- Joined
- May 14, 2016
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- 35,484
With his strength yes he could definitely transition to BJJ with the right teacher he would be more than fine.He's not wrestling freestyle in that video either. That is folk style wrestling, which may as well be an entirely different sport than freestyle wrestling. I don't think his technique would translate to the BJJ world either. He's winning matches there mostly based on being stronger and a naturally better athlete than his competition. His technique leaves a lot to be desired. His double leg take down shots are lazy and would get his face planted in the mat by any opponent with skill. This kid would be an also ran in any of PA, IA, IL, OH, WI or MN.
I’ve been a practitioner for 6 years, I’ve seen kids who were way smaller, way weaker with no background in wrestling at all become skilled grapplers with a year or 2 of proper teaching. All he would need to learn is how to pass guard from different positions in mount & he’d be good to go, although he’d probably get leg locked quite a bit until he learned how to defend against it.
And of course he would get washed by most Midwest & Northeast wrestlers, that’s literally their culture, those kids from those regions live & breath wrestling like kids in the Southeast live & breathe Football.
I wasn’t saying he can be an Olympic wrestler or even college level, my exact comment was he has a future as grappler if Football don’t work out, which is true, take him to a legit BJJ teacher & they would be more than happy to work with a kid that has his natural strength.