Tom Keesler wrote:It is my understanding that BJJ was intially developed from Judo. Judo is a martial "sport". BJJ has many great techniques for two unarmed opponents wearing no armor to grapple on the ground. I beleive that the ground fighting in Ringen would have reflected the goal of the fight: to gain a dominant position from which to stab, choke, pummel, or otherwise incapacitate you adversary.
So I guess my point is that an art doesn't have to contain the armbars and triangle chokes of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu to be ground fighting, it simply requires techniques for fighting back against an adversary while you are on the ground.
In my mind, this is the crux of really understanding the difference. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu teaches you to do exactly what it does best--one on one fighting on the ground, with extremely heavy emphasis on joint locks and choking. Ringen, in my mind, is a much more "military" art (depending, naturally, on which master, but that's way more scope than we need to get into here). In Judo/BJJ/etc. you know the guy's friend won't stab you in the back of the neck while you're going for an Americana (o?). In Ringen, that assumption could not be made. Plus, why break an arm, which is harder than people think anyway and takes some time, or position yourself for a choke, which could take a while, the dagger is the trump card that ends the fight NOW.
I'd say a lot of the BJJ techniques under discussion are just too hazardous to do when facing a knife, even if yo get on the ground. Triangle choke, for example, is a terrible idea, since you have every limb (usually) tied up on his head, while he can stab you in places no one should ever be stabbed, pretty much at will, and bailing out from your position isn't all that quickly, either. Guard in general is dangerous for this reason--you can't get up easily, and yo can't really control his arms, while all he has to do is move the knife through about 6 inches of space to cause massive damage and bleeding.
As was said much earlier in this thread by Jay, most of the BJJ stuff goes out the window when one guy pulls a knife. And though it was mentioned by someone that most of the knife vs. grappling stuff relied on a stupid grappler, I'd have to disagree. You don't rise to the occasion, you sink to the level of your training. If what you train all the time to do, as many BJJ/MMA enthusiasts do, is to double-leg and then pound or choke, then that's what you'll do when attacked, by instinct, because you do it 800 times a week. And if you don't know the knife is there (which you really should assume, anyway, but many people don't) then it's too late by the time you figure it out.
I think the mode Stewart recommends, getting two-hand control of the knife (or some kind of arm wrap) is necessary, definitely. Which works great--Jay's book is full of these kinds of covers and controls. After that, I personally prefer to take down and remain standing, but that's just me. Gives me a much better chance to bail if I need to (important with a knife).
I'm impatient with stupidity. My people have learned to live without it.--The Day the Earth Stood Still