Types Of Wrestling

If you see two guys in bikinis, holding each other and grabbing each other, they are not trying a new type of dance, they are wrestling. These athletes are very skilled and strong. They also need to practice and learn the moves and countermoves in order to have success in their discipline. Some wrestlers do have more moves than others.

  

Official wrestling recognizes four types of wrestling

The Greeks and the Romans practice Greco-Roman wrestling. There won’t be any flashy stuff if you go see a match. However, you will be able to see their impressive upper strength as they have to throw the opponent. You can watch it during the Olympics. In fact, wrestlers have been Greco-Roman wrestling over 110 years in the Olympics.

Theother kind of wrestling that can be more entertaining is freestyle. Holds, legs, arms… everything is accepted in this type of wrestling. These wrestlers have also been in the Olympics for a long time like their team mates practicing Greco-Roman. The interesting note here is that women can also wrestle in this event at the Olympic Games.

You have to give it to the Japanese, they know fighting. They specialize in a discipline that is called Judo. Its meaning can be translated in "gentle way’’, however, if you ask a guy that has been on the receiving end of a move, he might say otherwise. They actually used the opponent’s force or movement and turn it against him. When practiced as a sport and not as a philosophy, the rules are as follows: to win a match, the participant must either make his opponent quit, throw him on the ground or pin him on the mat. In the Olympics, men have been able to compete in Judo for the last 40 years, and women have been able to participate in the last 4 Olympics.

Sambo (not Samba as in the dance) was created in the USSR. It means to protect oneself without the means of a weapon. This kind of self defense was/is used for soldiers in the army to defend themselves if they were ever found in this compromising situation. There are a few variations to this kind of wrestling. The roughest of them all is called the combat sambo. There, hitting and ways to make a rival drop his weapon is learned. The two other are a little less ‘violent’ as defense sambo and sport sambo is taught. They respectively look like jujitsu and judo. Needless to say, if they would get caught, they can offer quite a challenge to anyone who would dare take them on.

If you do want to improve your general strength overall and your balance and pretty much everything else, practice wrestling. If you go to school, you could check if they offer such programs. If they have a weight room, there are usually mats for this purpose.



   

wrestling Recommended Products

Oregon Wrestling News

Wrestling competes in national duals tournament

Beavers will take part in a six-team regional this weekend, need two wins to advance If the No. 16 ranked Oregon State wrestling team wants to advance to the final four of the national duals tournament, they will have to take care of business this coming weekend in the six-team Iowa regional. ...

Read more...


Area wrestlers lead state rankings

Marshfield sophomore Thaddeus Nelson is the top-ranked wrestler from the South Coast in the all-state rankings produced by Richard Rockwell for the Oregon Wrestling Forum.

Read more...


No. 2 SOU triumphs in final dual match

FOREST GROVE — With the second-ranked Southern Oregon wrestling team resting most of its starters, the Raiders overcame an early deficit to defeat Pacific 29-18 in the final dual match of the season Friday at Stoller Center.

Read more...


High School wrestling: Dallas knocks off Hermiston to win Oregon Wrestling Classic

Dallas High Schools wrestling team defeated six-time defending Class 5A champion Hermiston 34-25 to win the 5A division of last weekends Oregon Wrestling Classic in Redmond.

Read more...


Vacaville's Clayton Jack nearing end to standout wrestling career at Oregon State

There isn't a whole lot that Clayton Jack hasn't accomplished in four-plus years with the Oregon State wrestling program.

Read more...