Becoming a great grappler is not an easy thing to do. If you want to be a great grappler you must work very hard and make many sacrifices. Most people have no idea of what hard work is…ask anyone born before electricity or hot and cold running water and they can tell you what hard work is.
To become a great grappler you have to have the mental toughness to overcome many things like being frustrated and disappointed with yourself. You must force yourself to workout when you least feel like doing it (that is when you need it the most) without over training. If you can get through the mental war half of the fight is won. The rest is just the training. The key to become a great grappler is the ability to keep training over a long period of time regardless of what fads come and go. Do your training consistently and correctly. Remember! Perfect practice makes perfect.
You will need dedication, determination and physical and mental toughness as well. You must be willing to train like a machine and like you have never trained before.
One of the greatest grapplers ever, my friend, Judo Gene LeBell, at age 73 is still one of the best technicians in the world. Gene has taught many of the great grapplers of today, including Gokor, Karo Parizyan and Erik Paulson. The list goes on. Not to many people know this story but the Shamrock brothers had an apartment near Gene’s school about 15 years ago for about 6 months but they never mentioned him in the Lion’s Den book. (Go figure). Gene had more than 2,000 judo matches in his life he won every one but one and he later avenged that loss. When he hip threw the guy he landed on the guy’s leg and broke it.
When Gene was competing he had the sickest work out routine. He would train 6 hours a day. He would do a 1,000 push up every other day and do a 1,000 sit ups every other day. He would climb up and down ropes and with one rope in each hand he would climb up and down to. He would run up and down hills with a 20 pound log on his back for part of his training. One of his favorite things to do was take a car tire and throw it with one or two hands and wind sprint to go get it. When you throw the tire you really have to twist and that helps develop your core. He would do this exercise for 45 minutes to an hour.
This will develop your waist, legs, lung capacity and back muscles. Gene believes that 60% is physical conditioning and 40 % is technique. No matter how skillful a fighter is if he gets tired during a fight he becomes a less skillful fighter. I always say, a musician will never go on stage without his or her instrument tuned and same should apply to fighters and grapplers. A lot of fighters will go on stage without their instrument tuned and you can see it in their performance.
To become a great grappler we can follow the examples of the great grapplers that came before us. The Farmer Burns could jump off a 6 foot table with a hangman noose around his neck and his hands tied behind his back and whistle Yankee doodle dandy. That was how strong his neck was. Karl Gotch brought catch wrestling to Japan. Dan Gable won the gold medal in the Olympics and Gene LaBell- well, you know about him. A great grappler will always spend more time grappling and working on his grappling skills than trying to become a body builder or Mr. Olympia. What great grapplers strive for are muscles that are functional for grappling and or fighting.
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