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The Showdown: Judo vs Jiu Jitsu vs Wrestling - Who Comes Out On Top?

When it comes to martial arts, the three most popular disciplines are judo, jiu-jitsu, and wrestling. These three martial arts have been around for centuries, and have been used for self-defense, sports competition, and even military training. So when it comes down to it, who will come out on top in a showdown between judo, jiu-jitsu, and wrestling?

At first glance, all three of these martial arts may seem similar. However, they are quite different in terms of their styles of combat. Judo is a Japanese martial art that focuses on throwing techniques as well as grappling and ground fighting. Jiu-jitsu is also a Japanese martial art that also emphasizes ground fighting but puts more emphasis on submission holds than judo does. Wrestling is an ancient European style of combat that relies heavily on takedowns and pinning holds rather than submissions or throws.

So when comparing the three disciplines side by side to determine which one would come out on top in a showdown between them all we must look at each one’s unique strengths and weaknesses. Let’s start with judo since it is the oldest of the three disciplines having been developed in Japan during the late 19th century by Jigoro Kano as a form of physical education for young people.

Judo has several distinct advantages over its competitors. For starters, its focus on throws makes it highly effective when dealing with an opponent who is larger or stronger than you since you can use their momentum against them to throw them off balance or into submission holds quickly and efficiently while avoiding injury yourself if done correctly. Judo also emphasizes gripping techniques which give you greater control over your opponent allowing you to manipulate their movements better than with either jiu-jitsu or wrestling alone which rely more heavily on body weight rather than technique when attempting takedowns or submissions. Finally, Judo also has plenty of offensive options such as sweeps and throws making it not only useful defensively but offensively as well as giving practitioners an edge over those relying solely on defensive tactics like those seen in jiu-jitsu or wrestling matches where both competitors are usually playing defense rather than offense until one manages to gain an advantageous position from which they can initiate attacks (like a guard position).

Next up we have Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) which has become widely popular over the past few decades due largely to its success in mixed martial arts competitions such as the UFC where practitioners like Royce Gracie found success using BJJ against larger opponents due largely to its focus on submission holds from dominant positions like mount and back mount from which there aren’t many escapes due largely to how difficult they are to defend against while at the same time being relatively easy for practitioners skilled enough at them to execute successfully without injuring their opponents too much (since submissions require only enough force applied so that your opponent “taps out” rather than getting injured). It’s this combination of defensive tactics combined with offensive submission options that makes BJJ so dangerous in the competition making it perhaps even deadlier than both judo and wrestling when facing off against similarly skilled opponents.

Last but not least we have wrestling whose roots go back centuries longer even than judo's making it perhaps the most primal form of hand-to-hand combat yet devised by man though modern-day wrestlers tend not to rely solely upon primitive techniques like those seen used by ancient wrestlers. Although some still do make use of them depending upon their particular style such as Greco-Roman wrestlers whose specialty lies mainly within throws rather than takedowns. Takedowns remain a very important part of any wrestler's arsenal regardless if he specializes in Greco-Roman style or Freestyle Wrestling where takedowns are emphasized much more heavily alongside other moves such as double legs trips hip tosses etc.

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