The martial art of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu has always prided itself on being able to defeat the largest and most aggressive of adversaries with correct technique and leverage with minimal striking being exchanged.
Notable examples of this include Demian Maia’s grappling clinic on Carlos Condit, who needed just under two minutes to completely neutralize Condit and force the tap via rear naked choke. Amazingly Demian has also only been hit thirteen times in his last four UFC appearances.
And of course the triangle armbar authored by Fabricio Werdum on heavyweight legend Fedor Emelianenko, taking only sixty nine seconds to end the Last Emperors ten year unbeaten streak. In that bout Werdum did not throw a single strike.
Now watching how the following street fight video unfolds, it looks like someone has been paying close attention.
The video starts off with the aggressor in the white shirt trying to land strikes from top position while the person on the bottom who’s almost lost his shirt is playing an open guard game to look for a sweep or submission.
After some scrambling the BJJ player locks up a tight triangle choke which puts white shirt attacker out cold only to add further insult to injury by adding an armbar to completely seal deal, at this point the fight is then broken up by onlookers.

The attacker then wakes up not knowing what had happened along with a possible sore arm.
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is a martial art and combat sport system that focuses on grappling and ground fighting. BJJ promotes the concept that a smaller, weaker person can successfully defend against a bigger, stronger, heavier assailant by using proper technique, leverage, and most notably, taking the fight to the ground, and then applying joint locks and chokeholds to defeat the opponent.
BJJ training can be used for sport grappling tournaments, mixed martial arts competition or self-defense. [source : wiki]





