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Thread: Cross Training---Belts?

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    Cross Training---Belts?

    Do people that cross train various arts for MMA or SD purposes train as normal MA students do going from white to black belt with normal classes or are they training more informally in these arts and focusing only on what they "need" thereby passing up on belts and not even belt testing...just training?

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    I can only speak for the gym I'm in but...

    MT and boxing don't have belts. You do have the option to purchase some colorful shorts though

    BJJ yes we have belts. But progression isn't a formal thing like people get accustomed to in the typical karate school or whatever. You beat a couple guys in a tournament. You might get a belt. You tap a few purples (or whatever higher rank than you) over the course of a couple weeks in training. You might get a belt.

    Rank isn't even secondary really. Belts are there but really what's more important is what you can do. Half of the guys don't even wear a gi, even on gi night.

  3. #3
    Is it like that in Judo also?

    Forgot that MT doesnt have ranks...oooops.

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    judo has belts.

  5. #5
    I know Judo has belts but how are they earned?

    Is it x number of techniques etc or as BJJ is decribed above?

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    Thailand's been trying to implement a ranking structure for Muay Thai for the past few years.
    I believe the purpose was to try implement some sort of officially recognized teaching certification.
    Not sure how many gyms actually prescribe to the ranking structure though.
    What would happen if a year-old baby fell from a fourth-floor window onto the head of a burly truck driver, standing on the sidewalk?
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  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by KFNOOB View Post
    Do people that cross train various arts for MMA or SD purposes train as normal MA students do going from white to black belt with normal classes or are they training more informally in these arts and focusing only on what they "need" thereby passing up on belts and not even belt testing...just training?
    belts are a funny thing, they really mean nothing. Some people make a big deal about them.. but Honestly I think they hinder more than they help. I like the hole levels idea, and have a set curriculum for each level. Its somewhat a semantic and in a way I am splitting hairs but its not the same thing. I think I talked to Dave Ross(owner of NYSANDA) about this topic before.

    Why would training with people have anything to do with belt? I roll (No Gi and GI grappling) with people who range from white to black. I submit blues sometimes and get submitted by whites(although I will say its much really rarely happens THANK G-D!).

    The gym I train at, and my JJ coach teaches one class for all levels. At first I hated this idea.. I was stuck learning hard moves, that I couldn't do.. and never getting enough time with the basics. The funny thing is I'm happy he teaches this way. It forces me to put forth the effort to ask, research, and drill. I can honestly say that I would not have progressed as fast if my Coach didn't teach in this manner.
    Thats me, I know for a fact that MANY of his students do not understand the basics. Thats just understanding, I'm not talking about the muscle memory or the fine details just.. the basic ideas. They didn't put forth the effort I did.

    Its all based on personal teaching style. If I owned or had my own class/school I would combine the two extremes. Have a basics class and have mostly open classes, were everyone rolls with everyone. Just as a point that is how NYSANDA does things. Its a very smart method, and I'm happy they do it that way.

    But to continue the question about belts, allot of people get upset if you hold two belts in different styles. Sometimes teachers feel that its a insult to them or their skills. I can honestly understand, but if you study two different styles it should not be a issue. EXAMPLE MT and BJJ/sambo/csw/ect..

    Some schools are very very strict about the belt thing, and those schools tend to suck (JMO). If you go to a school with a specific family name (everyone knows the name), I tend to find the belt issue a big deal.

    again, the schools (not the teachers or the family or the style) tend to suck and you often get much less for your money.

    JMO

    If you live in NY come train with us, I know for a fact Dave doesn't care who you trained with or what belt you have. His only deal is come without the ego, and keep your hands up.

    Don't you love the Carmine Zocchi/ NYSANDA plug Dave?
    oh forgot the website... http://nysanda.com and http://www.geocities.com/carmine.zocchi/
    Last edited by monji112000; 05-28-2008 at 06:45 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by monji112000 View Post
    belts are a funny thing, they really mean nothing. Some people make a big deal about them.. but Honestly I think they hinder more than they help. I like the hole levels idea, and have a set curriculum for each level. Its somewhat a semantic and in a way I am splitting hairs but its not the same thing. I think I talked to Dave Ross(owner of NYSANDA) about this topic before.

    Why would training with people have anything to do with belt? I roll (No Gi and GI grappling) with people who range from white to black. I submit blues sometimes and get submitted by whites(although I will say its much really rarely happens THANK G-D!).

    The gym I train at, and my JJ coach teaches one class for all levels. At first I hated this idea.. I was stuck learning hard moves, that I couldn't do.. and never getting enough time with the basics. The funny thing is I'm happy he teaches this way. It forces me to put forth the effort to ask, research, and drill. I can honestly say that I would not have progressed as fast if my Coach didn't teach in this manner.
    Thats me, I know for a fact that MANY of his students do not understand the basics. Thats just understanding, I'm not talking about the muscle memory or the fine details just.. the basic ideas. They didn't put forth the effort I did.

    Its all based on personal teaching style. If I owned or had my own class/school I would combine the two extremes. Have a basics class and have mostly open classes, were everyone rolls with everyone. Just as a point that is how NYSANDA does things. Its a very smart method, and I'm happy they do it that way.

    But to continue the question about belts, allot of people get upset if you hold two belts in different styles. Sometimes teachers feel that its a insult to them or their skills. I can honestly understand, but if you study two different styles it should not be a issue. EXAMPLE MT and BJJ/sambo/csw/ect..

    Some schools are very very strict about the belt thing, and those schools tend to suck (JMO). If you go to a school with a specific family name (everyone knows the name), I tend to find the belt issue a big deal.

    again, the schools (not the teachers or the family or the style) tend to suck and you often get much less for your money.

    JMO

    If you live in NY come train with us, I know for a fact Dave doesn't care who you trained with or what belt you have. His only deal is come without the ego, and keep your hands up.

    Don't you love the Carmine Zocchi/ NYSANDA plug Dave?
    oh forgot the website... http://nysanda.com and http://www.geocities.com/carmine.zocchi/
    Years ago, when I was doing TSD, I had to go up against Brown Belts, because of my age. Yes, I am an old timer..LOL. I was a white belt at the time. So belts really do not anything.

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    Quote Originally Posted by monji112000 View Post
    If you go to a school with a specific family name (everyone knows the name), I tend to find the belt issue a big deal.
    I train at a Renzo Gracie affiliate and this is not true at my gym. We actually have a guy who had around 10 amateur and 10 pro MMA fights before the instructor 'officially' awarded him his blue belt. It was just not a big deal to the fighter or my instructor so it just did not get done for years.
    When given the choice between big business and big government, choose big business. Big business never threw millions of people into gas chambers, but big government did.

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  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by 1bad65 View Post
    I train at a Renzo Gracie affiliate and this is not true at my gym. We actually have a guy who had around 10 amateur and 10 pro MMA fights before the instructor 'officially' awarded him his blue belt. It was just not a big deal to the fighter or my instructor so it just did not get done for years.
    Its good to hear that, but I have visited a few Gracie Barra places and the Big Renzo school.

    The Big Renzo school seemed ok. I wouldn't join the school, but not becouse I thought they didn't teach quality stuff. I'm sure they do..

    Every Gracie Barra school I have visited I have really really not liked. MMA isn't just BJJ... the ground game isn't just BJJ ... not that you were saying it was.

  11. #11
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    Belts have always been a big thing in BJJ, always.
    Remember the "stigma" of being a BJJ Black belt? or how a Blue was like a black in other schools, etc, etc.
    Silliness, but there you have it.
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    Quote Originally Posted by 1bad65 View Post
    I train at a Renzo Gracie affiliate and this is not true at my gym. We actually have a guy who had around 10 amateur and 10 pro MMA fights before the instructor 'officially' awarded him his blue belt. It was just not a big deal to the fighter or my instructor so it just did not get done for years.
    Well, to be honest, MANY BJJ schools sandbag students (hold them back) so they can compete against lower levels in tournaments and bring home lots of trophies for the club.
    He most honors my style who learns under it to destroy the teacher. -- Walt Whitman

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    Quote Originally Posted by MasterKiller View Post
    Well, to be honest, MANY BJJ schools sandbag students (hold them back) so they can compete against lower levels in tournaments and bring home lots of trophies for the club.
    Agreed. Mine does not do that.

    That's one of the reasons NAGA keeps detailed records. If you enter as say a beginner and clean out your division, you better not try to enter as a beginner again in any NAGA event.
    When given the choice between big business and big government, choose big business. Big business never threw millions of people into gas chambers, but big government did.

    "It does not take a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brushfires of freedom in the minds of men" -Samuel Adams

  14. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by 1bad65 View Post
    Agreed. Mine does not do that.

    That's one of the reasons NAGA keeps detailed records. If you enter as say a beginner and clean out your division, you better not try to enter as a beginner again in any NAGA event.
    yeah, true. we had a guy who was a black belt in judo, but a white belt in bjj. He honestly didn't think anything about it, just "I'm a white belt, so I will enter as a beginner" He cleaned house and was accused of sandbagging.
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    Quote Originally Posted by 1bad65 View Post
    I train at a Renzo Gracie affiliate and this is not true at my gym. We actually have a guy who had around 10 amateur and 10 pro MMA fights before the instructor 'officially' awarded him his blue belt. It was just not a big deal to the fighter or my instructor so it just did not get done for years.
    my coworker's been rolling for 15 years, in a few different schools, with a couple breaks.
    he is still a white belt i believe.
    he works out early in the afternoon before the classes start and rolls with some of the regulars at the gym.
    i think this year's going to be his first competition.
    skill wise he says he's less than a blue belt - not sure i believe that.
    his knowledge of the game is solid tho.

    i've noticed that the whole ranking issue really only matters to people who don't really know the stuff. in my own case, i feel like i'm constantly challenged by new, little guys coming into the gym and thinking i can't do the stuff coz i'm not built like wanderlei. As soon as i get more fights, i'm hoping the issue goes away.
    What would happen if a year-old baby fell from a fourth-floor window onto the head of a burly truck driver, standing on the sidewalk?
    It's practically certain that the truckman would be knocked unconscious. He might die of brain concussion or a broken neck.
    Even an innocent little baby can become a dangerous missile WHEN ITS BODY-WEIGHT IS SET INTO FAST MOTION.
    -Jack Dempsey ch1 pg1 Championship Fighting

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