injuries I kind of changed my diet, started working with my sleep schedule, checked my health and went to the CrossFit coach in my martial arts gym (brilliant guy, has a major in Greco Roman wrestling plus ex football player), consulted with him and we began my recovery in group. I also started lifting and my overall physical condition has improved to something I have never been dreamed of: my knee hurt for a few months before it stopped, I improved my warm up routine including knee strengthening exercises and also stretching, I do it at least for 20 minutes now because my both wrists were injured in school (so now i strengthen them too). I often surf the KZitem to find more exercises and consult with my coach. I reduced my bjj classes from 4 times per week to 2 because I wasn’t sure my body could handle it, now I feel much stronger but I still think about it. I also started visiting other martial arts classes in my gym for free to learn from other guys and find my mistakes, and surprisingly when I say that I am a white belt, I train for X months, I have this and that injuries, all people start to teach me how to improve my technique. And they say compliments too 😂 I would say the most difficult thing was to live with pain and sore muscles after classes when I just started, my mind was fighting for my comfort and also nobody told me I would have so many bruises (which is unavoidable because people grabbed your hands and other parts of your body, something the grip can be too strong, or maybe I have a sensitive skin). And also with the fact that I often lose in rolls and made mistakes which lead to me losing 😅 And maybe with the confusion when you can’t make submissions as your sensei showed you, I often felt quite dumb. Because I am a girl and just started my path in bjj, I would say there are quite things which could make your path difficult: 1. Ego 2. Inadequate behavior (like you don’t want to tap or bully others) 3. Desire to “kill your partner” (idk, maybe to show your dominance) 4. Too much aggression (calm down buddy) 5. Ignoring others’ or yours injuries (some ppl in my gym have old injuries, I try to train with them to avoid relapses and also tell them if I have injuries) 6. Hygiene stuff (wash gi and wear leggings, rush guards pls, clip nails, etc) 7. Not analyzing how other ppl train (to understand how to roll with a person and overestimate yourself; sometimes you better pass if the person next to you want to see blood not training 😅) 8. Not warming up enough (my neck was very sore, now I start doing my neck strengthening exercises to avoid injuries) 9. Imo not supporting others? Maybe that’s just my opinion, but it’s cool when other people in the gym are kind and respectful, supportive of each other, it gives ppl motivation to continue 🙃🥋 Ps: also I think it’s a good idea to ask your sensei what kind of submissions are illegal or dangerous. I often practiced with other guys who in fact used dirty tricks and I was in trouble because I was lighter and shorter than they were. Fortunately I avoided injury by tapping on 😅
@calcutt
2 ай бұрын
This is a must watch video. I recently had the pleasure of rolling with Jordan and he definitely practices what he preaches here- gentle but clinical with his movements.
@rodrigobanados9079
3 ай бұрын
Hope some of my partners could had watched this video. I´ve tried BJJ 3 times in a timeline of 10 years, never made it more than 3 months on a row, 4 stripe white belt. First here to say thank you Jordan on speaking this things, the BJJ community is amazing but finding good teachers that know safety and know how to teach it is rare. The 3 times I stopped was bc of an injury, At first wrists and fingers and this last time the knees... I´m 34 and dude I have a graduation for the first time my academy (been here for 8 months straight until last tuesday I blow out my knee in sparring last 20 secs) and I don't know if i can continue. Every injury as a hobbyist, makes me rethink everything. It's been a week of ice and not moving my leg and now let see what´s next
@ronaldt1932
Ай бұрын
You should be lifting to get stronger, don’t be a bum
@Utuberj0sh
3 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this Every BJJ practitioner needs to watch this! One time my bigger training partner let me get to top position. I can’t remember now if I was in his closed guard or if he gave me full mount, but I had my hands on the ground posting (so my body weight was on my hand) too close to his body. When he hip bumped me to sweep my fingers were pointed out and I thought they were going to break as he turned and also put his body weight on top of my hands which were stuck to the mat. Fortunately the point we were turning around was a bit further out than where my hand was and my hand came off of the mat. But for a moment instead of stopping the roll or yelling I accepted my fate. Moral of the story is to keep hands away from mat and if they are on mat keep them further away from big training partners body
@JCDoesStuff
3 ай бұрын
Excellent video. This information needs to be shared with everybody who does jiujitsu, especially white and blue belts, because a lot of injuries happen due to lack of knowledge, not bad intentions.
@CoolDadManTalk
3 ай бұрын
good vid ❤ i am 50 and started BJJ about a year ago. my priority during every roll is to not get hurt. as long as i am not injured after each practice, i consider that my win 🎉
@cjanquart
2 ай бұрын
You and me both!
@paparadeliko
3 ай бұрын
My downfall for my meniscus twice was, when i got taken down and the opponent triangled my legs tight i tried to hip out. My hips turned but my leg didn't. Don't force something that isn't there guys
@josiahgonzales1573
3 ай бұрын
Great content Jordan! Proactive maturity for safe skills development should be at the forefront of every training session/class and philosophy. Appreciate you man!
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
Thanks man! Safe training is so important to me. Doing everything I can to help prevent people from getting hurt out there :)
@cristinalbaker7696
2 ай бұрын
Thank you for the courtesy of the “close your eyes” part. I really appreciate that. 👍
@samantonacci256
3 ай бұрын
My very first semi significant JiuJitsu injury in 5 years of training came from number 11. New white belt just threaded his arm in so fast and cranked it before I even realized. Partially tore my MCL. It’s all good now. Thanks for highlighting that one, I don’t see it talked about often!
@side1981
3 ай бұрын
So the throw at 4:40 I was on the receiving end of throw like that. I launched over the guys hip shoulder first into the mat breaking my collar bone. Aside from a knot where the bone healed I had no permeant damage but it was the type of injury that will cost a person months, and I mean months, of training.
@MaxLohMusic
3 ай бұрын
Harai goshi is a standard throw which lands safely. You may have been a victim of one of the pitfalls mentioned in the video. I suppose in your case "spiking on the shoulder" may be needed to included with spiking on the head. The only real safe hard-impact throw is one in which they land on their back
@deanboman
3 ай бұрын
Analysing the anatomy and movements in bjj for years, honestly I've trained different sports and martial arts for 20+ years and jiu jitsu it's the one single sport where I had and I've seen the most injuries.
@Chillpillspill
3 ай бұрын
I agree there's definitely higher risk than a lot of marital arts but there's a good reason for that. I've trained in several martial arts before BJJ and I can tell you one major difference : Many of the other martial arts I've practiced did not allow for an equivalent of rolling. Ie, you vs. an opponent, really going at it. There were forms, there were scripted techniques requiring cooperation on the part of a compliant partner, there was light-contact sparring, there was complete deference to rank, etc. So of course I almost never got injured doing any of those martial arts. In over 10 combined years of those martial arts, I had one injury, a sprained ankle. When I switched over to Muay Thai, I loved it because it felt "real" and guess what, I injured my toe and also got a concussion within the span of 18 months. Later on, two months into BJJ, my elbow was injured. A year later, I'm still training BJJ bc there is actual pressure testing in the form of rolling. It doesn't feel like I'm wasting my time with a martial art that will leave me wondering, "would this actually work if I need it to?" As for comparing it to other (non-martial art) sports, that's a whole separate conversation I'm not qualified to get into. Just wanted to put my perspective out there as it pertains to martial arts.
@scarred10
Ай бұрын
It's the safest of all the combat sports because there is very little takedown sparring in most gyms.The injuries are due to individual factors or bad supervision,nor bjj itself
@djg093
3 ай бұрын
Watching videos warning about scissor takedowns helped when a white belt attempted one on me out of the blue. I knew what they were clumsily doing and just went with it knowing that it was better to concede the takedown or even just fall down than resist and get injured. Good info all around and awareness helps everyone.
@BbB-vr9uh
3 ай бұрын
Awesome vid! I’ve managed to train for 3 years with only a fluke injury to my foot while wrestling. Thankful for good training partners that have helped to kept me safe.
@CervusGreen
3 ай бұрын
Re: Kani became, there is also something to be said for just taking the fall. Most injuries I have seen from standup are due to people fighting the takedown from a position of mechanical disadvantage.
@vlada
3 ай бұрын
BJJ people love to try to break their fall using their hand. I cringe whenever I see it because I've seen 100s of judo tournaments and dislocated shoulder, elbows and wrists and it seems that a dislocated wrist is extremely, extremely painful.
@CervusGreen
3 ай бұрын
@@vlada very true. I generally teach people to just tuck their chin, and not stick out their arms. Anything else just confuses bjj people.
@88brunos
2 ай бұрын
I had a guy yank a short choke on my neck during an escape drill, completely fractured my cartilage aka Adams apple area, had to get surgery. I'm forever comprised, but ok now. Not enough people talk about this injury. That's in the cranking subs, RNC.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Oh damn man that's serious! Damn, I'm sorry to hear that. Is it alright now completely?
@calebschaaf1555
3 ай бұрын
This is the kind of video that I think would be good to play at the beginning of an open mat.
@noiburglar
3 ай бұрын
I’ve been training for 4 months and was overstacked by another white belt during training on Saturday. My neck has been so sore since, but hopefully good again soon. Thanks for the video, I too am trying to be a better, safer training partner for the people I roll with 🙏🏻
@hambam1-521
3 ай бұрын
Great video. Fractured my collarbone from a new guy while drilling. and had to get surgery last week.
@Johnny-gk3hg
3 ай бұрын
Very insightful video, I've recently broken my Fibia from Jui-Jitsu and even with a video of it I never completely understood how it broke (it was number 3).
@scarred10
Ай бұрын
Theres no fibia in the human body
@MrTapout619
Ай бұрын
One of the best videos I have seen around jiu jitsu
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Thanks! 👊
@swampgoat6343
3 ай бұрын
Posting my hand out is how I blew out my elbow for the first of 3 times. That being said I'm pretty convinced it kept me from breaking my neck as I was being spiked
@imtherealjoeyd
Ай бұрын
“If you can’t finish slow then your control sucks!” Amen brother!!! 💯
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
29 күн бұрын
🙏
@ubershmekel
3 ай бұрын
Can you produce a poster of "dos donts and be carefuls"?
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
I'll see what I can do!
@kylehaugstad2910
3 ай бұрын
@@JordanTeachesJiujitsu Or a rash guard with a picture of the the take down and DON'T SCISSOR ME BRO. I'd wear it to every open mat!
@jacquedegatineau9037
2 ай бұрын
Great list. If I ran my own gym I'd make this part of my new member program.
@SlashnKashmir
3 ай бұрын
Very good points, after this video I realized I was doing overstacking sometimes. I will definitely fix that. Also it is funny - 07:28 - last week we had a darce in our flow and professor literally said it is a bit neck crank if partner taps it is ok.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
She it comes to darce I think it goes both ways. A tap is a tap, in competition, or if you're getting tapped by one. But in training perfecting your darce so it's all choke and no crank, should be the goal!
@ForzaTerra89
3 ай бұрын
I actually think there’s a really big issue with BJJ that needs to be addressed and you said it in this video when you said ‘don’t roll with assholes’ How. How do we do that in a class without making a scene or a big deal out of it. There’s a guy in my BJJ gym who goes too hard and I’ve asked him a couple times now to slow down. Doesn’t listen. Hasn’t listened. When I see him rock up I’ll actually change class as there’s usually an advanced and fundamentals class happening at the same time. I’ll do the opposite of him as were the same height; but what do I actually do about it. Do I grab one of the coaches ?
@kylefee4822
3 ай бұрын
Either tell him politely you don't wish to roll or drill with him and after a few times he will get the message or you can also tell one of the coaches if the first doesn't work
@ForzaTerra89
3 ай бұрын
@@kylefee4822 yeah I don’t wanna get Injured, just awkward and easier said than done
@Sobek_GG
3 ай бұрын
Great video, please can you do more of this kind of video? Im newbie and helped me a lot
@josephninosky6057
3 ай бұрын
Excellent video. I do the same thing with folks who are obstinate about tapping - I will release a joint lock and move to chokes only. At that point, if they decide not to tap, then fine: they go to sleep and no permanent damage is done. It's training - treat it as such and watch out for one another. Oss.
@mexicanachulax3
2 ай бұрын
Thank you for the close your eyes warning. I hate seeing injuries! I suffered a PCL, LCL, meniscus tear and popliteus tear due to a negligent takedown in open weight class 😢 return to sport next month woooo!!!
@ugglan1549
2 ай бұрын
Excellent video. I once got over-stacked by someone half my age and I had to yell STOP STOP STOP loudly. Had problems with my neck for weeks after that. And thanks for including the clip by Danaher, he also mentioned if I remember correctly that in his gym the responsibility of a takedown lies on the person doing the takedown. I've always thought this way since I heard that.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Yepp communication is super important man. People really need to be careful more. My hopes are that videos such as this one (and coaches talking to their students first and foremost) the awareness will increase. Which I think it is, but it could be faster lol
@dustinmbox
3 ай бұрын
This video is perfect. I’m sharing it to my students. Thank you!!!
@УчительиУченик
3 ай бұрын
Very useful video! Thank you, master 😉
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@morganmackenzie250
3 ай бұрын
Great video and more of these videos are needed.
@ManuelDP95
3 ай бұрын
This us gods works brother. Very informative and will prevent allt of injuries on future practitioners.
@emilyjerger3511
28 күн бұрын
Thank you for this video. As someone new to BJJ, I wish there were more precautions and better introductions on safety when rolling. I feel like learning about safety first should be mandatory.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
28 күн бұрын
Glad you found it helpful! Yepp I think explaining things like this should be mandatory in all gyms. Hopefully it happens.
@eclipsez0r
3 ай бұрын
Had all of these done to me training in the early 2000s in Australia
@Mangix_the_Bear
3 ай бұрын
Very good advice! Safety should be #1 for pros and amateurs alike!
@TheSamiG
3 ай бұрын
Hey Jordon Please could you do a video on how to fall with the Kani Basami safely? I feel like a lot of people get injured from take downs because they dont know how to fall properly and the is especially true with the flying scissors. Love your content!
@Shimon-l9p
2 ай бұрын
I second this
@pablomedina1878
2 ай бұрын
Great video bro, Thanks and keep the education to all the new beginners in BJJ, Judo and Jujitsu.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Thanks man! 🙏
@aeneas116116
3 ай бұрын
This is an excellent video… you most probably saved someone a serious spinal or long bone injury. Good form sir
@seamuspadraigsanders431
8 күн бұрын
You make some really good points here, as a beginner I notice the only time you really gain any advantage is when the slightly more experienced guy makes a mistake, I think it's good manners to let them reset rather than take advantage of that poor position and possibly injuring them just for that elusive W.
@kitteguh
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for addressing overstacking. I was enjoying my BJJ journey before a reckless partner overstacked and jumped his weight on me (he was bigger than me). I couldn't sleep on either side for at least a month and I'm still not 100% to this day. Still not prepared to come back to the mat even after almost a year to the injury. Btw, love your videos!
@NF12222
Ай бұрын
If I catch an inside heel hook in training and my opponent doesn't tap, I just let them figure how out to get out of it. I never extend any pressure. I just hold my wrist and hand in place and when they try to roll I just let go. No point in hurting training partners.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Exactly. You are a great training partner and thank you for your service lol. Leading by example!
@Ravens4life5
3 ай бұрын
Nice vid. One thing you forgot to mention is to make sure to tell your partner to stomp (as a tap) when trapping both arms for a one arm rear naked choke since they don't have a hand and can't verbally tap.
@mrage22r
Ай бұрын
I have the same injury as your friend, luckily not as bad but still really bad. Femur crashed into the top of the tibia, fracturing the hell out of it and have a metal plate and screws. It was from a guy 50+lbs heavier than me forcing a takedown/leg sweep from standing. Took 1 - 1.5 years of rehab, PT, and training knee/leg strength until I was able to get back to BJJ. Will always have some knee issues, but I'm back to training and much more cautious with who I train with. Only do stand-up with people I know and trust.
@rubenguevara5753
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for letting us when to look and when not to look. I had to wind up myself to see the injuries. Thanks for the video too of course, it was a great topic
@FeralWorker
3 ай бұрын
Brilliant video. Thanks for making it. Subscribed!
@EC88838
3 ай бұрын
Thank you! Testing from an injury. You might want to consider an addition that is similar to neck spiking and that is spearing or using your head on doubles. My cervical spine buckled under axial compression. Super sore but thankfully no neurological signs. Apparently much more common for catastrophic injuries than movements where you can see the neck move.
@AntonAdelson
3 ай бұрын
Saved!! This video is really important! Please share with anyone you can!
@rafaelandrade6783
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. Appreciate your wisdom.
@derricksasenarine70
3 ай бұрын
Well done Jordan, keeping them T-rex arms even during the explanations!
@ja1720
3 ай бұрын
This is the main reason why I worry about training with white belts, a lot of the younger ones are reckless
@nicolasdesjardins6207
3 ай бұрын
I wish you were closer to Montreal, i really like the way you teach and explain things
@eddiehazard3340
2 ай бұрын
People are claiming JiuJitsu injures them or ruins their bodies. In my gym - our injury rate was very very low and we still won at contest. It's up the instructor to create a culture of safety and synergy. I wish people would quit blaming "Jiu Jitsu" for their injuries, and take responsibility and also expect more from coaches.
@AK-hq5ib
3 ай бұрын
Great informational video Jordan! Can you make a back escape instructional video? Thanks for all you do!
@zacklow1192
3 ай бұрын
Good video, was also thinking when i saw the throw at 4:48, that the uke shouldn't have held on. Im super careful with throws on bjj guys cus they have a tendency to not take the breakfall and want to move to the next position. Easy way to crack your ribs is holding on while being thrown.
@artnos
3 ай бұрын
There is one my instructor pointed out really only for newbies who drill single legs. your feet should be outside their feet not past their feet because when you drop you could fall on their knee sideways.
@Meeko2689
3 ай бұрын
I’ve been off training for almost 6 months after getting wrist locked I broke my wrist and torned some ligaments, still recovering from the surgery. This happened during training sessions when I was rolling with a black belt ,the move happened so fast that I didn’t even had time to tap, I would advise people who like wrist locks to be mindful of their training partner as sometimes there’s not enough time to tap from those submissions.
@Justin-no2ql
2 ай бұрын
I've been injured by overstacking, being pulled back from turtle, and from standing guard pull all at the same gym. Since recovering from snapping a knee, I've finally chosen another gym
@CaleCoast
3 ай бұрын
Great video. I disagree with a couple points, but am 98% in agreement. Thank you for making this!
@cjanquart
2 ай бұрын
I've started jiu jitsu (only 10ish times on the mat) and at 52, not incredibly flexible and heavy, I don't want to get hurt to the point where I can't work or live. I'm still trying to not get smashed constantly but it's a really insane learning curve. Not only is safety paramount for generally well-being and being to live correctly, there's no sense getting beat up/on then not being able to train or function correctly.
@jking5772
3 ай бұрын
First gym I ever joined the instructors went around and basically tapped for you If you were in a bad position I didn’t appreciate that until now since I’ve had so many injuries. Tap fast and tap was their motto. I understand why. It’s a long journey
@DefconUnicorn
3 ай бұрын
Always good to have a refresher on these moves. Also good to know them if you are in a suprise roll out side the gym :)
@julienwatkins3574
3 ай бұрын
Great video! Huge respect for making it.
@yesukheich6134
27 күн бұрын
Great video and reminder
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
20 күн бұрын
🙏
@BAranguiz
3 ай бұрын
The ONLY channel that actually talks about safety with training.
@AndyOhMy
3 ай бұрын
Thank you for pointing these things out.
@l.k.9666
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this. I realized as I was watching it that I have done some of these, not realizing the risks they pose (particularly overstacking and applying torque to the knee shield). I don't think I fully understand the knee shield one though. Can you talk a bit more about the dangers or why it's different? I figured that, as long as i was applying it not too fast, that the person has ample time to grip fight, leg pummel, or (worst case scenario) go belly down to alleviate pressure.
@richmoreno9938
3 ай бұрын
This was incredibly helpful. Thank you. 🙏
@robertofleury4777
2 ай бұрын
Perfect video! congratulations!
@lukasleong3640
3 ай бұрын
Hello Jordon! Could you cover how to keep you and your training partner safe when performing head chokes like guillotines, darces etc…
@spipes5611
3 ай бұрын
our gym just went over this as well... thank you...
@johndoe-id2uh
3 ай бұрын
You gotta make a video on how to counter all of these moves, firas zahabi from tristar gym mentioned when someone jumps a scissor the counter is to drop to you knees and there is footage of fabricio andre doing this counter againts felipe machado
@KazzArie
3 ай бұрын
4:00 as a 41 year old, jumping closed guard is what had me the most nervous about competing at blue
@khalidalali2435
2 ай бұрын
Super respect to you coach. Well said and well explained
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Thank you! Happy to hear it made sense 🙏
@Sauromalus
2 ай бұрын
I had my instructor perform an uchi mata on me and my foot was planted. I over-extended my hip and had some impingement. I could feel the injury for months. I consider myself very lucky.
@EckardBerry
Ай бұрын
Really good video man, I wish all Jiujitsu gyms that really care about their training partners would implement a strict set of rules for everyone and make sure that all new comers know those rules before they know anything else.
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Thank you! Yepp me too. It'd be so much better for everyone involved.
@RabbiT-qh8pd
3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this one
@AnandSingh-nr4ro
29 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing this 🙏🏽
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
28 күн бұрын
🙏
@elreefi4344
3 ай бұрын
Number 11 happened to me in December.. tore my meniscus and have been recovering since then… hopefully back to training in a couple of months
@luigidemariobros
3 ай бұрын
110% agree i take care my students always is a very good list and examples, good and safetly work
@titi9874
3 ай бұрын
Hey awesome video, I appreciate someone for once making ppl aware that jjb can be dangerous even in gyms because of not knowing how to safely perform techniques. I personally never try to tap a guy quickly, I control, start submitting slowly and if I can’t control my opponent until he taps, it’s okay, It means I need to work on it :)
@overrideFunction
3 ай бұрын
That stupid knee shield tweak is one a few people started at my gym a while back. I don't know who started it, but I hate it.
@tomsheppard378
Ай бұрын
As someone with a previous neck injury overstacking means I'm off for months and last time need a week off work. I'm a hobbyists and got bills to pay but still want to train BJJ, you can still have a fun roll without injuring people. Appreciate your advice
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
Ай бұрын
Man I hope your neck is better now? That really sucks.
@tomsheppard378
Ай бұрын
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu yeah it is better now thanks and I'm back to training and some sparring but if it's anyone I think is a little wild I just tap out. I always think injury can happen when people are going at different speeds, like if someone thinks they're drilling and other thinks sparring. That happened before someone rolled me over my neck in closed guard because I thought we were drilling and they went completely wild. Then after everytime I'm stacked on neck it hurts. Now with more experience I can tell immediately and say dude we are drilling calm down
@sammalama
3 ай бұрын
Jordan how do you protect yourself if someone attempts a scissor take down on you? Should you just turn your knee in or something? Or do you just sit down?
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
Try to get your foot off the mat as soon as possible. Don't fight the takedown or try to support your weight what so ever.
@mmhm007
3 ай бұрын
In the Gi, a much larger opponent grabs the belt and collar and hops to knee through sternum while pulling both grips. I'll never roll with him again. Had that done to me recently. What am I doing withy life? 😅
@Leitefsj
Ай бұрын
There are a lot of gyms that try to sell the "warrior" mentality, instead of a competitor mentality (which is wildly different). That makes some students roll in a higher tempo, with more strength and speed than needed and not caring about cleaning up their technique. Catching a more experience training partner in a lucky armbar (almost invariably hurting them), or chocking another over their teeth will only bring them a bad reputation on the mat.
@lvl18abilities
2 ай бұрын
great video sir. you are a great role model
@josephbreza-grappling9459
3 ай бұрын
Great video!!
@JordanTeachesJiujitsu
3 ай бұрын
Thanks man!
@superbroolyy
3 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video Every BJJ practitioner needs to watch this!
@dzen_dzenkazan8050
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for information, through i wouldn't mind if you elaborate about two last points
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