University of Jiu-Jitsu by Saulo Ribeiro
Moderator: Dux
University of Jiu-Jitsu by Saulo Ribeiro
I give it a 10/10, but it is designed for the sports competitor who uses a Gi.
An extremely comprehensive, 368 page book that breaks the game into 5 levels.
White Belt -- survival. He shows what to do to keep from getting submitted, where to put your hands, how to turn your body, etc.
Blue Belt -- escapes. Builds upon the info from the white belt section, using the same fundamentals but then adding the steps necessary to escape.
Purple Belt -- guard. How to retain guard, subs.
Brown Belt -- passing the guard.
Black Belt -- submissions.
The breadth of information contained in here is quite large. Many, many details and a variety of moves that deal with a lot of stuff that you would encounter in a Jiu-Jitsu match, more than any book I've seen. It's produced by Victory Belt, which is one of my few gripes, because I feel their presentation is kind of "bleh". Lots of pictures, but just a bit of a dull look to it.
Other than that, it's definitely for sports Jiu-Jitsu. Some of the stuff looks like it would be bad news for the street or MMA, but the book is written by one of the most successful BJJ competitors out there, so if you want it for that purpose it's gold.
Up until this point I've always recommended Rodrigo Gracie's excellent "The Path to the Black Belt" as the best BJJ book out there, but I would have to put Saulo's new book in the top spot.
http://www.amazon.com/Jiu-Jitsu-Univers ... roduct_top
An extremely comprehensive, 368 page book that breaks the game into 5 levels.
White Belt -- survival. He shows what to do to keep from getting submitted, where to put your hands, how to turn your body, etc.
Blue Belt -- escapes. Builds upon the info from the white belt section, using the same fundamentals but then adding the steps necessary to escape.
Purple Belt -- guard. How to retain guard, subs.
Brown Belt -- passing the guard.
Black Belt -- submissions.
The breadth of information contained in here is quite large. Many, many details and a variety of moves that deal with a lot of stuff that you would encounter in a Jiu-Jitsu match, more than any book I've seen. It's produced by Victory Belt, which is one of my few gripes, because I feel their presentation is kind of "bleh". Lots of pictures, but just a bit of a dull look to it.
Other than that, it's definitely for sports Jiu-Jitsu. Some of the stuff looks like it would be bad news for the street or MMA, but the book is written by one of the most successful BJJ competitors out there, so if you want it for that purpose it's gold.
Up until this point I've always recommended Rodrigo Gracie's excellent "The Path to the Black Belt" as the best BJJ book out there, but I would have to put Saulo's new book in the top spot.
http://www.amazon.com/Jiu-Jitsu-Univers ... roduct_top
“If it won't matter in a year, don't spend more than a day stressing about it."