I%26#039;m going to be taking Muay Thai and Jujitsu. I know what they teach I just wanted to know what you did in your classes like did you spar a lot, what kind of excersises did you do, and other stuff like that. Obviously I want answers from people who take either one or both of these martial arts so please don%26#039;t answer if you don%26#039;t. Also, how much did your teacher, or whatever you want to call them, lecture you?|||I train in kickboxing and jujitsu. We usually start with some cardio (rope jumping) and medicine ball work or push-ups/sit-ups. We do a lot of striking next, mostly with targets/pads. After the kickboxing part of class we go to jujitsu....lots of drills with armbars and chokes, positional wrestling, rolls. After class is when we do the sparring, it%26#039;s switched up every class from MMA to submission wrestling to stand up. It%26#039;s full contact, but pretty well supervised with breaks so our instructor can give feedback. As far as lecturing, my coach is a little different with each student, depending on what they want/need out of it. Hope this helps!|||In our BJJ class, it usually consists of a warm up and exercises like pushups, rolling.... in the first half hour, the next half hour we practice a series of techniques one linking into the other, so say we might do a takedown, practice that, then the next step of what to do after you make that take down and practice that and then maby a third technique, then the last half hour or less is sparing usually in 5 min rounds, this is the hardest part
The teacher watches everything you do, even while he is sparing sometimes! its funny, because he is good he can just lie there sometimes and watch you while someone is trying to do an armbar on him, and they always help out and tell you where you need to improve|||Muay Thai and Brazilian Ju Jitsu is what makes up MMA. It%26#039;s the perfect combination. It trains you how to find standing up and on the ground. The classes are usually separated into sections. Once class for kickboxing, one class for jujitsu, one for sparring, and so on... All classes are very strenuous and yet educational. They focus on technique while building your stamina and conditioning which is extremely important. The classes are taught in groups unless you get personal training. If you are highly motivated and your goals are to fight at a competitive level, you should let the instructors know. They will train you accordingly. Most of them will ask you what your interests are when you start your training. If your training just to stay in shape and learn how to defend yourself, you can just go with the flow in the classes. If you want to compete, you will have to push yourself and train hard. The trainers will know when you are ready to compete. They will keep an eye on your progress and let you know you are ready for smokers (amateur fights).
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