tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-62101365865648336912024-03-12T17:08:42.419-07:00foos-jitsuMy Brazilian jiu-jitsu training log.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.comBlogger38125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-35025923191462549812008-05-10T15:36:00.001-07:002008-05-10T15:37:46.708-07:00Flowers in Bloom<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/SCYjrP-J_xI/AAAAAAAAACY/crrn0GOZAHQ/s1600-h/IMG_2337.JPG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/SCYjrP-J_xI/AAAAAAAAACY/crrn0GOZAHQ/s320/IMG_2337.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5198882045774397202" /></a>The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-29160217427432473062008-03-24T21:24:00.000-07:002008-03-24T21:47:33.703-07:00Day 91: You've also bested my Spaniard, which means you must have studiedAccept as an axiom that I will not keep current with my training blog. By inspection, it is trivial to derive that I have been training my <span style="font-style:italic;">ass</span> off. <br /><br />I'm finally getting into a regular groove. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday I train jiu-jitsu, weights or intervals on Sunday, and Tuesday and Friday are rest days. My body has toughened up, and I'm recovering faster and more completely. I added some carbohydrates and protein to the liter of water I consume during my grappling workouts, and that has helped my recovery speed immensely. <br /><br />The training is paying off. Last time I weighed myself I was around 187, and the mirror agrees. There's still a bit of padding around the middle that I'd like to take care of, but as of now I am very satisfied with my progress. <br /><br />My jiu-jitsu is improving as well. Omar is back from vacation, so we have been drilling and rolling together frequently, and learning quite a bit. He is bringing out the best in me, it seems, and I am securing solid submissions that I have not been able to get in the past. The other day I transitioned a Kimura from top half guard to a straight armlock when he straightened out to escape. Today I had an iffy back control, but I was able to sink in the bow-and-arrow choke for the tap. Larry and Naps are right-- getting taps is quite addictive. I'm imagining a huge surge of dopamine and serotonin flooding my gourd every time I finish a submission. <br /><br />Obviously, I still have a lot to work on. I've made some progress dealing with bottom north-south, where I was previously getting victimized by the Kimura. Now I'm staying very tight with my elbows (duh), and scissoring my legs and attempting to get to my knees when my opponent moves from side control to north-south. Far fewer Kimuras-- imagine that. Still, I am very uncomoftable in bottom N-S and will continue focusing on it.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-83627535644129416112008-02-27T22:28:00.000-08:002008-02-27T23:17:15.240-08:00Day 76: Murderers' RowKeeping a training log is no joke, especially when one is as ignorant as I. Every session is full of useful bits of new knowledge and refinements to old techniques, scarcely grasped or otherwise. In a perfect world I would commit every iota of wisdom to this digital diary, but by now I am convinced of the futility of that notion. Sparse updates will have to suffice, and here's to hoping that my memory can pick up the slack. <br /><br />Recently I've begun to search for another submission from the mount. I have some confidence in my armbar, but I felt the need for more balance, more options. Jason suggested the "wrestler's choke", basically an <a href="http://revver.com/video/578499/arm-triangle-from-mount/">arm triangle</a>. From mount, get your opponent's left arm across his body, ideally with his shoulder compressed against his neck. You can use the "gift wrap" if you like to control the wrist from behind his head. Slide your left arm under uke's trapped arm, and lock in the triangle by grabbing your right bicep. Here, it pays not to shoot your left arm so deep behind uke's neck: the best choking is done by the blade of your forearm, so you want that on his carotid. With the triangle locked, unmount to your right and drop your weight down onto the trapped shoulder, squeezing for the tap. <br /><br />This week Kahlil had us working another choke from the mount, the simple cross collar choke. It's pretty tough to sink in when your partner is expecting it, but understanding the biomechanics of the choke and mount stability are key. Get the first grip by crossing your right hand over to get a deep, palm-up grip. You want to be deep enough that the blade of your forearm is against your opponent's carotid. If you are performing the choke on a corpse, bring your left arm over your right to secure a palm-down grip on the opposite lapel. Drop your head and pull your elbows to your abdomen to finish. However, on anyone with a pulse, you are in imminent danger of being rolled as you pursue that second grip. Base hard to your left while you search for the handle. You can grapevine the legs, and stretch uke out as you drive your pelvis into his diaphragm. One way to get the grip is to hook your thumb into the collar on the left, then loop it over uke's head to sink the choke. Tough. <br /><br />After drilling the choke dry and and against some resistance, I sparred with some gnarly grapplers in succession. Jack didn't sub me this time-- he transitioned to spider guard, I postured up (expecting the triangle), and instead he kicked me in the temple trying to get the triangle anyway. I begged off to collect my wits, and he moved on to healthier prey. Small victories, eh? <br /><br />Cobwebs cleared, I rolled with Thomas next. It was our first time sparring, and I was a bit nervous. He is an intense purple belt who favors leglocks and is known for an absurd reluctance to tap. Great. I think I surprised him a bit, as he plowed forward with choke attempts with nary a setup, but I was able to defend adequately. He armbarred me once, and I think finished a choke as well. I was able to keep my head, however, and work escapes and defenses without panicking. <br /><br />Finally Del asked to have a go. He pulled guard, and scissored his leg across. I had a feeling he was not really interested in the scissor sweep. I worked to pass back around the leg he pulled across my waist, but his hip movement was good, and he captured the far arm for the sweep to the opposite side from that position. I was able to get guard, but he neutralized my game by staying low and tight. I attempted the pendulum sweep a few times, but his base was too good. He baited me into a triangle attempt, stacked me, and passed to side control, and quickly, mount. He was putting the pressure on pretty hard, so I wound up giving up my back. I was almost able to turn into his guard, but he went for the armbar. I stacked him, but he was able to hip out for the belly-down armbar and the tap. <br /><br />Rolling with such tough competitors is a huge resource for me. My submission defense and escapes are improving at a rapid rate. I don't feel threatened by submissions from anyone at my level of experience, at all. Now if I can just find some partners that I can work an offensive game on, I'll be all set.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-14685980355470901212008-02-14T10:29:00.000-08:002008-02-14T10:39:28.591-08:00Gi Pants: Solved!Jiu-jitsu rewards problem solving. The most intractable problem I have faced in my brief tenure in the sport has been the dreaded gi pants drawstring. WTF, drawstring? Why are you so difficult to tighten? Why are my pants seemingly made for a man with a 50 inch waist? Isn't there a better way to do this? YES. <br /><ol><li>Pull the drawstring tight while you are not wearing the pants.</li><br /><li>Put on the pants, loosening them if necessary.</li><br /><li>Profit.</li></ol><br />That is all.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-40982914416833784502008-02-12T20:36:00.000-08:002008-02-12T21:07:43.364-08:00Day 70: Mount Escapes, KnivesOn Monday (day 69) I had some good rolls that spanned the jiu-jitsu spectrum. Christian and I had a protracted, deliberate, technical roll that ended when I got stupid and got armbarred. It's the first time I have really been subbed because I lost focus and not because I lacked skill. Jason then took over and sent me off with a painful 350 pound pressure sub. Finally Jack transitioned a triangle to an armbar for my last tap of the night. <br /><br />Today I was a bit worse for wear. Khalil had me work mount escapes with Marc. We started with the standard <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HbQM2Y8qwf8">elbow escape</a>. From there, we worked a re-counter to an opponent posting his leg and turning when you get on your side (looking for an armbar, perhaps). If you are on your right side, uke has his left leg posted over you. Keep your left arm in tight against his belt, and underhook his posted leg deeply with your right arm. Slide your left arm under his butt as you upa, shift your hips, and drive through with both legs now underhooked. Stack him, get a lapel grip, and pass to side control. <br /><br />Lastly we drilled a reversal for situations where your opponent tries to get mount from side control. If you are too slow to stop the attempt, but fast enough to react, you can grab his far knee and get your forearm in his ribs and drive to take him over. You end up in his guard. This works if your opponent is sloppy or tries to mount too fast and lets his momentum carry him past your center of gravity. <br /><br />As we were finishing up, Damon and Craig stopped by to hang out in their work clothes. Damon showed us some nifty Youtube stuff, like this awesome knife fight from the Korean action flick <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-8n63mEn2A">City of Violence</a>. Where is your jiu-jitsu now, eh?The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-26724948814434187432008-02-11T13:00:00.001-08:002008-02-11T23:24:13.786-08:00Review: Sirius Athletic Ultra Lite Gold Weave KimonoInspired by Jason Clarke's excellent review of the <a href="http://smashpass.blogspot.com/2007/07/gi-review-padilla-sons-gold-weave.html">Padilla and Sons</a> gold weave BJJ gi, I decided to write a short review of a gi that has gotten some very positive word-of-mouth on the web: the <a href="http://www.siriusathletic.com/kimonos.html">Sirius Athletic Ultra Lite</a> gold weave.<br /><br />My point of comparison is the Koral Classic that I have been using for almost five months. The criteria I am concerned with are fit, comfort, features, and price.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R7C9e6aHvfI/AAAAAAAAAB4/wFxUC3Qvo5A/s1600-h/front_full.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R7C9e6aHvfI/AAAAAAAAAB4/wFxUC3Qvo5A/s320/front_full.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5165837111366499826" border="0" /></a><span style="font-weight: bold;">Fit</span><br />I am 5' 11' and about 195 pounds. I ordered the A3 traditional style from <a href="http://www.budovideos.com/shop/customer/product.php?productid=23191&cat=&page=1">budovideos.com</a> because <a href="http://www.siriusathletic.com/kimonos.html">Sirius</a> themselves were sold out. Out of the packaging, the jacket was a bit big but the pants were perfect. I washed the jacket in cold water and dried it on medium heat for 10 minutes at a time until I got the fit I wanted. I like the length on the sleeves, though some may consider them a bit short. There is a bit of bagginess in the body, but it's not excessive. I probably would have dried it more if I were not concerned about the sleeves shrinking too much. When the kimono is pulled closed, the hip splits ride right on my hips where they should be. The skirt is longer than the one on the Koral, so the lapels don't get pulled out of my belt as often.<br /><br />The pants have an enormous waist, but so do the Koral pants. When I have the waist cinched up over my hips, the cuffs come right to my ankles. Wearing the Koral pants the same way results in a slightly higher cuff. I've got big thighs, but I've got enough room in the Sirius pants, while the Koral pants are a little more form-fitting in the upper leg area.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Comfort</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R7E-m6aHvgI/AAAAAAAAACA/LOTOX-gSGAM/s1600-h/side_full.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R7E-m6aHvgI/AAAAAAAAACA/LOTOX-gSGAM/s200/side_full.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5165979085805436418" border="0" /></a><br />The Sirius jacket is very soft and light. Even after a wash on cold and a hang dry, it retains its softness and flexibility. My Koral sets up very stiff and scratchy. I would not want to wear the Koral jacket without a rashguard after hanging it dry, but the Sirius is as comfortable as a bathrobe. Though nominally a <a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R7FB1aaHvhI/AAAAAAAAACI/LRUt5s6J1Q4/s1600-h/weave.jpg">gold weave</a>, the Sirius jacket fabric is thinner than Koral's, which I would consider a single weave. Despite this, I find the Koral much more breathable and cooler when training. <br /><br />The Sirius pants are soft as well, despite being considerably heavier and thicker than the Koral pants.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Features</span><br />First off, I love the collar on the Sirius. It is thick and dense. Though I'm well aware that one shouldn't rely on a collar as protection against chokes, it is a nice safety blanket. My training partners have a hard time grabbing and holding on to the Sirius collar, since it does not deform easily. While the Koral has an adequate collar, it is rubber, so it is much easier to grip and manipulate. A downside of the Sirius collar, and a flaw that rubber collars are designed to address, is the drying time required. It takes a day and a half, hanging, to be fully dry. The Koral dries in about twelve hours. Not a huge problem, since I've got two kimonos now. The dryness of the southern California summer should also increase drying rates in a few months. <br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R7FFzqaHviI/AAAAAAAAACQ/ConwFY7ZRTU/s1600-h/pants.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R7FFzqaHviI/AAAAAAAAACQ/ConwFY7ZRTU/s320/pants.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5165987001430162978" /></a><br />The other key feature of the Sirius is the tie system on the pants. There is a rope tie, instead of a fabric tie, which makes a world of difference. Tangling within the waistband is greatly reduced. I can pull the rope tight without thrashing around like a hooked marlin. It's heaven. Even better, there are three loops, instead of two. This helps keep the front of the pants from dipping under the knot and falling down, even though the rope is tied tight. <br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Price</span><br />Koral: $145.<br />Sirius: $95.<br />'Nuff said.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Conclusion</span><br />The Sirius ultra-lite gold weave deserves the praise it has received, especially at this price point. The pants are stellar, from the fit, to the fabric, to the tie system. The jacket has a great collar, but could be a little more snug in the body. I would like a more fitted sleeve cuff as well, but the already short sleeve length prohibits me from drying this baby again. Time will tell if the durability is there, but I have a good feeling. If this one or my Koral springs a leak, I'll be sure to post about it here.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-43682763336505629952008-02-09T18:24:00.000-08:002008-02-09T21:16:38.512-08:00Day 68: JarheadI peeled myself out of the sack with just enough time to get to Saturday's class on time. My alacrity was of course rewarded by Roger being late. Turnout was good, however, and after warming up my old bones I sparred a bit with Marc after we practiced the hook sweep from butterfly guard. He is still much better than me and showed me a measure of positional control that I would like to emulate. Oh yeah, and he's 17.<br /><br />Varush was looking lonely, so I asked him if he wanted to drill a bit. He is a friendly guy so he was game. We worked the pendulum sweep-amrbar combination (what a coincidence!). In his variation, you underhook the leg the same way for both the sweep and the armlock. When your free leg swings out, instead of chopping the leg for the sweep, you bring it back over uke's head for the armbar, taking him over under your mount for the finish. <br /><br />Roger arrived and continued the armbar-from-guard theme. When your opponent pulls his arm out, you have several options. <br /><ul><li>Triangle. If uke pulls his right arm out, control the left, and bring your left leg over his head to the left. Push off his hip with your right foot to get a better angle. Adjust your leg with your hand and lock up the triangle.</li><br /><li>Z/Shin Armbar. Slide your left leg down so your shin is on uke's throat and your foot hooks his head. Cross your right leg over for the armbar.</li><br /><li>Omoplata. Control the wrist and let it rip.</li></ul><br /><br />There was also a sweep and some other fancy stuff from there, but I had my hands full with the basics. I drilled the combinations with Varush and Larry for a bit and felt pretty comfortable. After fifteen minutes or so Roger broke us up for some guard circuit training. I got passed, swept or submitted every time, which was pretty sucky. The Saturday crowd is pretty accomplished so it was nothing to be ashamed of. <br /><br />During free spar I got Varush to roll with me. He's a big thick guy, goes 250 I guess, with crazy grip strength and some nice moves. Last time we rolled he wrecked me pretty good. This time, I pulled guard from the start. Varush worked his pass by trying to pin my biceps and back out. I was able to prevent that and threaten his arms and neck. I think I went for a triangle and he stacked me and passed. He was very fast when I ended up turtled, and I'm still not entirely sure how he failed to get my back. Nevertheless, we ended up neutral, facing each other from our knees. I must have done something clever. <br /><br />Soon enough the big man had me in side control once more, and this time he got the keylock and submitted me. Definitely a learning tap; I picked up a lot from Varush's pace, positional control, and selective explosiveness. Great class.<br /><br />Oh yeah, and I <a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_0E8DTFSx7zs/R66Hf6aHvbI/AAAAAAAAABY/Z8KsxAUO2Lo/s1600-h/cropped.jpg">shaved my head</a>.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-47385353191092384752008-02-08T20:53:00.000-08:002008-02-08T23:19:02.068-08:00Day 67: Skeleton KeylockI wasn't planning on heading over to no-gi training tonight. Three days a week has been a good regimen for me, and a hard workout on Friday can tire me out for Saturday morning's session. Things happened to finish up well at work, so I just grabbed my gear and said what the hell. Good decision, as it turned out.<br /><br />I got to work with Germaine on some half guard sweeps, specifically Eddie Bravo's "old school". You have uke's right leg trapped, so you are on your right side. Pummel for the left underhook, and get your right hand on his left hip. Upa and hip out, bringing your head into uke's pelvis with a crunching motion. Then grab the toes of his left foot with your right hand and pull them toward you as you come to your knees and drive forward for the sweep. I am totally lost in half guard, so adding something to the toolbox is always welcome. <br /><br />After a bit of drilling, I sparred with big Jason. Lately I have been pulling guard in sparring sessions, but Jason is so big that I do not want to be on the bottom for any amount of time. He took half guard and I worked my pass to get the mount. He has a big belly, so one tends to ride a bit high from the mount and getting rolled is a constant worry. I pulled him up on his side in the armbar posture, anticipating his roll. I was able to take his back, but he rolled on top of me, which would have been fine for a smaller dude. As it was, I had to roll to my side, and he escaped and I wound up back in mount. I isolated his arm and with my far arm under his head and knees gripping his side tightly with feet tucked, I was able to get the tap from the Americana. That submission was very gratifying for a few reasons. Jason has been around a lot longer than me and he has taught me a ton of things; he's also almost twice my weight. Being able to neutralize his game and his size advantage and play my game for the submission gave me a burst of confidence. <br /><br />Jason was wearied from our battle, so Del stepped in for him. To this point Del has been a measuring stick for me, since he is in my weight class, very strong (probably stronger than I am), and a blue belt. The first time we rolled he RNC'ed me in about 15 seconds flat. Every time since I've reached down and found something extra for him when we go at it. Even so, I'm sure that for him I'm just some white belt who happens to be the same size as he is. Extra motivations notwithstanding, our first roll went like a lot of the others. I pulled guard, and he passed pretty quickly, and got mount. I'm getting pretty good at defending armbars, which is lucky, since he tried several on me. I was able to come up into his guard, but couldn't pass. Without the gi I couldn't get any traction to even break open his guard, and he was able to get the sweep. He soon got my back and subbed me with the RNC. <br /><br />Ho hum, right? Well. Our second go was a lot like the first, with me pulling guard, getting passed, ending up in mount, and defending armbars and chokes. However, this time I was able to re-guard after an upa-roll scramble. He put his hand on the mat! I immediately grabbed the keylock, escaped my hips, and fought for the Kimura. Del is hideously strong, so it took a hell of an effort. I was up to it, though, and got the tap. I was very proud of myself. But as they say, act as if you've been there before, son. I slapped hands with Del and congratulated him on a good job. Inwardly, I beamed.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-86375145115811861772008-02-07T21:02:00.000-08:002008-02-07T22:16:47.226-08:00Day 66: Back from the DeadI took an unplanned break from this training log due to a computing outage, but now I'm back in business. It's a very nicely spec'ed HP, and after some fighting with the Windows boot manager, I've got Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon dual-booting with Vista and sharing an NTFS partition. Right now I am using Linux as my primary OS, and so far I'm able to do everything I want to do except rip CDs to a somewhat obsessive 320 kbps VBR. <br /><br />Geekery aside, I have been training very hard and it has been showing up in my game. I've finally got a sweep that I can work with some confidence, and that has made me a much more dynamic grappler. It's more or less the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JghhIgmqYI">pendulum sweep</a>, but I find it more effective to keep my foot on the hip rather than swinging it outward for momentum. As long as I pull the arm I am controlling as I kick my near leg into my opponent's armpit, it works and I feel like I stay in better control than the variant in the video. For right now this is tying together with armbars from guard for a nice two move combination. <br /><br />Along with the sweep, my guard game has also been coming along. I took Stephan Kesting's advice about starting from the knees by <a href="http://www.grapplearts.com/2008/01/alternative-to-pulling-guard-when.htm">going right into a sweep</a>, and that has been working pretty well. As Stephan notes in his article, even if you miss on the sweep, in all likelihood you still have guard. Once I have established closed guard I'll work my armbar-sweep game like it's goin' out of style. <br /><br />Another move I have been working on from closed guard is the omoplata. We have had some classes focusing on the technique and how to counter it, and that has given me some confidence to work it in to my game. It's important to remember to push off the opposite hip, control the wrist of the trapped arm, and get the belt or armpit controlled as you sit up. If uke rolls you can roll with him (stay in front!) while controlling the wrist. Aesopian filmed a <a href="http://www.aesopian.com/187/leos-sitting-guard-and-omoplatas/">cool omoplata tutorial</a> with Leo Kirby that is an impressive drink from the firehose and gave me some things to think about. I haven't finished an omoplata, but as the video demonstrates, it is as much of a sweep as it is a submission. <br /><br />I am still having a great time training, and it has been good to me. I weighed in at an even 200 in my gi last week, which means I am about 195 pounds. I walked in on my first day at about 220. Twenty-five pounds in less than five months. Not bad. Once I get some more of the padding around my midsection excised, I may consider competing.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-8132162191119663002007-12-24T13:38:00.000-08:002007-12-24T14:39:44.469-08:00Day 45: X-MassMy lack of laptop has kept me from updating as often as I'd like, which is a shame, because I've really been improving. The submissions are starting to come, just as everyone said that they would. It wasn't like a switch had been flipped, but still the room has started to brighten. <br /><br />After the Americana from side control, I suppose that the next sub that I really started to get was the armbar from mount. It's a focus of our drilling, at least with Roger, and those drills are beginning to pay off. By staying tight and maintaining control of my opponent's torso, I've been able to get a good shot at swinging the leg over their head. Once there, I've been able to pinch with my heels to keep them from rolling toward me. Even if they defend by clasping their hands or similar I've been breaking the grip for the submission. <br /><br />I was surprised when the armbars from guard started coming. My legs are pretty strong, so I have a tight closed guard (or so I'm told). Inexperienced opponents have been getting frustrated,I think, and I've just been working through the sequence I've been taught to get the armbar. Control the wrist with your near hand, then reach across and get a paw grip above the same elbow with your far hand. Upa and pull across to get the arm across your body. Now grab the far shoulder with the near hand to keep uke from posturing. Push off his hip with your near foot to change your angle, and bear down with your far leg to flatten him out further. Swing the near leg over for the armbar, taking care to get the back of your knee over his neck to keep it nice and tight. If you've done everything right, you don't even need your hands to control the arm anymore. <br /><br />I've been getting the armbar variants for a week or two now, and I just got my first triangle today. I was rolling with Chris, a visiting blue belt who goes about 160. He was really careless trying to pass my guard and I just slapped the triangle on, without even thinking. I kept his head down, adjusted my foot into the bend of my knee, and that was it. He was rightfully abashed at forgetting the triangle threat when trying to pass. <br /><br />It certainly is nice to have a few submissions that I feel I can work with confidence. Of course, there are tons more that I am still lacking. I would say that I need at least one go-to choke to round things out a little bit. I've been playing with the bow-and-arrow from the back and from knee on belly, but my positional control from those is not very good and has kept me from being able to submit (except armbars!). <br /><br />Another problem area I tackled today was sweeps. I'm having a tough time getting any, even against training partners that I am submitting. Craig and I worked a little bit on diagnosing the problem and trying to improve my game there. The lesson came down to keeping options available, and being persistent. Starting with the scissor sweep, we worked to develop a decision tree for sweeps based on your opponent's counter. If the scissor doesn't go, you can recover your guard, or try a "re-counter". One re-counter we worked was the push sweep, which you might try if uke bases out very low and wide. Alternately, come up and grab uke's belt and sweep him back in the opposite direction on your knee. Craig gave some good resistance and I think it helped my functional understanding of the sweep series from the basic scissors. I'll be paying some attention to that this week.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-75847326758597252092007-12-11T20:31:00.000-08:002007-12-11T20:52:53.823-08:00Day 40: EquilibriumDecember has been a cruel month for my training blog, especially now that my laptop has decided that it will no longer boot Windows. I was able to boot Knoppix from CD, but that is the subject of some other, much geekier blog. <br /><br />I definitely feel like I am improving. My dedication is paying off, and I am starting to see things a bit differently and start to work my offensive game the tiniest bit. An interesting lesson came from Ernie (a newly minted black belt), regarding <span style="font-style:italic;">sensitivity</span>. The actual content of the lesson regarded armdrag to the back from spider guard, but the concept involved is as general and fundamental to jiu-jitsu as can be. When you are gripping both of uke's sleeves, he may try to pull one arm back. You must be <span style="font-style:italic;">sensitive</span> to this action and release the sleeve he pulls back, immediately transferring your grip to behind his opposite elbow for the armdrag. What I realized after my drilling was done was that this lesson can be extended to many positions (all of them, I would assume). When you feel your opponent moving to improve his position, you can often counter his movement with your own technique.<br /><br />This really struck home as I was sparring with Omar, who is close to my level in that he is slightly smaller but more skilled. I had him mounted, and I felt that he was going to try to upa and roll me off. He did not have my arm trapped sufficiently, and I anticipated the roll, came up a bit, and spun immediately into the armbar that he so graciously turned his body to give me. It was so natural that I was shocked, I felt as if someone else was piloting me from behind my eyes. But as far as I know there wasn't. It was me. <br /><br />I am definitely making some progress, and have been assiduous about making it to training. I'm trying to work my bottom game a bit, and I also am looking for a go-to submission from mount.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-19762783643377550682007-11-27T20:16:00.000-08:002007-11-27T20:46:20.902-08:00Day 35: ProgressI was excited for training today. I had been visualizing in my idle minutes today, thinking of triangles, of the satisfying <span style="font-style:italic;">thwack</span> of my thigh against an unprotected neck and the dovetail of my foot into the back of its companion knee. The focus at class today...armbars.<br /><br />Nevertheless, after an uncharacteristic cardio warmup, we went into drilling the armbar from mount. I worked with some heavyweights, Jason (350+) and Mario (230). Since we had just worked it on Saturday (Roger had Larry and I do 50 reps each), I was feeling pretty good about the move. Even so, Jason and Mario helped me sharpen my technique by having me concentrate on getting uke on his side when pulling the attacked arm from the shoulder. <br /><br />Subsequent to drilling, we worked some positional sparring from the mount. I was able to work my arm trap upa escape successfully a few times, even against Craig. My attacks were less successful. <br /><br />In free sparring, I worked with Mario on his preparations for the Machado tournament next weekend. He has short legs so can't easily play closed guard; I suggested he try an open guard, specifically, spider guard. We started from there and had some spirited rolls. I took advantage of some of Mario's mistakes and was able to apply the armbar from mount a few times. My confidence was high and I also had the moxie to try the triangle from mount twice. I couldn't lock it in (damn visualization!) but with Jack's sideline coaching I was able to transition to the armbar. I didn't get that either, but using a submission chain was a first! I even had a chance to go for an omoplata which I ended up turning into an armbar later on. <br /><br />Rolling with Mario was a big confidence boost. I had been forgetting, in the midst of rolling with vastly superior opponents, what it was like to roll with someone who is just starting out. And I realized that I am just starting out, in one of the hardest sports around. And I've come a long way in a short amount of time.<br /><br />Huzzah huzzah, Foos, there's still a long way to go.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-32650807137101680852007-11-21T22:06:00.000-08:002007-11-21T22:30:04.821-08:00Day 33: Half Empty or Half FullWith all of the holiday craziness beginning to take hold, I was very grateful to be able to make it to a training session today. The lesson plan was a cohesive one, beginning from the knee-slide open guard pass. <br /><br />From the standing position, get inside grips on the knees of your uke. If you are heading to your left, step out with your left foot, and bring your right foot between uke's legs and nearly under his right cheek. Get a sleeve control with your left hand on his right, and then drive your knee to the mat as you drive your head into uke's chest to keep him pinned. It's important to keep your hips in line with your knee as you slide through. Unhook your foot from his leg, then shift your base into side control. Typically you;ll want your right hand posted on the opposite side of uke's body from the leg you're passing through, which transitions to the underhook if he catches you in half guard as you are sliding across.<br /><br />It was just this scenario we practiced next. If you get the knee down but your ankle is trapped, you have several options. You can simply try and free it by continuing your knee slide action, remembering to keep your hips in line with your knee. However, I found this unsatisfactory as it allows uke to come up very far on his side and it made me feel vulnerable to having my back taken. Alternately, you can work transitions from within his half guard. You can move your knee from his right side to his left, and then with the right underhook in place you can use your free leg to strip his locked legs and go directly to mount. Or perhaps you would prefer to swing your left (free) leg over uke's body, and then control his knee with your hand, subsequently stripping his legs from your ankle with a combination of your hand and free leg. If this transition doesn't work straight away, you can flip back across and try to pop the leg free, again into the mount. <br /><br />After dead-pattern drilling and some live positional sparring, I rolled with Jack a few times. As always, he had some helpful nuggets for me, wrapped in glistening cauls of pain. Most importantly, he showed me an escape from omoplata when your opponent has not controlled your belt or opposite shoulder. It's easy to just roll on the trapped shoulder and poof! you're out of trouble. Be quick though, as soon as you are rolled down into the omoplata, or your opponent will immobilize you and kill your roll. <br /><br />My penance is done in advance...gluttony awaits.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-20872840074207767082007-11-12T23:02:00.000-08:002007-11-12T23:36:48.433-08:00Day 30: MilestonesI've been remiss in updating my training diary. Since there is scant possibility of a readership for these notes, I'm only hurting myself. Which, as it turns out, just makes me feel worse.<br /><br />I started training around two months ago, and I've made it to 30 training sessions. That's a pretty good rate, I think, and a pretty good value for my unlimited training contract. I'm motivated to continue at a comparable rate.<br /><br />Also: Kahlil got his brown belt today. His emotional response was touching to see. <br /><br />As for me, I'm the low man. The survival blues are doing their thing. I feel like I'm learning, but the ass-kickings have not decreased in frequency, they just take a little longer. Being able to intellectually grasp that this is the way it is supposed to be, and simultaneously being unable to suppress the emotional response to repeated strangulation and joint locks offers a lovely bit of cognitive dissonance. That's the name of the game in jiu-jitsu, apparently. Maybe it's a microcosm of life in that respect, a lesson in resisting the pull of the animal and striving for rationality. Or maybe I should quit being philosophical and just train. <br /><br />Roger was at class, presumably for the purpose of awarding Kahlil his promotion. We kept it simple with some guard-passing circuits for quite a long time. I had some ups and downs, getting annihilated by Jack and swept quickly by Del as well. However, I hit the hip bump sweep on Christian and was able to block Damon's triangle attempt, stack him, and pass. Aris took some time to explain the importance of posture when you are in someone's guard, showing me how to get a wide base with my knees, keep my back straight and keep my head up. It is way easier said than done.<br /><br />By the time we wrapped up circuits I was nice and tired, but Jack must have sensed my malaise as he slithered over for a roll. My confidence was nicely smashed by the time I tapped to his Americana. I guess one needs to choke down some nasty medicine to get better.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-38485052846144685252007-11-06T20:44:00.000-08:002007-11-06T21:14:28.862-08:00Day 26: Sometimes you eat the barI took a few days off for a restorative journey into <a href="http://www.nps.gov/seki/index.htm">King's Canyon</a> national park with a few comrades over the weekend. <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/mistergruff">Much grandeur</a> was observed and much fun was had.<br /><br />Back at home, there was training to do. I felt very fresh and ready to work as I arrived, and after a very quick warm-up I dove right into a circuit training session focused on passing the open guard. From the top I did pretty well, avoiding getting my sleeves gripped and trying to control both of my opponent's pants cuffs with one hand by reaching under one leg to grab the opposite cuff. From the bottom I did not do as well. I allowed my opponents to get sleeve grips and was slow in tracking their movements and I found myself in side control often. Not surprisingly, my bottom game still trails my top game.<br /><br />Rod stepped in for Kahlil and taught an excellent series of moves from the "baseball slide" open guard pass. Uke is sitting up, legs wide and arms extended to defend, while you are standing. Get his right sleeve with your left hand, and get a thumb-out deep grip inside his collar with your right hand. Aim to grab the label of his gi. Step deep between his legs with your right leg, and pull the grips toward you as you slide your right knee over his right leg. Pass to side control, where you should have your right collar grip deep. Now reach for his lapel or shoulder with your left hand as close as you can to your right hand, and drop your elbows and squeeze for a nasty modified baseball-bat choke. Alternately, if he defends the choke, push, then pull the defending arm across his body and drop your weight down on it as you squeeze the collar grip for another choke. <br /><br />After we finished working the drill, "little" Larry showed me the <a href="http://www.aesopian.com/9/bow-and-arrow-choke/">bow-and-arrow choke</a>, which is, in the parlance of Aesopian, totally awesome. <br /><br />Finally I had a chance to roll with Omar, who is one of my favorite training partners at the moment. He Kimura'ed me twice, though I did work hard for a sweep escape from <a href="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0e/Makura_kesa_gatame.jpg">kesa gatame</a>. I worked some half guard specifically and Omar had some good pointers. Since you must keep your elbows in to guard against armlocks, use your legs to create your mobility. Get on your side. Push your opponent away. Shrimp to guard.<br /><br />Overall, a very good session that found me recharged, rejuvenated, and ready to improve.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-6775798805281539542007-10-29T21:23:00.001-07:002007-10-29T21:43:52.351-07:00Day 24: Survival BluesI left work late and got to the gym around 7. There were only a few guys around; all the regulars were there. <br /><br />No drilling, just sparring tonight. I drew Jack right off the bat. I played a bit at passing his open guard, working my hand under one leg to get the opposite ankle and try ing to collapse both legs for the pass. I had a small measure of success, but soon found myself swept and fighting off the choke. Jack is a crafty player and is always giving me something to worry about. When he has the mount I have tons of trouble working escapes because he constantly threatens the Ezekiel choke and forces me to defend it. If I get sloppy with my elbows defending the choke, that's an instant keylock or some other painful destination. <br /><br />I shouldn't be discouraged about getting mauled by Jack. He's a very good blue belt who gives the purple belts a hard time, every time. Nevertheless, it's hard to get my mind in the right place, to drop the remnants of my ego and those useless concepts of "winning" and "losing". I'm trying. It's going to be a long road, and I hope that I've grown enough to enjoy the ride.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-81367810288358639942007-10-26T21:33:00.000-07:002007-10-26T22:14:01.613-07:00Day 23: Slippery When WetNogi today. I went with a new long-sleeved rash guard to minimize my exposure to the mats, with drug-resistant staph causing all sorts of hysteria. Better safe than sorry, I suppose. Ringworm sucks too.<br /><br />I got started with some informal drilling with Ian. We worked triangles, then some sweeps. I liked the hip bump sweep. Open your guard, then sit up (on an elbow if necessary) and get your same-side arm behind uke. Then bridge towards him and twist your torso to sweep. Finish in mount. We also worked the hook sweep from butterfly (including the leg-slide variant). We started to roll lightly (Ian's a little guy) but my nose started bleeding again. Damn you, dry, soot-filled air!<br /><br />After staunching my flow, Damon and I lined up for a go. It was a pretty good one. I showed some mobility and even had a chance to work my new triangle escape-- and it worked! Later, Damon went for the D'Arce/Brabo grip when I was turtled. In response, I went for the Kimura try that Omar showed me but I couldn't get it to go. Eventually he nailed me with a Kimura of his own but I think I did a pretty good job. <br /><br />At the end of the session Jack was game, so we rolled a bit. He triangled me several times, which sucked. However, I did manage to escape his side control (he probably let me) and get full guard. He broke my guard pretty quickly, but let me in on a good insight, one that I am slowly coming around to. He scooped my leg, which to him was an instant "signal" for triangle. Moves have signatures, templates perhaps, that demand their application. That is how we "flow with the go"; by reading the signals our opponent sends and the templates he cycles through. For example: uke in your open guard, one arm out = triangle. Hand flat on the mat = Kimura. You can short-circuit the decision making process, achieve "no mind," by using the template positions as triggers. I'll be on the lookout for more of these as my training progresses.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-9883647926070521802007-10-25T21:35:00.000-07:002007-10-25T22:06:38.259-07:00Day 22: Escape from Jitsu IslandYesterday and today were similar, so I'll mash them up together. <br /><br />We've been working controls from the spider guard, specifically the arm wrap. Get sleeve grips ("joysticks") with your knees inside uke's arms and your feet on his hips. Then you can escape your hips and wrap the arm you escaped away from. Return your hips and get that foot back on uke's hip. From there you can control the other arm with foot-on-bicep. You can bicep sweep from here, or go for the triangle. <br /><br />If you lose control of the unwrapped arm, stay with it. Turn on your side and use your knee to keep uke from coming around. Recover to your knees, taking his arm with you. Then adjust your angle to go back to spider, or pull him in for full guard. If you're good you can roll for the omoplata, but I'm not, so I didn't. <br /><br />Both days we worked on using and passing this guard. I had some mixed results. I caught Damon with the bicep sweep, which got me pretty stoked. Craig got his knee in between my legs and broke my grip, and it was downhill from there. <br /><br />During Jack's daily ass-kicking, he showed me a neat escape from the triangle. Immediately after it gets slapped on, slam your body (and uke's leg) down on the mat to the side of the leg that is right on your ear. Then you can hop your legs over uke and twist out and escape. It sounds tough but it's not.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-74279237292041569932007-10-22T21:04:00.000-07:002007-10-22T21:33:04.696-07:00Day 20: This ain't Taylor. Taylor been shot.I guess there was a case of the Mondays going around at school today. Sparse attendance, and no specific drill to work. Talk of the tournament was the order of the day. The rest of us were left with an open mat.<br /><br />I rolled with Mark first. He pulled guard and I worked to pass. To his credit he baited me by opening his guard and nearly catching me in a triangle as I tried to slide my knee across his leg. I was able to work my other hand in an avoid the choke. Eventually I passed his guard got side control, and I remembered to drive my shoulder hard into his face to keep him uncomfortable and pinned. After some hard work I finished with the Americana. <br /><br />We went again, and he wanted to work his top game, which was fine by me. I was looking forward to applying what I had learned from Larry, and I immediately controlled his sleeves and opened up my guard (scary!). I worked my leg up onto his bicep and got the sweep. Yes! Mark gave his approval. We re-set and worked a few more from my guard. <br /><br />Jack brutalized me a bit, and as usual that's not worth writing much about. I'm getting better but am still helpless against him. <br /><br />At the end of the session, I went once with Omar. From the start I got him with an armdrag and took his back. I tried to work a few chokes and also tried to get my hooks in, but couldn't. We ended up with me in front headlock with him turtled. As I worked for the Brabo choke, he sprawled and turned and got me in a Kimura. Dang. Slick, I had to hand it to him. <br /><br />I'm making progress. Hitting the sweep against Mark and the armdrag against Omar were both confidence builders.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-50781695316550411742007-10-20T12:24:00.000-07:002007-10-20T13:08:57.774-07:00Day 19: Made of JiujitiumSo I missed a few training log entries. These things happen.<br /><br />Saturdays are more sparsely attended at the gym, which is great, because there is some more teaching and personal attention. Roger taught class, with Kahlil, Jason and Jess at the tournament in Santa Cruz. After a good warmup, I worked the guard-sweep-armbar flow with Craig. He favors the hands-on-chest position for spinning to the armbar from mount. It pins <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uke_%28martial_arts%29">uke</a> to the floor, and simultaneously takes the weight off of your legs making it easy to spin to the armbar. <br /><br />The goodies came when Roger heard us discussing options from a failed scissor sweep, such as when uke sees it coming and bases by splaying his knees out. You have several options here. <ol><li>Shift your hips so that your trapping leg (the one flat on the floor) is trapping his knee in its new position. Then, scissor sweep!</li> <li>Trap his other arm and sit up so you can get his belt. Use the leg with the knee in to sweep in the opposite direction you intended to go.</li> <li>Transition to the <a href="http://www.aesopian.com/7/stupid-simple-scissors-sweep/">stupid simple sweep</a>. Mount with smugness.</li> <li> Spin back for an armbar. Only works if you're good.</li></ol> We then worked sweep training. I was partnered with Larry, a bull of a man, around 6'2", maybe 250. He is a great, patient teacher. So many little but important tips! <br /><br />When uke has a grip on your cuff, grab his cuff and get your knee down on his wrist. He will release. <br /><br />Axiom: never be flat on your back except in closed full guard. Larry uses this position for rest only. <br /><br />Rod's sweep-- get double joysticks. Open guard, get feet on hips, their arms outside your knees. Walk your feet up their body and sit up. Then get one foot on the bicep, flatten and scissor the other as you bicep sweep.<br /><br />For side control escapes, turn your body immediately, <span style="font-style:italic;">towards</span> him (chest to chest)-- this makes space. Then get the knee in and recover guard. <br /><br />If your right arm is in danger of being armbarred, and he already has the leg over your head, grasp your lapel with your right hand. Then work your left arm under the leg thats over your face, and bridge strong over his right (back) shoulder. <br /><br />Great session. I gained confidence in not being afraid to open up my guard, improved my escapes, and learned some new sweeps while improving the ones I knew. It's nice to have fifty instructors instead of one.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-37007900682519877192007-10-12T23:07:00.000-07:002007-10-12T23:18:32.277-07:00Nice chokeHere's a cool video that was posted on the <a href="http://sherdog.net/forums">Sherdog</a> MMA forums. In particular, check out the "loop choke" that the guy uses at about 1:30 remaining. That's something nice and sneaky that I'd like to add, along with the <a href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3665612579142152429&q=ezekiel+choke&total=11&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=1">Ezekiel choke</a>. I especially like the delayed reaction the opponent has to these chokes-- they don't even realize it's a choke until it's too late. Heh.<br /><br /><object width="425" height="353"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/CILVELdGjJw&rel=1"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/CILVELdGjJw&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="353"></embed></object>The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-81200389194492465722007-10-12T22:18:00.000-07:002007-10-12T22:43:23.686-07:00Day 16: Nogi BearToday was a pretty informal no-gi session that was nevertheless very productive. Jess, one of the few women currently at the school, was doing tournament training and had a fair portion of the mat and Kahlil's attentions. That left the rest of the class mainly to our own devices. Kahlil shooed me over to the other white belts for some drilling.<br /><br />Bill, Bobby and I worked escapes, which seem to be in high demand at this stage of my training. Bill showed me a gem of an escape from mount. Extend your left leg and turn to your left side. Hook his right leg with your <span style="font-style:italic;">right</span> heel, pulling it over your extended left which gives you half guard as you immediately turn onto your right side. You can then even try the overhook with your left arm, and after feinting right, with his pushback you can underhook his left leg with your right arm and sweep his to your left. Slick.<br /><br />I rolled with Damon a few times after we drilled. I had some good rolls and felt very mobile without the gi. I missed the kimono's mystery, its bottomless array of sneaky sleeves and lapels, but I did not miss the friction or the bevy of points for my opponent to grab me. As Damon and I were sparring he threw me, and my knee smacked hard into Bill's head. It hurt my knee, and I was wearing kneepads, so his noggin must not have been feeling so good. He sat there, stunned, for a few minutes until Kahlil brought him an icepack. I felt bad. <br /><br />I played some closed guard with Damon and felt reasonably comfortable. For a short time I was able to control his head and/or arms, but was unable (or afraid) to attempt any offense. As he opened my guard I thought about sweeping, but he just grabbed my leg and flipped me over. Boo. <br /><br />When Damon and I finished Del invited me to go a few rounds. He has not been so friendly up to now, but I suspect it's just his reaction to n00bs. The dude is absolutely ripped, very big and very strong. He threw me around a little bit (as he later explained, I came in way too high), but I was able to work a little position (I got half guard from mount with the move Bill just showed me) but that's about it. He sank some RNCs on me with apparent relish, as well as hit a Kimura that I would rather not experience again. Perhaps I passed his hazing, as he came over and we chatted a bit after the roll and he seemed to loosen up.<br /><br />I also took my nightly ass-beating at Jack's hands. Nothing new to report there.<br /><br />I'm feeling frisky-- maybe I will try the Saturday session tomorrow as Booka needs to work.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-13449836220637148902007-10-11T22:09:00.000-07:002007-10-11T22:39:38.533-07:00Day 15: Tough guy golfGreat session today. I learned a whole lot, had some good rolls and some good laughs. <br /><br />I drilled a single leg takedown with Damon first. Your grips are reversed- you have lapel-elbow, and he has your lapel where you have his elbow and vice versa. You want the leg near his lapel grip. Pull that arm to bring the leg forward, then dip your head into his shoulder. Release your grip on his elbow and push downward with your forearm and elbow into the crook of his arm. This exposes his leg. Shoot and take it, then sweep out the remaining foot for the takedown. <br /><br />Omar then worked with me on a funky sweep from the spider guard based on the arm wrap. You have joysticks, his arms in. Turn onto your right side and dip your foot inside his arm, keeping your grip and hooking his back. Then get your other knee and shin up against his midsection, using a grip on his knee to turn away from the wrapped arm. Now, pull him onto your shin and sweep him over at 45 degrees. This is a tricky one. <br /><br />I rolled with Omar, Jack, and Spencer. Omar is a good training partner. He is close to my size and skill level (slightly smaller and better, respectively) and he understands the technical aspects of the game so that we can interact on those terms very well. We had a good, long, semi-relaxed roll that ended up with me tapping to an armbar. Jack annihilated me again but also gave me some good pointers. I kept getting my arm trapped across his waist trying to pass guard, leading to an easy sweep. He showed me the merits of digging my elbow into the inner thigh and grabbing the skirt or belt as you attempt to pass. He also showed me another way of dealing with the butterfly guard: get into it real deep, then reach under one hook and grab the opposite ankle. Then you can smush his legs downward and pass. <br /><br />Toes are feeling better. Still sore, still loving it. Nogi tomorrow.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-57009720015791217682007-10-10T22:34:00.000-07:002007-10-10T22:58:44.603-07:00Day 14: LuxuriousSo I may have earned a nickname: Luxurious. At least, that's what it'll be if Damon has his way. We were rolling, and he was probably about to armbar me, but at the time he had his face near mine and got a dose of the beard. He said something about it, and I replied that my growth was "luxurious". There it is. <br /><br />We drilled the bicep sweep from the spider guard. Get your feet on his hips, and get grips on both sleeves. Try to get your knees inside his arms. Break him down, then shoot a leg into the crook of his elbow, nice and high, keeping the grip on his sleeve. Move your hips to get your leg higher, so that you are on your opposite side, ready to come up on your opposite elbow. Drop your other leg off his hip flat on the mat as the sweep pivot. Then pull with your arms and sweep him over with your leg to finish in mount. You can also triangle from here-- the pushing pressure on his bicep will induce him to push back. Slip your foot off his bicep as he pushes back, trap the other arm as you push on the hip (your foot was already there!) to turn your torso and go right into the triangle. <br /><br />I sparred with Luke, Damon, James, and Jack. Damon showed me a nifty pass of half guard. Inch the foot of your trapped leg towards his butt so your knee comes uo until you can slip it out. Simple. Jack was brutal-- he wanted to try some things Roger showed him, and I guess I make a good dummy since I struggle a lot but don't really know how to do anything. He held my head up off the mat, so that I couldn't bridge off of it. This shortens your lever arm to the base of your shoulders and makes your upa much, much less effective. This one is simple enough for me to give it a try in the next few sessions. <br /><br />Man, I need to sleep a bit.The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6210136586564833691.post-84330980047551623192007-10-08T21:28:00.000-07:002007-10-08T22:14:55.355-07:00Day 13: Black and WhiteI took three days off to regain some strength and relieve some muscle soreness that I couldn't shake. Even so, my hips and shoulders were still sore, and my toes as well. Disappointing, sure, but not enough to keep me off the mat. <br /><br />Roger was giving the instruction today. He's The Man, so everyone was intent on listening. He judged me to be too green to participate in the main drill today, so I worked the guard-scissors sweep-armbar flow with Bill for the drilling session of class. That's fine, since I need work on just about everything. Unfortunately, Bill is pretty frail and I couldn't work the sweep with as much snap as I would have liked. <br /><br />Rod was kind enough to roll with me and it was pretty instructive. He showed me a second pass for the butterfly guard. Get your hips on top of both legs and pin them to the mat, and then you have a good chance of passing around the guard. Another simple tip was regarding having side control: keep your leg that's near his knee down and tight to his body so that he can't slip his knee in and recover guard. Rod is very very good, so he toyed with me for a good while, sweeping me this way and that. He's such a nice guy and is really the epitome of the "leave your ego at the door" ethos. I enjoyed the sparring session and I was grateful he took the time to show me some things. <br /><br />The entire class halted when Roger kitted up and started to roll with Kahlil (that's the spelling, at least on the attendance sheet). Roger is so in control when he rolls that it seems like he is not expending any effort at all. He slips and slides his limbs to all of the right spots and magically appears in the dominant position. I guess that is what should be expected from the guy with a black belt so old it's gray and falling apart, and it's his third one, to boot! Great stuff. I'm glad I was there.<br /><br />After Del and Rod broke the spell by starting to spar, I rolled with Mark, a young guy I hadn't met before. He's a white belt with about 8 months of experience, and, get this- he's 16. He's also strong, fast, and skilled, and handled me pretty easily. I worked what there is of my game and was able to pass his guard a few times (he recovered it pretty quickly- alas). I escaped a triangle attempt with the move that Jack showed me last week, and I finally fought my way to side control and was able to hit the Americana. I was more happy with my work during the roll on escaping and fighting for position rather than "winning".The Fooshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16964653919918006905noreply@blogger.com0