Patches in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, Judo, and MMA

roger-gracie-jiu-jitsu-fashion-plain-black-shortsThis is one of those posts where I get in trouble with my coaches, and they tell me to take it down because I’m an idiot. So let me just say that this is my opinion and my opinion only, and I’m just one guy, and an inexperienced one at that.

So here we go. I personally don’t like any labels, patches, branding, etc on fighters in MMA, jiu jitsu, or submission grappling. I have tremendous respect for fighters that have the opposite view, but for me it’s just what I like: simple. It was nice to see Roger Gracie wear simple black shorts (which is a relative rarity in MMA) to his last week’s Strikeforce battle.

Now I understand the importance of teams in BJJ competition, so I think a single little patch is cool, but coming from a judo background, I will always prefer a gi with no patches at all (except what nation you represent). So instead of the patch covered gi of Caio Terra in the image on the left, I prefer the “patch-light” gi of Jimmy Pedro on the right.

Caio-Terra-with-lots-of-gi-patches

jimmy-pedro-no-patches

 

 

 

 

 

I know that some patches bring athletes money, some patches (like those of your team) bring athletes pride, but to me, the former doesn’t matter, and in the latter case I prefer to carry my pride a little quieter, on the inside. Everyone will know what team I represent when I stand on the podium with a gold medal around my neck, and if I don’t make it there, I wouldn’t want anyone to know anyway.

Muay Thai Injuries

Muay Thai kick in competitionI got hit in the arm in muay thai from a hard kick that missed the pads. The downside of training as much as I do is that injuries are that much more difficult to deal with mentally.

Most minor and major injuries provide me with time and motivation (born out of frustration) to rethink where I stand, where I’m going, from high level goals down to the details of day-to-day training.

So, I started reading about injuries in Muay Thai (example) and realized that they happen a lot, more than with judo or grappling. In fact, that’s the fundamental problem with striking arts. If you want to execute the techniques at anywhere close to 100% intensity, you are going to deliver damage to yourself and/or your opponent. There is just no way around that. That’s partially why jiu jitsu and submission grappling is so effective at building great fighters. More than other disciplines, it allows you to train at 100% intensity with a minimal risk of injury, so you can train more often, for longer, and at full intensity.

Of course, when I talk about “risk of injury” I’m assuming both people have extensive experience in the sport and thus have clean, polished technique. For me, in Muay Thai, this is not the case. Arguably, the reason I got injured is that I don’t have extensive experience in holding the pads, and that in itself is an art. The cost of being a beginner in a contact sport is that you are going to have to accept injuries as you learn how to avoid them while amping up the intensity of regular training.

The key is to not let injuries deter you from confident full emergence into the dynamics of the sport. In Muay Thai, too many people seem to get injured, and then start flinching or hesitating every time they hold the pads or in sparring. I guess it boils down to being a tough, crazy, even stupid s.o.b. It’s the wrestling mindset of going harder whenever every reasonable part of your brain is telling you to quit, stop, go home and sit behind a desk reading a book of Convex Optimization or some such other mathy crap. I know I’m not that tough yet, but I’m learning it, and unlike many people that talk about this subject, I believe that it is something that can be learned. Of course, those people usually know a lot more than me, so my belief is on shaky ground, but that’s why life is a bitch.

Patches in Jiu Jitsu and Judo

I’m just now watching 2008 Mundials (World Jiu Jitsu Championship). Dai Yoshioka comes out in the finals wearing an unbleached gi with no patches representing a fictional team (Tokyo Yellowmans). Have to love that, especially the self-deprecating humor of the team name. This is one of the aspects in which I personally like the judo culture better than jiu jitsu. Patches and dramatic emphasis on a team you represent is a little silly. Many people I respect feel otherwise. This is just my modest opinion.

Dai Yoshioka at 2008 world jiu-jitsu championship

(Plus it helps that Yoshioka has amazing jiu jitsu. I’ve never seen anyone so relaxed under a constant high-intensity assault of his open guard.)

Don’t get me wrong, I love being part of a team. When I wrestled in high school, lining up with my team by weight and facing the opposing team in a western-style showdown was always awesome. We supported each other, and everyone fought that much harder because we needed their points for the team win. On the other hand, wrestling (as well as jiu jitsu, judo, mma) is fundamentally an individual sport. It’s just you out there. The beauty of the game is in the clash of individual wills. It’s a test of who is the better man, and a big patch on your back always seemed to me to be a deviation from that ideal of pure one-on-one competition.