BJJ (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu)and Pool, Has anyone had any experience starting BJJ? Did it help or hurt your game???
Pete
BJJ (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu)and Pool, Has anyone had any experience starting BJJ? Did it help or hurt your game???
Pete
BJJ (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu)and Pool, Has anyone had any experience starting BJJ? Did it help or hurt your game???
Pete
BJJ (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu)and Pool, Has anyone had any experience starting BJJ? Did it help or hurt your game???
Pete
I imagine it wouldn’t hurt but I have a hard time seeing how it would help, unless you’re down $10k and want to make a run for it. Muscling is about the worst thing you can do for your pool stroke.
I tend to agree with you, Taco.
I feel that tai chi would greatly benefit any pool player.
BJJ (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu)and Pool, Has anyone had any experience starting BJJ? Did it help or hurt your game???
Pete
As a long-time Tai Chi adept I couldn't agree with this more.
The improved balance, mental focus, and breath control during motion will certainly come in handy. The integration of various body parts in a progressive manner during a move will train the body to feel the proper timing in almost every physical activity. To me, timing is the essence of a great pool stroke. Lastly, as you learn to relax your weight into your feet, your stance will gradually become steady as a mountain. We all know how important a solid stance is to delivering a straight stroke.
I've studied a few external ("hard") martial arts as well, wrestled competitively in high school, even boxed a bit in my youth, but none of them did much for my overall sense of balanced well being like Tai Chi provides. Plus, it is a martial art, although the applications of the moves in the form may take a bit more time and dedication to learn than most folks have the patience for.
Here's a video of a very accomplished Tai Chi practitioner from Toronto applying his art in a demonstration against a senior student of some MMA school. If you aren't impressed with how easily this chubby Canadian turns his opponent into various pretzel-like shapes against his will, you aren't ready to seriously study BJJ IMHO.
Trust me, most of these holds and traps would easily dislocate a shoulder, snap an elbow, or break a neck if that was the desired result. And if that's not enough for you, there are hundreds of potent hidden strikes throughout the form once you reach a very advanced level.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDIb9TWy-78
Once learned, this stuff is all very practical, and may allow you to leave pool hall in one piece if things go wrong, without having to throw a single punch or break a sweat. And no bail bondsmen or lawyers will need to get involved during the aftermath.:wink:
The guy throwing the punches in this video is throwing them at 10% speed and with no power. What would happen if the younger kid went in for a double leg takedown, slammed him on the ground and proceeded to slap on a rear naked choke or pound his face into the pavement?
This is why you don't see any Tai Chi "masters" in the UFC. MMA fighters only use techniques that work, mainly striking, wrestling and jiu-jitsu. No forms, katas, horse stances, none of that.
Now, for balance, self-confidence, agility, flexibility and overall health (and your pool game), I'm sure Tai Chi is a great discipline. It's just not going to work against a trained fighter. Remember UFC 1?
Did you expect them to have a full-out fight at a public expo? lol Tai Chi responds with only as much speed and power as is used by the opponent. If the guy throwing the punches threw them at full speed and power, he just might have gotten his neck broke when that power was used against him. If anything, IMO the guy in the video was being gentle with the student. I've been put into many of those holds by master practitioners. You can't do a damn thing but fold to the ground once you are in their control, and you don't feel the trap until you are already in it and it's too late. It's stupefying, and pretty embarrassing, dangling and flopping like a fish while a guy half your size holds you there with no effort while he smiles and talks to the onlookers.
I don't recall UFC 1, was it a supposed Tai Chi master against a BJJ artist? I do remember, however, renting like 5 of the first tapes that came out on VHS about 10-15 years ago. Time after time, I slowed the tape down and watched as a "defenseless" opponent lay on his back and received multiple head punches... that all missed the mark. Yet, the ref stopped the "fight".
There was one time where a guy delivered a "knockout" punch (more invisible in slow-mo than the infamous punch Ali threw against Liston) that sent the opponent frozen and motionless but semi-upright against the side of the octagon, like a still figure in a macabre tableau. I have seen hundreds of real knockouts in boxing matches, and have never seen one time where a guy that was unconscious and motionless laid anywhere but flat on the canvas. Too many other similar things for me to ever take this stuff seriously.
I'm not saying that some of these guys don't possess world-class fighting skills, I just don't think they actually use them with real intent in these most of these matches. There'd be a lot more guys leaving on stretchers if they did.
Did you expect them to have a full-out fight at a public expo? lol Tai Chi responds with only as much speed and power as is used by the opponent. If the guy throwing the punches threw them at full speed and power, he just might have gotten his neck broke when that power was used against him. If anything, IMO the guy in the video was being gentle with the student. I've been put into many of those holds by master practitioners. You can't do a damn thing but fold to the ground once you are in their control, and you don't feel the trap until you are already in it and it's too late. It's stupefying, and pretty embarrassing, dangling and flopping like a fish while a guy half your size holds you there with no effort while he smiles and talks to the onlookers.
I don't recall UFC 1, was it a supposed Tai Chi master against a BJJ artist? I do remember, however, renting like 5 of the first tapes that came out on VHS about 10-15 years ago. Time after time, I slowed the tape down and watched as a "defenseless" opponent lay on his back and received multiple head punches... that all missed the mark. Yet, the ref stopped the "fight".
There was one time where a guy delivered a "knockout" punch (more invisible in slow-mo than the infamous punch Ali threw against Liston) that sent the opponent frozen and motionless but semi-upright against the side of the octagon, like a still figure in a macabre tableau. I have seen hundreds of real knockouts in boxing matches, and have never seen one time where a guy that was unconscious and motionless laid anywhere but flat on the canvas. Too many other similar things for me to ever take this stuff seriously.
I'm not saying that some of these guys don't possess world-class fighting skills, I just don't think they actually use them with real intent in these most of these matches. There'd be a lot more guys leaving on stretchers if they did.