6 Things EVERY BJJ White Belt Must Know By Blue Belt!

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Hey giant slayers, In this video Brandon covers 6 things every BJJ (Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu) white belt must know by the time they get their blue belt.
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Komentáře • 135

  • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
    @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +4

    Free ebook “How to be a bjj giant slayer” Here www.bjjgiantslayer.com

  • @ashlieduarte4239
    @ashlieduarte4239 Před 3 lety +164

    Keeping that ego outside is a huge one. Sometimes training days are hard, and being kind to yourself keeps you coming back!

  • @josewmeldondo
    @josewmeldondo Před 2 lety +16

    6 Things Every BJJ White Belt Must Know By Blue Belt:
    1.) The terminology of BJJ
    2.) The scoring system of BJJ
    3.) When to tap
    4.) How to fall
    5.) Have no ego
    6.) Show respect

  • @kovenmaitreya7184
    @kovenmaitreya7184 Před 3 lety +34

    As someone who's already a blue belt, the intro alone is giving me anxiety, as if I'm about to be tested and might fail, lol 😂

  • @scottanderson2796
    @scottanderson2796 Před 3 lety +63

    They say belts and stripes don't matter and they don't but man just got my first stripe on my blue and it just motivates me more than ever to push forward roll on 🤙

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +9

      Right on congrats Scott! I’m in favor of stripes for that exact reason. It helped me make it through blue belt when I wanted to quit at times.

    • @anonymousanonymous7600
      @anonymousanonymous7600 Před 3 lety +1

      I’ve been a year blue belt and I don’t have a stripe on it though

    • @scottanderson2796
      @scottanderson2796 Před 3 lety

      @@anonymousanonymous7600 Took me like a yr to get my first they'll come just stay rolling 🤙

  • @christopherallan4298
    @christopherallan4298 Před 3 lety +28

    I think the breakfalling part of this is especially important. Even if you don't plan to incorporate standup into your own game, you could still be swept from a standing position if the other person sits down first. If you do plan on fighting for the takedown and you plan on competing, there are wrestlers and judo black belts lurking in the white belt divisions (I know people who have more than a certain amount of wrestling or judo experience are technically supposed to compete as blue belts, but sometimes they don't know this when registering for tournaments, and so still compete at the white belt level). If you get thrown hard and don't know how to breakfall, it could force you to take unexpected time away from the mats to recovery from an injury.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +3

      Totally agree.. I’ve also seen really high level takedown guys in white belt or novice brackets due to their experience in judo or wrestling.

  • @dapperbowtique2696
    @dapperbowtique2696 Před 2 lety

    Great advise coach! Thanks for sharing.

  • @brettakasaki1612
    @brettakasaki1612 Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome videos B!!! All great stuff youre sharing 👍

  • @giddyup11321
    @giddyup11321 Před 3 lety +6

    Really great explanations about fall techniques, this was not addressed in my first initial classes but I copied others without knowing the reasons. Awesome content

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety

      Glad you enjoyed. Hope you are enjoying your journey thus far!

  • @michellewada2185
    @michellewada2185 Před 3 lety +6

    This was an awesome video! The tips were on point!

  • @ccrass4443
    @ccrass4443 Před 3 lety +17

    Great advice. I really liked the idea of teaching the point system to help develop strategies. A big detail that my first BJJ coach left out, which would have been helpful. Also, coming from a Judo background, good advice on break falls.

  • @aaronfong792
    @aaronfong792 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video! I’ll keep all these tips in mind!

  • @NB-dz7wv
    @NB-dz7wv Před 3 lety +7

    This is a great video! I got promoted to blue about 3 months ago and watching this got me sweating! I agree don’t have an ego. Also when I first began I really didn’t know much and over the course of time I learn the basic take downs, scissors, breaking guard, and etc. So whenever I roll with someone who’s new/beginner I’ll show them how to do the basics and encourage them to continue jiu jitsu because it’s an amazing sport.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +3

      Congrats on the blue belt! Sounds like you’re a great training partner who’s willing to help others. 🤙🏻

  • @Wrightwayjiujitsu
    @Wrightwayjiujitsu Před 3 lety +3

    Great advice!!

  • @ElioVillegas
    @ElioVillegas Před 3 lety +5

    A video with a lot of great info. I just started BJJ last week and im glad i did. Excited to learn and eager to get better 😎🤙

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +1

      Enjoy the journey my friend! - Caio Terra says,”It’s not just about how good your jiujitsu is but how good jiujitsu is for you.”

    • @ElioVillegas
      @ElioVillegas Před 3 lety

      @@DavidvsGoliathBJJ Thank you! I appreciate it 🤙

  • @teresaflores514
    @teresaflores514 Před 3 lety +2

    thanks i needed this video

  • @ryanvangorder7846
    @ryanvangorder7846 Před 2 lety

    Awesome…thank you!

  • @goldsoulplaya
    @goldsoulplaya Před 3 lety +10

    Great video! Currently a second stripe white belt and Im learning to drop my ego and realize that the journey will be a long but rewarding one. Thank you for these tips!

  • @alexvucinic
    @alexvucinic Před 3 lety +5

    Nice to see someone talking about other very important values of bjj

  • @lukedodge2754
    @lukedodge2754 Před 2 lety +1

    Respect for yourself is something that I need to work on fr 💯 🙏

  • @bjjrealtor
    @bjjrealtor Před 2 lety

    Great video!
    How many points for a submission?

  • @sleepyredpanda2643
    @sleepyredpanda2643 Před rokem +1

    Best thing to say about ego is pretty much how you said it. Blue belt to me is a “glorified” white belt. A fresh blue belt tapping to a white belt is the same as a higher white belt being tapped by a lower white belt. It’s best to remember that when you transition from white to blue, your skill doesn’t just magically jump up, it progresses on an upward slope.

  • @traditionallyuntraditional2032

    "He eventually woke up..." hahaaha great video

  • @bobbydabutcha
    @bobbydabutcha Před 3 lety +2

    Best forward/backward roll tutorials ever 🙂

  • @mellamodiego8458
    @mellamodiego8458 Před 2 lety

    this was therapeutic

  • @christianmathison1182
    @christianmathison1182 Před rokem +1

    My first time being hurt was crossing my ankles (not my legs) to hold someone’s back and they crossed a leg over and made me cry like they took my bottle. Needless to say 22 years later I still haven’t crossed my ankles ever again.

  • @umairz2178
    @umairz2178 Před 3 lety +13

    Hey there I'm a stripeless white belt. I was having problems recovering from rolls and now my coach has paired me up with 100 kg 6 feet beast. It's sucking the energy out of me. Should I limit my rolls or drill more or give it all I got?

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +2

      Hey friend, sounds like a personal choice but if it were me I’d pace myself. Staying consistent is more important than winning or going all out. Have a long term mindset that will keep you training for years to come and adopt it as a lifestyle.

    • @MrJeric1
      @MrJeric1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@DavidvsGoliathBJJ i agree with you...I'm a small guy and im always fighting "beasts". The tip that i can give to you is this: don't use strength, roll and learn what will work better for you against biggest dudes, for me half guard is the best, because you don't nerd strength and save a lot of energy

  • @sevourn
    @sevourn Před 3 lety +8

    I just got my blue belt after 6 months and I don't really know any of the vocabulary or the entirety of the point system. I'd give it back if I could, but I don't feel like that's an option, I definitely didn't ask for it or want it yet.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +7

      If your instructor felt you were ready have confidence in his/her choice! I think feeling ready is a lie. Every promotion I got I never felt ready. Let the promotion inspire you to keep going and to train harder!

    • @John_Nada_
      @John_Nada_ Před 3 lety +2

      I've been a white belt for over three years hahahahaha

    • @stevenconnolly28
      @stevenconnolly28 Před 3 lety

      @@John_Nada_ 18 month white belt here

    • @projectdren806
      @projectdren806 Před 3 lety

      6 months is incredibly short for a blue belt. Have you trained in other martial arts/wrestling/judo before? That seems sketchy unless you are a prodigy or training 7 days a week. The average time to get a blue belt is like 2 years.

    • @sevourn
      @sevourn Před 3 lety

      @@projectdren806 I wrestled. 25 years ago. I'm tough. I know how to cut weight and how to win. That doesn't mean i know bjj, and it doesn't mean it doesn't look stupid having someone wearing a blue belt who can't do the goddamned warm up drills.

  • @Vintagegijoefreak
    @Vintagegijoefreak Před 2 lety +1

    The ego part is huge!! Glad to hear that’s important in your academy.
    I just started at a academy but I have 25 years experience of fighting and a lot of grappling. I’m a first responder of 15 years and have trained a lot at work with both purple and brown belts.
    But I wanted to train more often and just recently got the chance to join a academy.
    And to my point, I have to fight for dear life every single practice. Frustrated blue belts that simply refuse to loose to a white belt. It’s really tiresome and I’m more often injured that tired after a class simply cause everything is done at 110% instead of 80% where I feel we should be when training..

    • @bw5187
      @bw5187 Před 9 měsíci

      And. . .they are the ones with the ego???

  • @ps3ud0nym
    @ps3ud0nym Před 3 lety +3

    The ibjjf point systems don't account in leglocks though xD

  • @rollinOnCode
    @rollinOnCode Před 2 lety +1

    you must know how to do a flying triangle and inside heelhook

  • @thefreedomproject4777
    @thefreedomproject4777 Před 3 lety +8

    A blue belt in 6 months? Wow, my gym gives blue belt after 3 to 4 years.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety

      Wow that’s a long time. What’s average time to black just wondering 💭? I got my blue in a year, but 14 years in I’m still brown. Been training consistently except for 2020 during peak of pandemic.

    • @thefreedomproject4777
      @thefreedomproject4777 Před 3 lety +1

      @@DavidvsGoliathBJJ I'm not really sure I only have 7 months trainning, but advance white belts here are tought, I have seen them beating blue belts from other schools ( in fact that happened yesterday) I like it, since that gives you the opportunity to enjoy being on top of the game for a long time at your belt rank, before advancing to the next lvl. I know one guy has been trainning here for 10 years and he is a brown belt.

    • @craigcrissman4651
      @craigcrissman4651 Před 2 lety +7

      So your gym sandbags lol

    • @mmanovicemw1161
      @mmanovicemw1161 Před 2 lety

      My gym average is 12-14 months

    • @yupindeed5422
      @yupindeed5422 Před 2 lety

      @Greg Lurik surely it just depends whether you're there yet or not. Can't really put a time on these things.

  • @lordglyn
    @lordglyn Před 2 lety +3

    I agree with all you say… however you absolutely SHOULD be able to beat all white belts as a blue belt. You will obviously get the odd tap now and again if you’re not focusing or going easy on them whilst they go hard … but you really should be able to show a higher level of skill which means you can tap them. Otherwise you’re simply not ready yet.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 2 lety +12

      I respectfully disagree under certain circumstances. For example we have a new guy (white belt) 240lb and was a wrestler. I wouldn’t expect a 135lb fresh blue belt to be able to submit him. A higher level of skill can also be demonstrated in his/her ability to defend/survive as well. But that’s my opinion as a coach, every coach is different and has different expectations for their students.

    • @googlegmail9888
      @googlegmail9888 Před 2 lety

      @@DavidvsGoliathBJJ agreed

    • @michaelnurge1652
      @michaelnurge1652 Před rokem

      I've beaten blue belts before when I was a 1-stripe white belt. Stuff depends on other stuff. As a new white belt I only rolled with white belts near my size and blue belts who were also close to it.
      I've got 3 stripes now and might make blue in a few months. Or not; I still feel like I'm pretty sloppy. I don't beat blue belts often except if they're much smaller than I am, but I have beat some who are closer to my size (granted, I usually lose, but not always). There are some smaller purple or brown belts who can't beat me. I don't have any experience rolling with people heavier than I am because there aren't any at my gym. One or two guys are taller but nobody is heavier, and, though there are plenty in better shape, I doubt anyone's stronger.
      Size and strength matter. I was a HS wrestler only a couple seasons and it was a long time ago, but I've got that, too. I figure I'm here to learn, so I don't have to go all-out always, but if we do and I'm twice the other person's size, unless they're purple or above, I'll have a pretty big advantage. I'd rather win with skill but I need to learn and use the advantages I have and others need to learn how to deal with people like me too. I used to feel a little dirty just going with strength, but I'm not as agile as a lot of others either or in as good shape...actually another guy told me to look at it this way. I'm sloppier than I'd like to be, and I'm a little more worried sometimes to try this move or that because I don't actually want to hurt the other person and nearly 300# is a pretty big load. I'm a little over 50# lighter than when I started though, so there's that :)

  • @k4milek82
    @k4milek82 Před 3 lety +10

    Proper pronunciation is "respectch".

  • @Sonny453
    @Sonny453 Před 3 lety +7

    Wow....by your definition I should be a blue belt. I have been training consistently for >2 years, can tap most of the other white belts in my gym but I am still a 2 stripe white belt.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +5

      Every gym has different standards but It definitely sounds like you’re ready if you have over 2 years experience already. Keep training and enjoying the journey. It’s not just about the belt but who we become in the process. Your time will come.

    • @robcubed9557
      @robcubed9557 Před 3 lety +8

      The color of your belt doesn't matter as much as the skill you possess. I've been training ~10 months myself and still feel like I shouldn't have any stripes on my belt (I have 3 stripes)

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +2

      @@robcubed9557 I agree skill is what matters

    • @ps3ud0nym
      @ps3ud0nym Před 3 lety +2

      Sounds like you still haven't got your ego in check. Why would you even care about your belt?

    • @Sonny453
      @Sonny453 Před 3 lety

      ​@@ps3ud0nym The main reason I train is to get better not to get a colored belt, otherwise I would have already quit. That said, the belt should accurately reflect our skill level.

  • @AB-dm8nt
    @AB-dm8nt Před rokem

    I didn’t catch why everybody slaps the mat on fall. It looks like the energy of the fall has already been absorbed, and doesn’t look like the arms and hands are doing much of anything other than adding impact and sound after the fact. I’m open to learn, but this looks like painful as one who has bad shoulders and elbows. I’m new, so forgive and inform my ignorance appropriately. I’m interested to learn the why.

  • @JOEY__SR
    @JOEY__SR Před rokem

    What about skill level vs other opponents?

  • @mellamodiego8458
    @mellamodiego8458 Před 2 lety +1

    to be completely honest with you it doesnt look like your hand slap when going backwards is stopping your momentum but just making a loud noise

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 2 lety +1

      Valid observation. I get the question from a lot of students and I usually tell the kids try falling backwards when someone pushes you down and not slapping the mat and seeing what happens. Their head hits the mat almost every time. Based on my own observation doing it myself it seems to help. That’s how my instructor taught it to me and he was a black belt judoka

  • @antoniostyles
    @antoniostyles Před 3 lety +3

    What's crazy is that most BJJ schools don't teach any of this. They teach you an arm bar drill then you spar. Thank you for the content!

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +1

      I’ve had a similar experience as well. Glad you enjoyed the vid Stevie 🤙🏻

    • @projectdren806
      @projectdren806 Před 3 lety +1

      Armbar is one of the first things taught because it is pretty high percentage with white belts. Plus, the sparring is probably the most useful thing to do. The more you spar, the better you get 100%..and that includes jumping in a bit so to speak. But almost all schools I've seen have warmups where they teach how to breakfall, shrimp, roll properly and more. Terminology comes pretty quickly and by doing as well.
      The way my school works is: 15 min warmup of running, high knees, butt kicks, pushups, situps, shrimps, forward and backward rolls, and bear crawls. Then we learn usually 2 to 3 new techniques and drill them each for several minutes while the instructor helps out people who are struggling on form.
      Then we spend the last 30 min constantly rolling 5 min rounds with 60 second breaks between.
      By doing this, I learned everything in this video well before the first month was over...which is nowhere near blue belt lol.

  • @roblox_games1982
    @roblox_games1982 Před 3 lety +2

    I'm going back to training.

  • @projectdren806
    @projectdren806 Před 3 lety +5

    While all useful things to know, this is more a list of things to know after 1 month of training BJJ. So while technically not wrong...there is a lot more you must know by the time you are a blue belt lol.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +1

      True but I’ve also seen tons of blue belts who don’t even know these

    • @projectdren806
      @projectdren806 Před 3 lety +1

      @@DavidvsGoliathBJJ Yikes! I need to find those guys at my next competition LOL

  • @johnwoods5095
    @johnwoods5095 Před 3 lety +1

    6-12 months??

  • @ZT-uh1xs
    @ZT-uh1xs Před 3 lety

    Ino most of the vocab cause I watch mma anyway

  • @lorenzojimenez8861
    @lorenzojimenez8861 Před rokem

    I think this are things you should know by your 2nd month in bjj

  • @richarddaniel6896
    @richarddaniel6896 Před 3 lety +1

    Should I be ironing my gi after laundering it?

  • @Li8mBenz
    @Li8mBenz Před rokem

    You chocked a guy unconscious on his first lesson?

  • @dogguy8603
    @dogguy8603 Před 2 lety

    Me with no gi: wait you guys get belts?
    Lol

  • @TheProdigy260592
    @TheProdigy260592 Před 3 lety +2

    Don’t think learning the point system is important.
    Learning to tap out should have been disclosed first call before they even jump on the mat.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank for your input! From an instructor stand point I’ve found it to be very helpful for new students. But that’s just my experience.

    • @surferjoe8586
      @surferjoe8586 Před 3 lety

      I can remember very clearly from my first time on the matt and not knowing what tapping was. I got my arm caught in an arm bar, boy did that hurt like no other. I strongly encourage how/what tapping is and that this be taught to new students.

  • @georgel.3357
    @georgel.3357 Před 3 lety +2

    Been doing Gracie JJ for almost 2 years, still don't know what a "whizzer" is...never heard it in class. *Shrugs*

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 3 lety +4

      Others refer to it as an “over hook” , whizzer is actually more of a wrestling term that bjj has adopted

    • @Bigmugatu
      @Bigmugatu Před 3 lety

      That is not good.

  • @wilbertcrisostomo3238

    🫲👊

  • @michaelchen3208
    @michaelchen3208 Před 3 lety

    It would be fantastic if some one could get seven stripes on a white belt and still a white belt.

  • @efbld2f
    @efbld2f Před 3 lety +1

    With a video title like this, you would expect to hear fundamentals - not “learn to tap” or “learn the point system.” Good info, misleading title.

  • @Brandon-ob9rg
    @Brandon-ob9rg Před 3 lety

    Why don't they award points for reversals?

    • @shadymilkman443
      @shadymilkman443 Před 3 lety

      Reversals are kinda like sweeps. Just past the guard

    • @Brandon-ob9rg
      @Brandon-ob9rg Před 3 lety

      @@shadymilkman443 Ya I know, but IBJJF rules don't reward you any points for them.

    • @projectdren806
      @projectdren806 Před 3 lety

      @@Brandon-ob9rg You inherently get points on reversals it awards you a useful position. Pass the guard or get mount from your reversal and you have points. If your reversal didn't gain you position..it probably wasn't worth awarding points for anyway.

  • @johnnycage2746
    @johnnycage2746 Před 2 lety +2

    I am thinking of quitting because my coach has not promoted me to blue after 3 years. We are a hobbyist gym but he seems to be grading me as a competitor even though I only competed once. I got injured before a recent tournament and couldn't compete.
    I have dropped in at other gyms in the area to scope out a potential new gym. In thst time, I noticed I was tapping alot of blues from other gyms and surviving their attacks.
    This just really pisses me off. I don't care about how he thinks his blues should hold up at other gyms. I just feel passed over and disrespected. Showing up 5-7 days a week for half of the time and being the most dedicated white belt DOES NOT pay off when more casual people have passed me in promotions, people I beat even though I am smaller.
    To me it is a measure of progress and an acknowledgement. Instead I get backhanded joking and alot of crap. I either quit my gym or I quit training. Leaning more to the latter.

    • @DavidvsGoliathBJJ
      @DavidvsGoliathBJJ  Před 2 lety

      Damn brother thanks for sharing all that. Sounds like you’ve been working really hard and you’ve been overlooked. 3 years to blue seems like a long time in my opinion especially training 5 days per week. Keep training man! Even if that means finding a new bjj home where you’re happy.

    • @turbojellyfish
      @turbojellyfish Před rokem

      What was your conclusion? Hopefully the former and not the latter!

  • @toolate6971
    @toolate6971 Před 2 lety

    I wonder why you didnt inform you "friend" about the risks and dangers of Jiu Jitsu? Why would you do something like that to your "FRIEND"?!

  • @dreal500
    @dreal500 Před 2 lety

    Sorry that tap story was on you. Not the fresh new white belt. You should have told him before you started rolling to tap when he was caught in a submission. Would this mean you would have broken his arm if he didn't tap to your arm bar attempt. You as the higher belt should have known better. That's my 2 cents. Lol

    • @Coderedpirate
      @Coderedpirate Před 2 lety

      Sure, he was most definitely at fault for choking out his friend, however I’d argue it’s pretty common knowledge to “tap” in a fighting situation. I only started training last week but walking in there I already knew you’re supposed to tap out, and I haven’t really been around any martial arts/fighting environments growing up.
      Also addressing your arm bar question, I’m sure he’s an experienced enough fighter to 1. Understand that he’s sparring not competing or fighting
      2. When the armbar (or whatever position) is starting to go too far.
      From my limited experience, the veteran guys at my gym were actually way more conscious about holding back compared to the other white belts. I understood at what point I was simply in the position where I couldn’t do anything, and obviously they knew too, so they wouldn’t do anything more than a light pressure.

    • @dreal500
      @dreal500 Před 2 lety

      @@Coderedpirate I get all that man, but why strangle him out. He's new. Could have easily stopped and said, "hey if I strangle you any more your going to pass out. Tapping is learning." After he or she is told I guess it's fair game. But to hold the hold on a newbie stinks of a little ego to me. I still train. And I'm about blue belt level. I'm about 270 lbs so I'm on the bigger side of things. I roll with new white belts all the time. I Don't assume they know how to tap. Also I can easily smash some of the newer lighter white belts. I can even hold down the spazzy ones. Just because I can doesn't mean I should rip off limbs with Kimuras and strangle newbies unconscious. To me it's not in good taste and I want these people to come back. That's my only point.