Alright, so I’ve been spending some time trying to figure out this Joe Pyfer wrestling thing. You watch the guy fight, right? Man, that power is just something else. Especially how he gets guys down. It looks so… forceful. So, naturally, I thought, “I gotta try and add some of that to my own game.”

Getting Started
First thing I did was just watch a ton of his fights. Slowed them down, watched his feet, his hips, how he explodes into those takedowns. It’s not just a simple double leg; there’s a real violence and commitment to it. Looked simple enough on screen, you know? Just shoot hard.
So, I hit the mats. Started drilling entries. Tried to mimic that explosive level change and drive. Let me tell you, it felt awkward as hell. My body just didn’t want to move like that naturally. It felt jerky, forced. Not smooth and powerful like his.
The Grind and Reality Check
Kept at it for a few weeks. Drilling the penetration step, trying to generate that forward momentum. My training partners? They saw it coming a mile away most of the time. It was too telegraphed. I was focusing so much on the “explosion” part that I forgot about the setup, the timing, everything else that makes a takedown work.
- Tried focusing just on the power drive.
- Worked on level changing faster.
- Drilled finishing strong.
But it wasn’t clicking. Felt like I was just crashing into people, not actually wrestling effectively. It takes a certain kind of athlete to move like Pyfer, that raw strength and pop.
That One Training Session…
Then there was this one session, I remember it pretty clearly. I was sparring with a guy, decent wrestler himself. I thought, “Okay, this is it. Time to unleash the Pyfer.” I saw an opening, or what I thought was an opening, and just went for it. Full speed, trying to blast through him.

Well, he just lowered his level, framed off, and I basically bounced off him and ended up on my butt. Felt like a complete idiot. My shoulder felt a bit tweaked too, nothing serious, but enough to make me stop and think. It was embarrassing, honestly. Put me in a real funk for a few days. Made me realize just trying to copy someone, especially someone with his kind of specific physical gifts, isn’t the way. Felt like I was trying to fit a square peg in a round hole.
Adjusting the Approach
After that little reality check, I changed how I was thinking about it. Instead of trying to be Joe Pyfer, I started looking at the principles behind what he does.
- Commitment: Going for the takedown with full intention.
- Explosiveness: Not necessarily his level, but finding my own burst.
- Finishing Strong: Driving through once I get the connection.
So, I went back to basics, but with those ideas in mind. Focused more on my setups, using strikes or feints to create the opening, THEN exploding into the shot, but within my own capabilities. Started adding more plyometrics and strength work specifically for that explosive power.
Where I’m At Now
It’s still a work in progress, always is, right? I’m definitely not hitting Pyfer-level blast doubles. But my entries feel more aggressive now. I’m committing harder to my takedown attempts. Sometimes it works great, sometimes I still get stuffed. But the mindset shift helped more than just trying to mimic the moves.
You learn that guys like Pyfer have something unique, built over years. You can take inspiration, sure, but you gotta blend it into your own style, make it work for your body and your game. So yeah, that’s been my journey trying to wrestle like Joe Pyfer. Still grinding.
