help/styles.en

1. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon0.png] Greco-Roman
2. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon1.png] Submission
3. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon2.png] No holds barred
4. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon3.png] Pro wrestling
5. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon4.png] Mud/oil wrestling
6. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon5.png] Sumo
7. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon6.png] Boxing
8. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon7.png] Kickboxing / Muay thai
9. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon8.png] Judo
10. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon9.png] Pool wrestling
11. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon10.png] Just watching

1. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon0.png] Greco-Roman

Greco-Roman wrestling is a style of wrestling that is practiced worldwide. It was contested at the first modern Olympic Games in 1896 and has been included in every edition of the summer Olympics held since 1908. Two wrestlers are scored for their performance in three two-minute periods, which can be terminated early by a pinfall. This style of wrestling forbids holds below the waist which is the major difference between itself and freestyle wrestling, the other form of wrestling at the Olympics. This restriction results in an emphasis on throws, since a wrestler cannot use trips to take an opponent to the ground or avoid throws by hooking or grabbing their opponent's leg.

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2. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon1.png] Submission

Submission Wrestling (also known as submission fighting, submission grappling, sport grappling, or simply as No-Gi), is a formula of competition and a general term describing the aspect of martial arts and combat sports that focus on clinch and ground fighting with the aim of obtaining a submission using submission holds, such as arm bars or chokes.

The sport of submission wrestling brings together techniques from Folk American Wrestling (Catch-as-catch-can), Luta Livre Esportiva, Freestyle Wrestling, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Judo and Sambo. Submission fighting as an element of a larger sport setting is very common in mixed martial arts. Submission wrestlers or grapplers usually wear shorts, skin-sticky clothing such as Rash guards, speedos and mixed short clothes so they do not rip off in combat.

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3. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon2.png] No holds barred

No holds barred, or mixed martial arts (MMA) is a full contact combat sport that allows a wide variety of fighting techniques and skills, from a mixture of martial arts traditions and non-traditions, to be used in competitions. The rules allow the use of both striking as well as grappling techniques, both while standing and on the ground. Such competitions allow martial artists of different backgrounds to compete.

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4. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon3.png] Pro wrestling

Professional wrestling, or pro wrestling, is a form of sporting theatre which contains strong elements of mock combat and catch wrestling. Matches are prearranged by the promotion's booking staff and contain choreographed content and scripted outcomes. Its origins date to 19th-century carnival sideshows and music halls, as part of displays of athleticism and strength. Modern professional wrestling usually features striking and grappling techniques, which are modeled after diverse sets of wrestling and pugilistic styles from around the world.

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5. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon4.png] Mud/oil wrestling

Mud wrestling is classically defined as physical confrontation (fighting, wrestling, etc.) that occurs in mud or a mud pit. The popular modern interpretation specifies that participants wrestle while wearing minimal clothing and usually going barefoot, with the emphasis on presenting an entertaining spectacle as opposed to physically injuring or debilitating the opponent to the point where they are unable to continue the match. Venues for competition are usually social in nature with equal numbers of male and female spectators. Mud wrestling is typically performed in a semi-competitive fashion — though presented as a competition between participants, winning and losing is not considered as important as having fun. Variations to mud are sometimes used; such as jelly or oil.

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6. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon5.png] Sumo

Sumo is a competitive contact sport where a wrestler attempts to force another wrestler out of a circular ring or to touch the ground with anything other than the soles of the feet. The sport originated in Japan, the only country where it is practiced professionally. The sport has a history spanning many centuries.

Many ancient traditions have been preserved in sumo, and even today the sport includes many ritual elements, such as the use of salt purification, from the days when sumo was used in the Shinto religion.

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7. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon6.png] Boxing

Boxing is a combat sport and martial art in which two people fight using their fists. Boxing is typically supervised by a referee engaged in during a series of one- to three-minute intervals called rounds and the boxers generally of similar weight. There are three ways to win; if the opponent is knocked out and unable to get up before the referee counts to ten seconds (a Knockout, or KO) or if the opponent is deemed too injured to continue (a Technical Knockout, or TKO). If there is no stoppage of the fight before an agreed number of rounds, a winner is determined either by the referee's decision or by judges' scorecards.

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8. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon7.png] Kickboxing / Muay thai

Kickboxing refers to the sport of kicking and punching. Kickboxing is a standing sport and does not allow continuation of the fight once a combatant has reached the ground, although certain styles of Muay Thai make exceptions to this rule.

Muay Thai is a hard martial art from Thailand and is referred to as the "Art of Eight Limbs" because it makes use of punches, kicks, elbows and knee strikes, thus using eight "points of contact", as opposed to "two points" (fists) in Western boxing and "four points" (hands and feet) used in sport-oriented martial arts.

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9. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon8.png] Judo

Judo is a modern Japanese martial art and combat sport. Its most prominent feature is its competitive element, where the object is to either throw one's opponent to the ground, immobilize or otherwise subdue one's opponent with a grappling maneuver, or force an opponent to submit by joint locking or by executing a choke. Strikes and thrusts by hands and feet as well as weapons defences are a part of judo, but only in pre-arranged forms (kata) and are not allowed in judo competition or free practice (randori).

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10. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon9.png] Pool wrestling

Pool wrestling is an informal variant of submission wrestling, practiced in a waist or chest deep swimming pool.

11. [IMAGE:https://www.meetfighters.com/Content/images/icon10.png] Just watching

Watching is not a fighting style, it's just serves as an indication that you do not wish to participate in a match, but would like to see one in real life.

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