Hi all
I wanted to get some opinions on strength & conditioning routines/exercises specific for BJJ players...not mma.
I'm asking for you guys help in breaking down the fundamental attributes and movements required in BJJ to tailor training to these accordingly.
Any suggestions would be appreciated, especially from those with relevant experience or qualifications.
The problem I see is that BJJ people are being given overly general routines ie. crossfit type or are given mma routines. Although there are useful cross-overs with these programs there are also fundamental differences in the attributes one needs between bjj and mma, for example, mma is much more of a speed and explosive movement game with far more emphasise on the free-movement phase and keeping distance for striking.
Key considerations for BJJ would be:
- grip strength (gi)
- isometric/static type strength for maintaining positional control and/or maintaining posture when in guard
- pulling strength and strength-endurance
- lifting strength and strength-endurance eg. standing guard passes
- explosive and dynamic hip movement
can anyone add to this?
I'm also a bit sketchy on the cardio nature of pure bjj. has anyone tried rolling with a heart rate monitor??
Interested to see how much would involve working above anaerobic threshold. Is it an anaerobic game or more aerobic? It certainly feels anaerobic after a hard roll but I wonder how much of this is generalised muscle fatigue from a muscular strength-endurance perspective, (eg. blasted forearms from gripping, or blasted biceps from figthing an armbar) rather than moving into a genuine anaerobic zone due to the hearts inability to supply oxygenated blood quick enough.
from my own experience (blue belt with 5 yrs of on/off training) I find that it is my muscular strength-endurance that is the limiting factor before my aerobic capacity, eg. increasing fatigue in your shoulder from repeated attempts to defend a kimura combined with generalised strenght-endurance fatigue all over eventually leads to getting subbed on the shoulder.
please helpl me out with understanding this, seems like all the focus is on the mma crowd these days. yet training for BJJ is not the same as for mma! much like training for a judo comp is different again, or a muay thai match is different
thanks!
any thoughts on this?
I wanted to get some opinions on strength & conditioning routines/exercises specific for BJJ players...not mma.
I'm asking for you guys help in breaking down the fundamental attributes and movements required in BJJ to tailor training to these accordingly.
Any suggestions would be appreciated, especially from those with relevant experience or qualifications.
The problem I see is that BJJ people are being given overly general routines ie. crossfit type or are given mma routines. Although there are useful cross-overs with these programs there are also fundamental differences in the attributes one needs between bjj and mma, for example, mma is much more of a speed and explosive movement game with far more emphasise on the free-movement phase and keeping distance for striking.
Key considerations for BJJ would be:
- grip strength (gi)
- isometric/static type strength for maintaining positional control and/or maintaining posture when in guard
- pulling strength and strength-endurance
- lifting strength and strength-endurance eg. standing guard passes
- explosive and dynamic hip movement
can anyone add to this?
I'm also a bit sketchy on the cardio nature of pure bjj. has anyone tried rolling with a heart rate monitor??
Interested to see how much would involve working above anaerobic threshold. Is it an anaerobic game or more aerobic? It certainly feels anaerobic after a hard roll but I wonder how much of this is generalised muscle fatigue from a muscular strength-endurance perspective, (eg. blasted forearms from gripping, or blasted biceps from figthing an armbar) rather than moving into a genuine anaerobic zone due to the hearts inability to supply oxygenated blood quick enough.
from my own experience (blue belt with 5 yrs of on/off training) I find that it is my muscular strength-endurance that is the limiting factor before my aerobic capacity, eg. increasing fatigue in your shoulder from repeated attempts to defend a kimura combined with generalised strenght-endurance fatigue all over eventually leads to getting subbed on the shoulder.
please helpl me out with understanding this, seems like all the focus is on the mma crowd these days. yet training for BJJ is not the same as for mma! much like training for a judo comp is different again, or a muay thai match is different
thanks!
any thoughts on this?
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