Lol, I love how you simplify it. I'd love to see you walk up on the street, or anywhere else to a UFC fighter and fight him. You have no idea brother, that caliber is beyond what you can even comprehend.
This is the Dunning–Kruger effect, where unskilled people suffer from illusory superiority, mistakenly rating their ability or knowledge much higher than average.
They start making assumptions like "they can just eye gouge a trained ufc fighter" or just "Grab his balls".
Kruger and Dunning proposed that, for a given skill, incompetent people will:
1. tend to overestimate their own level of skill;
2. fail to recognize genuine skill in others;
3. fail to recognize the extremity of their inadequacy;
4. recognize and acknowledge their own previous lack of skill, if they can be trained to substantially improve.
Whats funny, is that ACTUALLY TRAINED people have the opposite effect, once you become skilled...you then learn how deep the skill set gets and you are surrounded with people who are extremely knowledgeable, talented and skillful and so you then compare yourself to them, feeling inadequate and below average even though you are high above average when compared to society as a whole.
I love how people always use these same scenarios, people are always fighting on broken glass and hot lava lol. Where are these kids fighting with broken glass all over the floor?
Even if there IS broken glass on the floor, someone skilled in grappling is going to be skilled enough to be ON TOP with you rubbing YOUR back all over the broken glass, not the other way around.
Jiu-Jitsu was the first art to be USED in the street and fight its way up into the cage, dominating all other styles (Back when there was ball punching allowed and no weight classes) It has only recently had rules added to it.
The difference between "COMBAT FIGHTING" is you "practice lethal techniques" but you cant actually "practice", them. So when the real situation happens, you are not prepared for it. You will perform GREAT in your controlled class situations, but anyone who's actually fought...know that the techniques you learn in class...have to be tweeked in real fights, fighting at 100%
You have to train at 100% to be efficient at fighting 100% Now, if your a combat soldier, and your literally fighting and using these techniques on people learning what works, and what doesn't and tweaking it and compensating for adrenaline etc. Yeah, it can help...but if you think your going to go to a class 2 days a week learning how "Combat fighting" and be ready for street war...your sadly mistaken.
Agree for the most part
Agreed
Wrong, ANY physical talent is going to help you in a street fight. Track-n-field will help you. Being able to out run a group of people trying to jump you might be the best self defense in the world.
I think its funny that you keep assuming that the people getting attacked are being attacked by Navy Seals or something. Your ignorant (and I don't mean that disrespectfully, but I mean it by its literal definition) if you think that an untrained guy, starting a fight with a guy whos been training MMA for 3 or 4 years has an advantage on him.
I don't care if its in a cage, on a mat, in a ring, in the streets in a bar, on glass on lava, on a plane or in the woods. The MMA trained guy is going to have a clear advantage.
Here is a page on one of my websites where I collected youtube fights that show some one with at least SOME level of grappling knowledge fighting against someone with no grappling knowledge. And yes, they are on "teh streetz", broken glass and with friends ready to jump in and stomp them the moment the fight hits the floor.
Videos: BJJ/MM in Streetfights