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Jits Notes 4/7

09 Saturday Apr 2016

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Late start today – instructors showed up last minute.  We had a great warmup, though – Takedown Thursday!!!

Standing grip breaks and double legs taught by a Div 3 wrestler/BJJ blue belt.  I learned some good tips on breaks so I’ll share them.

His 2 preferred grips off the standard lapel and sleeve neutral position were:

  1.  Right hand grips top sleeve of arm gripping lapel near the hand with either the pistol or Carlson grip.  Gather the material to take some of the slack out of it – that really seemed to help.  Left hand releases sleeve, comes up over the top, and then smashes down on crook of his lapel arm as you drop lower into your base.
  2. Right arm crosses and grabs sleeve material near the hand.  Gather slack.  Left hand grabs gi material near the tricep.  Strip grip by pushing arm away and down while dropping into base.

Right arm then pushes his right arm across his body and you should make sure your level is right for the snatch double (or single, depending on position).  If your right foot is forward, take the double.  If your left is now forward, take the single.  I found I was stepping in when I stripped the grips and while I could still hit the double, the single was probably preferred due to my angle.  Keep posture up and butt head into the lat area, then grab the legs at the knees to help scoop them in and compromise the opponent’s base.

If going for the single, grab leg, stand up, circle to the side of the leg that’s grabbed.  A back step will clear the leg if its trapped between your legs.  Arch back to bring opponent’s leg higher and make life difficult, then foot sweep him.

Techniques continued with the spider guard sweeps we learned on Tuesday.

In addition to the 3 sweeps we learned then, we also learned to counter the opponent posting the leg opposite the arm being stretched out by the spider guard.  If he comes up off his knees to counter the sweep (or any other reason), work the sweeping leg in to hook the thigh or calf, then sweep to the side of the raised arm by throwing the arms over and using the shin as an elevator to kick that side over.  Keep the sleeve grips and come to side mount – this sweep lends itself more to that than hitting mount.

The last technique was an omoplata off the 3d sweep we learned during the last class –  If those don’t work, move foot out so your hips are perpendicular to the top man with the foot still on the bicep.  Your left foot should be almost parallel to the floor. If the sweep’s not working (or if you just love omoplatas!), move the opponent’s arm down to your hip (the far one, away from him – in this case its the right side) move the left foot from his bicep to his hip, swing the right leg over his outstretched left arm, roll up to omoplata and secure a grip on his belt or pant leg to prevent escapes.

3 rolls.  Felt good, particularly the 2nd roll – hit a cross lapel drag once and a belt and sleeve drag another time to take the back, but got rolled when I tried to attack the turtle defense both times.  A little study seems in order!

 

Jits Notes – 4/5

09 Saturday Apr 2016

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Went back to traditional warmups – 3 lines, shrimping, breakfalls, technical standups.

Standing up in closed guard 20x, bottom man kimuras in clossed guard 20x, then switch.

Went back to spider guard drills – start in closed guard, open while maintaining tightness and pressure with both legs to not give top man an easy avenue for escape.  If a leg isn’t kept behind him, the top man will just stand up.  Drop left leg to the floor close to top man’s right hip.  Keep right leg around his back and maintain inward pressure with both legs.  Carson grip on both sleeves.  Insert the left knee across the top man’s sternum.  Press in with knee while pulling and arching hips to create push/pull.  Right leg is now free to come from around the back to the top man’s left hip and press out.  Move the top man’s left arm enough to get the right knee inside and press out on the bicep and do the same with the left.  Keep the sleeve grips and hips square.  This shouldn’t be a comfy position for the top man.  Now, insert one leg into the crook of one elbow and straighten the leg while rolling to the opposite hip.  Pull straight up with the opposite arm, like pulling a lawn mower cord to stretch the top man out and compromise his base.

1st sweep:  Press the foot up on the bicep to stretch the top man up as high as possible, pull the arm up, then drop the foot off the hip and scissor sweep the leg.  Roll to mount while maintaining grips on sleeves, keep his arms in a crucifix position, and post head on the floor until he settles down, then scoot into mount.

2nd sweep:  If the sweep doesn’t work but both his knees stay on the ground, try the gas pedal sweep – press his leg out while pulling up with the right arm to stretch him out.  Roll to the crucifix mount position, post the head on the ground as above.

3rd sweep:  If those don’t work, move foot out so your hips are perpendicular to the top man with the foot still on the bicep.  Your left foot should be almost parallel to the floor.  Adjust the foot on the ground, then hip switch while throwing both hands and the foot up and to the right while scissor sweeping leg .  Keep the sleeve grips and take mount, post head on the floor until there’s an opportunity to consolidate the mount position.

Had some breathing issues so left after 2 rolls – colder than normal temps seem to be triggering my asthma.

 

3/29 – Jits Notes

04 Monday Apr 2016

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Competition training is in full swing!  Standard stretching opening, then we warmed up with maintaning guards and guard passing.

I worked with a complete beginner, so we stuck with closed guard and 1 guard pass.  The others worked any guard and pass combo they liked – one man stayed in guard and the top passed.  After several minutes, people switched and the other man got his turn on top.  I stuck with this guard opening. After that, I hit combat base and went for the knee cut pass.  I note that I’m moving my knee to the tailbone before I shift my other leg during my guard opener, and, like mentioned in the video, I often get swept or bumped out of posture – I’m going to try his method of shifting one leg and establishing the angle before wedging the knee in to provide pressure to open the guard.

Then it was 10 6 minute rolls with a 30 second rest between each – grab a new partner, hit a position and go.  Lower ranking person got to pick their starting point – so I got to work rear mount, mount, top side control, etc.

Left without free rolling – I’d had a good workout and was feeling better than when I arrived and wanted to keep that good vibe going!

Since there was such a focus on opening the closed guard and passing it in this class, I might as well link to some relevant videos.

Ritchie Yip’s version of breaking open the closed guard.

Ritchie Yip’s staying safe in the closed guard.

Ritchie Yip – Knee cut pass with back step

Ostap tips with Stephan Kesting – standing pass, but important detail at 3:45 about weight shift to avoid a sweep during the knee cut pass.

Kurt Osiander – closed guard passing and grip fighting.

Marcelo Garcia – good tips about keeping posture and not getting swept from a standing pass.

3/31 – Jits Notes

03 Sunday Apr 2016

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A major competition is this weekend, so we switched back to a lighter pace and focus on techniques.  Tonight’s focus was on escapes from bad positions.  I was thrilled, as I wind up stuck in them so often!

We started with concepts, which I also liked.  I do a lot better when I grasp the concepts with a few examples to illustrate them rather than being handed techniques with no idea of the context.

The attacker generally wants to take space from the defender to limit his options.  Then he or she 1) secures the position, 2) hunts for a submission, 3) transitions to a better submission if no immediate submission is available

Defender want to make space/options by creating a frame, defending from submissions, and transitioning to a better position.  Then we moved on to the practical examples.

Bottom Side Control Escapes

1st Escape –  Starting position both arms inside, flat on back, top man in side control with one hand under the head and the other over the body.  Keep the frame by pressing both hands into prayer position, forearms tight together, elbows on rib cage, hands near neck and jaw to defend vs. chokes.  Chin tucked, and hands often on side of neck nearest the opponent, as you’re trying to turn into him and keep him from crossfacing/smashing.  Prevent the mount transition with the leg nearest the opponent – raise the knee and block attempts to to slide into mount.

Work the feet away from the opponent to assist in leverage and create space to slip the knee nearest the opponent into the gap between his leg and torso.  Bridge up and to the side, facing the opponent.  Keep the arm frames in place as the body drops and knee scoots between his leg and torso.  Underhook the arm closest to your head to control his posture.  You’ll probably have to circle toward the top man and work that knee in as the top man attempts to hold the position.  Use the foot that’s still free to keep wedging in.  When the knee is finally far enough in, place that foot on the ground between the top man’s legs and then wrap the free leg around his body.  Hip escape to the side to free the leg that’s still wedged under the top man, then assume closed guard.  The underhooked arm closest to the head is in position for an armbar, so that can immediately be attempted.

Jeff Mancuso shows a very similar escape here.  I like his detail about holding the bridge rather than trying to buck explosively.  I’ve had way more luck with his method than the explosive bucking that served me pretty well in high school wrestling.  Roy Dean’s video is exactly the same escape we practiced, including the underhooked near arm.  Later, during positional rolling, I kept getting hit with the sweep Dean shows at the 2 minute mark when I was in top side control, too – there’s lots of goodies on that 8 minute clip!

2nd Escape from side control – One arm inside under the neck/jaw, arm nearest opponent outside.  Bridge and get both hands on the cross-facing arm.  Hold the bicep/shoulder area like a hamburger.  Wiggle the hand that’s outside of the cross-facing arm under the armpit to make the frame.  Frame up, then drive the elbow of the near-side arm to the sky – you’re tossing that cross-facing arm over your head and slipping out the side.  The far side arm grabs the top man’s near side gi sleeve by the elbow, then the near side hand near the tricep.  Drive the arm away and to the mat and scoot backwards out from under the top man.  Its quite similar to this escape from Marcelo Garcia.  The same basic “grab gi sleeve, post, and drive across his body” works on many guard pass attempts, too, esp. the torreando.  Example here and here .

Mount Escapes

1st Mount Escape – trap same side arm and leg, bridge and roll.  This one works when someone’s grapevining and has their head low, often with one arm around your head and the other posted out like an outrigger. Ditch the grapevines by thrusting out the legs and slamming the knees to the mat.  Bring both heels up to the butt to establish both better position for the bridge and also keep top man from grapevining again.  Trap the arm and leg on the same side.  Don’t use opposite arm to help push – keep elbow tight to ribs and just bridge.  The forearm will help drive the top man over without any need to expose that arm to a submission attempt.  Here’s Draculino showing it, although he uses the other arm to help push.

2nd Mount Escape – Almost exactly like that demonstrated by Emily Kwok and Stephan Kesting here.  We were told to frame with the hand on the opposite hip and keep the other hand up near the collar – the elbow stays tight to the body and drives against the thigh during the escape.  I have problems hooking the top man’s leg…not sure why as yet.

Back Mount Escapes –

Just 1 – Tuck chin, get fingers on hand on the side of the choking arm inside the forearm and the thumb of the opposite hand in.  Pull arm away from the neck as much as possible.   Roll to the side opposite the choking arm.  Move butt over the choking man’s leg on that side as you start to crab walk out.  Keep pressure on the leg and position the opposite leg near the trapped shin so opponent has a harder time repositioning.  When you’ve moved past the leg far enough, take the hand on the side of the choking arm, place it on the same side leg of the choker.  Roll to face the choker and drive forward, keeping the hand straight out and gripping the far leg.  End in side control.  Example.

Left without rolling.  I was feeling good and wanted to leave on a high note!

I might start moving techniques to unique entries or at least general categories so I can link directly to notes I’ve made on the technique before without having to hunt through an entire class period of notes.  We’ll see how that works!

 

 

Jits Notes 1/14/2016 – No Joy in Mudville

16 Saturday Jan 2016

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I was informed that there will be no more takedown class.  I am a sad, sad panda.

Takedown Class – Coach drilled us at a quicker pace than usual.  Started with burpees, then sprawls on his count from a low stance while moving in stance.

Partnered up with the Chiropractor – a nickname I gave to a classmate who’s built like a barrel.  Whenever I work with him, I get at least 1 good pop out of my back when he takes me down and winds up atop me.  I got about 6  the last time when we worked single leg counters (IIRC it was a kimura to roll, follow up by rolling into mount.  Could have been a front headlock to a mounted guillotine, though).

We worked armdrags for a minute, then duckunders for a minute.  I kept fumbling the armdrags but the stars must have aligned because I kept hitting duckunders pretty smoothly.  Toward the end I wasn’t blocking the incoming arm and got wrapped up by my partner.

Takedown-a-palooza – 3 minutes to hit whatever takedown you wanted, then switch to be the thrown.  I worked:

Snapdown to double leg with trip (Double leg is called Morote Gari in judo)

Armdrag to Russian tie to Fireman’s Carry (here’s Jimmy Pedro on the Fireman’s aka kata guruma, cuz he’s awesome)

Single leg.  Tried to footsweep and couldn’t get it, so I just grabbed the far ankle and pushed.

Osoto Gari – Gotta admit, this is a favorite.  Seems to work well for me.

Uchi mata – still needs a lot of work, so I hit it a few times.

Body lock takedown into mount

Tani otoshi

My partner, the Chiropractor, hit me with the double leg trip and a fireman’s, as well as some I didn’t work:

Russian tie to inside trip

Hiza Garuma – he really nailed this one.  Very clean throw.

Hip throw aka O Goshi – he botched this a couple of times.  When he finally got it right it was quite a ride!

I’ll drop these here, too:  Jimmy Pedro Secret of Throws, University of Judo – Analysis of Competition Judo

Ground class – warmups.  Still gassing way too quick on these, particularly the reverse shrimp.  Unfamiliar movement, fat ass, and weak core are probably the cause.

Warmup/drilling – 10 leg drag passes, 10 passes to knee on belly, 10 kimuras, 10 triangles, 10 armbars

Technique – Bottom man starts in Carlson 3 position – foot on top man’s upper thigh, knee on his collarbone/neck, same side hand has cross lapel grip.  Other foot on hip, that side’s hand has sleeve grip.

Top man attempts to pass by threading his arm between legs and going for a grip on the bottom thigh in order to smash the leg on his chest and pass.

Bottom man counters by releasing lapel and grabbing sleeve of reaching arm, then squaring back up to top, keeping outward pressure on the arm that had been reaching – its now lassoed.  Kick that lassoing leg up and insert the far leg so its across the waist and hooked on the Top’s opposite hip, swivel to grab under to the far leg if possible.  If not, grab the near leg.  Kick sweep.  If opponent doesn’t fall, mess with his balance by pushing and pulling with the legs, and pushing up and over with the arm grasping the leg.

If the top posts by bringing the sweeping side knee off the ground, bottom slips the same side leg through and hooks the thigh.  Drive up and through to sweep the opponent.

The last item worked was the omoplata from closed guard.

3 rolls, rested 1 round in between each, and done.

Jits Notes 1/12/2016 – I’m back!

13 Wednesday Jan 2016

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Sorry for my long absence, dear readers!  Holidays, work schedule, the inevitable soft tissue injuries made for large gaps in the jits class attendance, which my coach and friend pointed out to me in his usual subtle manner!

Takedown class – new guy in class, so was pretty mellow.  Backfalls and sprawls started things out.  We then moved to snatch doubles, snatch singles, and a snapdown series.  We worked arm drags and duckunders to take the back.  For the technique drill, we stuck to the snatch double with the rear leg coming around for a trip.

Ground class – usual warmups, drilled snatch guard pass, pass to knee on belly, stuff one arm to diamond guard, then closed guard to arm bar.  As usual, drills went too fast to pick up fine points, but I did get some good stuff on the arm bar:  thread hand between arms to grab the sleeve of the arm you want to bar, other hand on opposite lapel.  Release guard and place foot on the same side of the soon-to-be-barred arm, push off and drag the seized arm across the chest, then swing that leg up and around the head.  Now release the lapel, and complete the arm bar.

Technique – Being in closed guard.  Move to Carlson 3 (crossgrip lapel, other hand on same-side sleeve pulling with elbow high, leg on same side that grips lapel has foot on same side thigh and knee in chest/throat, leg on the side that grips the sleeve is on the hip and pushing.  The push-pull generated drives the knee into the throat.  Opponent attempts to thread free arm under top leg and grips the bottom leg to smash the top leg down and pass.  Bottom blocks attempt by removing lapel grip and grabbing sleeve of threading arm.  Square up to top man, then release the other sleeve, swivel closer and grab a pant leg – reach under if possible, or grab the outside leg.  Swing former top knee toward the mat and lift with the pant-grabbing hand at the same time, forcing a sweep.  You can break posture/balance if necessary by kicking one leg then sweeping the opposite way.  Roll forward onto opponent and take side control, being careful of the incidental bicep slicer that occurs due to the threading arm being stuck under the top leg.  Here’s a good video featuring Kron Gracie showing some of the dynamics of this kind of cross grip guard – I see my coaches doing it to people, including me, fairly often.

Rolls – Rolled with a purple belt who snatched my lapels again.  The purple belt guys seem to love that worm guard!  I applied a cross face a couple of times but never really got past his guard.  Go figure, since he was larger, stronger, and a lot more skilled than I was!

Rested for 1 round, then rolled with a blue – got arm dragged to a rear naked choke right off the bat – I saw it coming but didn’t move fast enough to counter it.  Also got caught under the kesa getame/side control deal again and eventually tapped to a kimura.  I was able to recover guard several times, though, so that’s an improvement!

Here’s a list of resources that looked relevant to today’s Jits Notes:

Stephan Kesting – cross grip counters

Kron Gracie’s 3 pronged cross grip approach
Demian Maia – Defending the Guard Pass – since people are rolling right through mine…

Leandro Lo Guard breakdown by Espen Mathiesen

Another Leandro Guard breakdown, by BJJ scout.  This is typical of what I see one coach in particular doing at my gym.

Jimmy Pedro – Basic Grip Break – since I keep having issues with grips…
Jimmy Pedro – Takedowns against “tight” opponents – Just something for me to play with later.  It also fascinates me as I see this all over in the ba gua forms I learned and had no real idea of how to use it at the time.

Collar drag from sitting guard – I might be able to use this one!

Defenses against the Evil that is Worm Guard:

Stephan Kesting – Worm Guard Passing

BJJ immersion – 3 Worm Guard Counters

Stephan Kesting’s Open Guard vs. Standing Opponents Roadmap

Jits Class Notes – 10/29 Omoplata madness!!!!

03 Tuesday Nov 2015

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Late for class – had to drop the better half of the Obsession Engine off to deliver a presentation.

Takedown class – Russian ties continues – this time beginning from a double grip with one hand on the wrist and the other clamping the upper arm near the shoulder instead of the hands figure 4-ing the arm like last time. Largely a review of Tuesday’s material – drop to knee, windshield wiper opponent’s near leg and press in to drop him, pin arm to mat and maneuver for side control and darce choke; fireman’s carry, drop to knee and opponent pushes trapped leg back, leaving opening for an ankle pick. I asked about the validity of a waki gatame takedown from the standing position but instructor didn’t think it was viable – if the opponent posts it leaves the back vulnerable. I see his point. Looks like it might be viable from kneeling positions, but there might be too much opportunity to weasel out from standing.

Ground class – After usual warmups, including me doing the technical standup the correct way and still not being able to do a reverse shrimp to save my life, we moved into Takedown-a-palooza – about 5 or maybe 10 minutes of “hit any takedown you want” as a partner drill. The fireman’s carry off a Russian tie, bodylock and dump, and osoto gari worked like a charm. I forgot to try uchi mata, brainfarted the lateral drop so didn’t attempt it, and couldn’t make the lapel drag throw work well. I think that throw is always going to be tricky unless if the opponent posts his far hand – if he collapses to his elbow he’ll be a beat behind.

Techniques – Omoplata from guard. Foot opposite the side your going to move to goes to the hip to help turn the body. Grab a pantleg and flatten out opponent to avoid counters and escapes. Roll up into a “cheerleader sit” position and grab opposite side, seatbelt the shoulder, or grab the head for leverage and rock forward to crank the shoulder. This video is pretty cool as it shows how important making space is to getting the lock on.

Omoplata from mount. Opponent reaches up – in this case we hugged the top man around the midsection. Pick an arm and overhook it, pulling it up and posting the same side leg. The opposite hand presses his face away while pulling. We worked a number of techniques from this series as well.

3 rolls…might go for 2, then skip one to rest, then 1 more next time just to start bumping my cardiac training up. It seems like 4 (5?) 5 minute rolls with a minute in between is the norm. I might as well stay and watch the rolls, too, instead of cutting out early. I might just learn something!

1st roll – a purple belt. Pretty cool guy that I partnered with through the technique portion. A comment was made that when I keep my elbows in when my opponent was going for spider guard that he couldn’t get some of the techniques he wanted off. I think the folks I know in law enforcement might call that a “clue”! Got guillotined when I attempted a single against a knee on belly…I think I used the wrong technique again. Let’s have a look at what I was trying to do again.

2nd roll with a white belt had a large portion devoted to me defending from a kimura attempt. The guy wasn’t strong, skillful, or large enough so I was able to brute force my way and stalemate most of his attempts. Not exactly a showcase of skill on my part, but it did make for a pretty good workout.

3rd roll – another purple belt. This guy pulled the “rope him up with his gi” stuff and probably hit an Americana on me about 73 times in 5 minutes. That seems to happen a lot more when I’m trying to pass an open guard player – I start to open up trying to pass the guard and get sucked right into a trap.

I’m still not having a lot of luck, so let’s review again:

Grip fighting – this one’s from White Belt BJJ and the instructor, Chewie, is putting out good info here.

Kesting, as usual – 4 tips to pass any guard

Some good gripfighting stuff from Kesting

Saulo Ribeiro – Guard Passing

Ryan Hall looks to have a LOT of good material.

Ryan Hall on Guard Passing.

Another basic guard passing vid with several techniques.

Mount escapes – this is similar to the escape I learned but looks like it can be applied when the mount is higher up – I’m having trouble hooking the leg at times. I think part of the problem is me not keeping one elbow down and the mounted opponent creeping too high up on my torso. This is almost the same escape I learned in class. We were told to keep one elbow on the mat to block the knee but at least one hand up to block collar access, though. I see that she mentions that the foot is “light” probably because of a hip buck. I often try this when someone’s sitting in good posture and it doesn’t work so well.

Here are some more mount escape basics. They haven’t worked well for me in the past but that’s at least partially because I didn’t know what the hell I was doing.

Jits Notes – 10/27/2015

30 Friday Oct 2015

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Warmed up by having a classmate show me how to reverse shrimp. I had it there for a couple seconds. Lost it again when we did the ground class warmups…there’s a brown belt there who hadn’t seen it before coming to this school either and was just as lost, so I don’t feel all that bad!

Takedown class:

Warmups – stay in wrestling stance, move around. Alternated sprawls and shoots on command. If you didn’t come back to wrestling stance it was pushups time! Thighs burned out pretty quick from the shoots – I think some higher volume squats and lunges might be in order, as the running I’ve done all spring and summer didn’t carry over.

Techniques – snapdown series to double leg with trip, then come to side control, just like last Tuesday.

Russian tie – entry similar to arm drag – cross grip sleeve, step to t position. Bring free arm under his grabbed limb and monkey grip wrist. Bend and place upper arm and shoulder against the back of his upper arm and bend him.

Next, Russian tie to ouchi gari. You can hit it from the side of the trapped arm and drive through. Bring the weight to the leg nearest the trapped arm by stepping forward. Place the foot nearest the leg between the feet and drop to one knee. Swivel the leg in to trap the foot, then lean and drive to into opponent. Keep the arm trapped, put weight on the bottom’s torso and swivel to side control while keeping weight on toes as you spin into place. An option presented was to shoot the arm closest to the hips through and cup the neck, palm up, then thread the arm that was still gripping the sleeve in for a darce choke. Squeeze the elbows to finish. This is the exact same technique sequence.

We did a throw from the Russian tie as well. Get the tie, move the hand nearest his shoulder to your opposite shoulder to lock his upper arm in place, move opponent forward, then reverse your motion, spinning to face the opposite way he is, throw his arm behind you as you drop into a sidefall. Roll to side control. This is almost the same technique, but I’m seeing some slight variation on them bending the arm and them placing it on the chest as opposed to pushing it through and behind.

For our last technique, we covered the Russian tie to the fireman’s carry. It went down just like this. If you move the opponent forward and/or put downward pressure on his arm he’ll often take a compensating step forward. If it’s done with the leg opposite the side you’re on that’s an open door to the fireman’s carry.

Ground class: Standard warmups, was taken aside and shown the correct technical standup – apparently people were omitting the kick/push/jam part of the pendulum action, and I followed along with the crowd. Reverse shrimping was a fail as well – I had the motion down for a minute or so before the takedown class, but couldn’t get my groove on during warmups.

Techniques – Crossmount into kimura submission. Start in side control. Press opponent’s far side wrist into his pelvis by grabbing his wrist and placing weight on it. Base with other hand. Shoot to the I position and begin to wriggle basing hand under the far arm. Lift chest quickly and shoot hand in to monkey grip your own wrist. Secure the hand position – both hands cupping solidly. Wriggle back to cross position. “Vibrate” opponent’s far arm off his body and onto the mat. Take up slack of his far arm until it is toward his shoulder. Crank the arm into kimura by leaning slightly back – rolling weight toward his hips can allow him to sit up and escape. This probably won’t work as flexibility will allow him to endure this limited range of motion, so switch legs and step over head, then reapply kimura. I’m thus far unable to find video of this exact sequence, but here, at least is a clip that incorporates some of it. He steps directly over the head without a leg switch – this is possible, but flexibility might be an issue.

The next technique was a setup for the previous technique. Take side control. Slip hand that’s around head into collar, behind neck, thumb in. Jump to pseudo knee on belly. Plant kneecap on center of sternum and pull up collar. Grab pants with other hand if that’s not enough. Extreme discomfort will make bottom man push knee of sternum. Point toes of the leg straight out behind and allow push to shove knee off belly and arm to move across belly. Collapse down into sidemount and seize the wrist. Continue as above.

We also worked some of last week’s material – Americana, the choke from sidemount moving to north south, and then the head and arm triangle.

Rolls – Can’t pass guard. Get stuck in mount and can’t make the mount escape work, hit kesagetame and got rolled, caught under side control. This quote of Ferdinand Foch seems relevant: ” My centre is giving way, my right is retreating. Situation excellent, I am attacking.”

Got collar choked a few times, can’t break grips, and seem to be keeping my elbows too open, particularly against open guard players – when I’m in closed guard people often comment on my defense. That seems to fall apart against the open guard guys – probably due to trying to mount an offense and not really knowing how.

Hit half guard a few times on the 3rd roll and wasn’t able to take the back or sweep – just continually threaten. At least there’s that!

Jits Notes – 10/13/2015

14 Wednesday Oct 2015

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Exercise, Fitness, Jits Notes, Jiu Jitsu, Judo

Drank some Gatorade before class. Got heartburn. Damn, I’m old. On with the notes!

Takedown class – Started with Osoto Gari goodness. Arm movements, then arms, hips, feet & grapevine the leg, then step through takedown. Focus on maintaining upright head position and maintaining grips. Hit knee on belly then armbar after the takedown. the closer the knee is to the armpit the greater the control for the armbar, so hit the floating ribs then shift it up.

We then worked Uchi Mata off a failed Osoto – opponent shifts leg back to prevent the Osoto, so turn elbow skyward and crank gripped sleeve to the rear, looking in that direction. Raise leg and dump.

Worked drill where opponent shifts to prevent Uchi Mata and we hopped in circles. Kicking leg high and pulling in the direction of throw while looking that direction makes throw happen. Finish with knee on belly and transition to the arm bar.

I think I need more warm up time before the takedown class. I’m feeling muscles complain about being strained trying to take people down or twist to avoid same.

Grip fighting to finish.

Ground class – Standard warmup, then the cardio stuff. Apparently I’ve been doing shrimping wrong, too – I’ve been bringing both feet to my butt, not leaving one out flat and bringing the other up. Forward shrimping still looks like an epileptic white kid trying to break dance…

Drills – From mount, take control position and cross face with one arm. Opposite arm posts. Keep the shoulder of the arm that is posting at level or below that of opposite shoulder unless you’d like to be rolled. Grapevine legs or keep knees wide for base. Wide knees= more weight on opponent.

First, we resisted being rolled. The grapevine leg prevented a roll toward opposite the posted arm. The posted arm, of course, acts as an outrigger against a roll to that side. Our first attack from mount is for an Americana lock. Take the posted arm and palm strike the bottom man’s near arm to the mat. Take the crossfacing arm and hook it. Use the thumbs over grip and either cup or keep the arms straight -use the palm, not the fingers, to control the trapped arm. Snake the free arm under the bottom’s trapped arm. Palm up usually worms underneath more easily. Grab the wrist of the hand still clamping the trapped arm. again, thumbless grip and hook works best. Bring crossfacing arm out and around opponent’s head, place tricep in neck, shove offline. Crank both hands toward the ground and bring trapped limb toward feet to get the tap.

2nd move – Ezekiel choke off a missed Americana. Opponent thrusts arm out, negating Americana attempt. Place elbow of free arm forward of bottom’s escaped arm. Draw elbow down toward ribs, scooping bottom’s arm and trapping it. Use crossfacing hand to hook sleeve of free arm, then snake free arm into neck of bottom man. Make a fist. Do a pushup.

Its a sneaky-assed choke. I like it!

3rd move – arm triangle. Mount and crossface as above. Opponent frames and pushes forearm against top’s neck. Top presses down, then releases pressure and pushes arm to the side and traps it with head pressure. Crossfacing arm hooks opposite bicep with monkey grip.

3a: Place free arm on side of head while pressuring with head. Squeeze elbows together.

3b: Place free hand on opponent’s forehead if there’s not enough space to bring it to own forehead. Squeeze.

3c: Can’t secure choke from mount for some reason. Abandon mount – free arm turns palm up. Gable grip with crossfacing arm. Secure hold. Hop off mount. Same side leg as crossfacing arm presses up against bottom’s ribs. Leg of free side arm is straight and posted about even with ear. Crank elbow of free arm toward stomach – take up slack in choke. Head moves toward mat and posted leg slides out.

Rolls:

1st roll: Problems with guard pass. Also, triangled opponent but couldn’t finish – maybe swiveled to wrong side? He definitely postured up to get out, so maybe a little help from Stephan Kesting is in order. Tried a cross-collar choke and couldn’t get the tap, either. At least I was on the offensive for a change!

2nd roll: Mounted but had no finish. Tried to apply class lessons and got rolled. Had problems with the mount escape – probably didn’t block the leg with the elbow before top man advanced too high. I probably should try to buck, too…when the guy’s sitting high in base, its hard to hook that leg with my far leg. Walking the leg out like Emily does in the video might be worth a shot, too.

I jostled around until top dude made a mistake, so I locked down his arm, upa-ed and rolled him, coming back to guard.

Overall, felt good. Had to quit as face was bleeding from a nail rake and didn’t want to bleed all over other people.

Jits Notes 10/8 – What a drag it is getting old

09 Friday Oct 2015

Posted by Obsession Engine in Exercise, Fitness, Jits Notes, Judo

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Exercise, Fitness, Jits Notes, Jiu Jitsu, Judo

Ate some tomato meat sauce over rice at about 4. Neck and upper back was stiff from the last class, so I popped 2 Ibuprofen before heading out to class. That’d haunt me.

During the first few takedowns I had 2 or 3 vertebrae go “pop!” in my back and 1 in my neck. I actually think those were good pops as my back now feels pretty normal again. Victory was short-lived, however, as I felt something complain just above the left knee on the outside when I got Osoto garied and my sciatic nerve has been talking to me ever since. Gassed pretty quickly, as usual, and got heartburn – no more tomato sauce before class, apparently! This cardio issue is really starting to get me down, too. I’m pretty useless halfway through a roll and I don’t have much game to begin with. Enough bitching – here are the notes!

Takedown class – started with pummeling drills and got yanked around by the big blue belt. Worked pulling with the underhook, 3 pummels then shoot for underhooks, then 3 pummels and step to the t position for the bodylock takedown (that’s where the pops came in). Worked Osoto in phases – the hands, then the hands and twist and leg grapevine, then the takedown, then we did the hop-in drill up the mat and down, then the snapdown series with an osoto gari. Last was several rounds of gripfighting. Messed around with overhooks – I should watch that Rob Koll video for some tips on how to make them work. I keep brainfarting and not using the right grip brakes on the lapel – one hand pushes inside of grabber’s wrist while opposite hand grips gi and pushes along with a body twist.

Ground class – Worked with one guy that I couldn’t even get my legs around for closed guard – that was interesting.

Kick sweep series and roll to knee on belly, mount escape flow drill, closed guard to spider guard transition, then closed to spider guard with the sweep. Spider guard sweep with the leg reaping the downed knee demonstrated, and a new drill, the spider guard sweep against a posted leg was shown. Details: perform spider guard transition and go for gas pedal sweep, but top man posts the leg rather than leaving knee on the mat. Bottom hooks leg with instep and hip escapes, dumping top man onto the opposite side of the hooked leg.

Spider guard demo by Larry showing ease of access to triangles, omo platas and sweeps with the spider guard.

Rolls

1st – tried mount escape with limited success – top man often just hit S mount. Did get it to work but then got stuck under the top man trying to roll him. Stephan Kesting’s sweep might have been good to try here. There are some good half guard tips here(Kesting again!), particularly for a position I get stuck in all the time – he uses a butterfly hook to pop someone up to recover guard when they’ve crossfaced and flattened the bottom man.

Tried the Kurt Osiander move against knee on belly and got armbarred instead of getting the single. I see I probably should have went for his second escape, as the guy already had the position on me. I was reaching up while mounted, too. Got head and arm guillotined as well from a kneeling position. This defense might be worth a go.

2nd roll – Tried kesagetame escape and was stymied by a turn to side control and a posted arm. Got my gi bottom gripped and couldn’t break out. Got rear mounted. Have no real game plan when starting.

Attempt to address issues in order:
Kesting’s Kesagetame escapes

Beyond Grappling kesagetame escape

Grip fighting upon entries I’m diddling around too much with the initial grip fighting, but I think that’s largely because I have no real goal or passing game.

Haven’t watched this one all the way through yet, but it looks promising.

I tried working this against the rear mount but didn’t get too far and don’t think I did it properly at all. Then got tired, got stupid, and got choked.

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