Wrestling

folkstyle vs freestyle vs greco — which style is best for MMA crossover

this question comes up constantly in MMA circles and the answer is more nuanced than people think.

folkstyle (american collegiate wrestling):

  • emphasizes riding time, top control, escapes, and returning opponent to mat
  • the most relevant to MMA ground control. if you want to hold someone down and ground and pound, folkstyle is your base
  • downside: the bottom position in folkstyle (referee's position) doesnt exist in MMA so some skills dont transfer
  • example fighters: Colby Covington, Kamaru Usman, Henry Cejudo

freestyle:

  • emphasizes explosiveness, throws, and exposure (turning opponent's back to mat)
  • the best for takedowns in MMA because freestyle takedowns are dynamic and translate directly to the cage
  • the scrambling in freestyle is incredibly useful for MMA transitions
  • less bottom position work which means less ground control but better takedown offense
  • example fighters: Khabib Nurmagomedov (sambo is basically freestyle+), Daniel Cormier

greco-roman:

  • upper body throws and clinch work only. no leg attacks
  • the clinch work translates DIRECTLY to the cage. dirty boxing and cage clinch positions are greco territory
  • the throws are spectacular and devastating in MMA — a greco throw onto a canvas is brutal
  • downside: no leg attacks limits the takedown options
  • example fighters: Randy Couture, Matt Lindland

my ranking for MMA:

  1. freestyle — best overall MMA transfer
  2. folkstyle — best for control and top game
  3. greco — best for clinch and cage work but limited in other areas

the real answer: train all three and pull from each what works in MMA. the best MMA wrestlers (Khabib, Islam) blend all three styles seamlessly.

what do DFW fighters and coaches think?

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 5:21 AM

5 Comments

DFW MMA gyms should be teaching more wrestling across all three styles. most MMA wrestling classes are just basic doubles and singles. a dedicated folkstyle/freestyle curriculum would level up local fighters significantly

the real move for MMA is to start with folkstyle (most accessible in the US), add freestyle in the offseason, and pick up greco clinch work from an MMA coach. thats the full package

folkstyle gets underrated because the riding and top pressure translates directly to ground and pound. Covington's entire MMA game is basically folkstyle wrestling with punches added. its brutally effective

greco for the clinch is underappreciated. when fighters are on the cage and fighting for position, thats pure greco-roman technique. Randy Couture built a hall of fame career on greco in MMA

freestyle is the correct #1 because the takedowns are the most important wrestling skill in MMA. you cant control people on the ground if you cant get them there first