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What martial art/fighting style has the most throws, bonebreaking, grapples and arm locks/leg locks/head locks

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what martial art/fighting style has the most throws, bonebreaking, grapples and arm locks/leg locks/head locks

I live in Adelaide, SA, Australia if that helps with training places or if u dunt no any just the name and explaining y wood be very helpfull

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  1. I think Ju Jitsu.


  2. Check out Pentjak Silat (also spelled Penchak). It's an Indonesian martial art with very good grappling, locking, and breaking concepts.

  3. Sambo has all of this with high emphasis on leg locks.

  4. judo

  5. Well minus the Leg locks I would say Judo.  judo I think beats jujitsu on throws but it has no leg locks. I think if you wanted to focus in on the latter part of your question Brazilian Jujitsu would be better for everything but throws. Ju jitsu spends much more time on the ground with bone breaking joint lock submissions and chocks that will put a person to sleep or if held longer kill them. Now the thing is if you find a good judo school they will put much more time into ground work and everything mentioned just now sept leg locks and they will split this ground work with throws that will use technique over power to throw people but either way jujitsu will spend more time with ground work and if you want to go that way with it you can learn with jujitsu to. In my life I took judo and Jujitsu both for a month. After that month I was a Jujitsu lover. I would suggest taking both and seeing which one is your thing cause they are both pretty cool.

  6. I think ju jitsu is what you are looking for.  It's a great combination of throws, locks, chokes and strangles.  Judo has more throws I think, but not so much locking and striking.  Jitsu has some strikes, but it's focused on using attackers' momentum against them ( breaking balance ) and controlling their body in, hopefully, a fast fluid movement. This means you have to be attacked first...you'll never start a fight but if you need to defend yourself you will know how to finish one quickly and efficiently.  Getting involved is the best way, first lessons are often free, and doing it for real allows you to keep a clean and knowledgeable mind and not get distracted by exaggerated, fabricated pub type stories of peoples 'mates taking on 20 blokes and hospitalising them'!  

    To simplify, you can learn to anticipate and avoid punches and kicks, throw people, break wrists, arms, shoulders, knees and legs, make people black out, break your falls, pin people down, escape from holds and grabs - all from £3 a lesson (well here anyway)!  Oh and you learn to defend yourself from all sorts of weapons too, and that is cool.

  7. Well BJJ covers almost all of that. Judo does a lot of that too. You'd be most well rounded with BJJ though. It's all submissions (legs, arms, etc) and chokes.

  8. For throws the answer hands down is Judo. As far as submissions (arm bars, chokes, ankle locks etc.) Brazilian Jiu Jitsu is the clear winner. If you wanna talk about headlocks, go to your local bar and ask the guy who likes to talk about fighting but would get owned against anyone with skill; headlocks do not work and will easily be countered.

  9. There are 2 identical styles that are very common everywhere in the world and that is Japanese style Aikido and the Korean version of it Hapkido. The only differece is the name itself because both have the exact same meaning the way of joining harmony, inner-energy or spirit. these are both very hands on artforms that deal with exactly what your looking for and if you have ever whatched a Steven Segal movie you'll know what your getting into. While some of the other forms of martial arts are best for competition these 2 can really hurt you.

  10. I would have to go with Judo or Sambo.  I have yet to take a Jiu-Jitsu class with any focus on throwing.  Also, the guys I've studied with don't really teach leg locks until you're at least a purple belt.  Understandable since its really easy for injuries to occur while practicing leg locks.  Judo focuses more on the the throws, but again, not so much with the leg locks.  Sambo, on the other hand, has all the throws of Judo, plus it has a lot of focus on leg locks.  Having never been to Australia, I can't really help you find a gym, but I hope this helped.  Best of luck.

  11. HAPKIDO IS NOT IDENTICAL TO AIKIDO!!!!!!!!!!

    sorry...now thats out of the way...

    any number of arts...hapkido, kung fu, japanese jujutsu, filipino arts, okinawan karate...they all have bone breaking, throws, and grapples.

    now if you want an art that specialized specifically in those things...japanese jujutsu. korean hapkido, russian "combat" sambo...not sport sambo.

    brazilian jujutsu, mma, judo. to a lesser extent because they leave out alot.

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