16 Year Old Destroys Opponent's Knee Grappling - Doctor Explains

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • 16 year old grappling phenom Pat Shahgholi used a brutal heel hook to defeat his opponent at the recent Eddie Bravo Invitational. Was it too dangerous and what could have happened to someone's knee in this submission?
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Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @BrianSuttererMD
    @BrianSuttererMD  Год назад +284

    Should heel hooks be banned in all competition or was this just a one off bad case?

    • @moongoosemcqueen
      @moongoosemcqueen Год назад +44

      Rousinar palhares is known for this move if you want to see more applications of this move. He was banned for holding too long

    • @drdoom246
      @drdoom246 Год назад +77

      Heel hooks are banned in some competitions. Personally, I don't believe they should be banned. Rather the grappler who applies the move, should use caution and be penalized for harming their opponent. You can apply a heel hook and make a competitor tap, without using the type of force that will destroy the limb.

    • @EtreNameless
      @EtreNameless Год назад +105

      No, definitely not. This kid has zero self-control, and it seems to me that he applies these techniques in this manner because he was taught them at a point where he lacks the maturity to use them. Put him on the mat with Gordon Ryan, and he'll learn some respect for ripping knees like that.

    • @Kikibrat2
      @Kikibrat2 Год назад +22

      Yes they should be allowed BUT for a certain age restrictions. I roll with a lot of men and the younger ones have less self control than the older men. I think if you are 20 or 21+, then sure.

    • @thedogrunner
      @thedogrunner Год назад +31

      That was a lack of self control/training. Every submission has the risk of permanent damage.

  • @fortyfour8160
    @fortyfour8160 Год назад +2566

    This is not the first time this kid has done this. He also showed little to 0 empathy after he inflicted this injury into his opponent. BJJ and MMA focuses heavily on respect and this kid clearly has none. Hopefully someone speaks to him about his uncouth actions.

    • @sladewilson9741
      @sladewilson9741 Год назад +190

      Like a District Attorney?

    • @fortyfour8160
      @fortyfour8160 Год назад +226

      @@sladewilson9741 like a coach, trainer, or whoever his mentor figure is in the gym.

    • @majormarketing6552
      @majormarketing6552 Год назад +96

      Speak? Really?! How bout justice

    • @fortyfour8160
      @fortyfour8160 Год назад +2

      Here is Pat Shahgoli tearing an opponents knee last year. Little to no care shown from this clip. ruclips.net/video/4fCBK3lsC6Y/видео.html

    • @AlexandreG
      @AlexandreG Год назад +252

      Dude, no one can incute respect or empathy in a 16 year old kid. From the way he acts, he might be the kind of guy to be in this just so he can practice violence without being criminally charged

  • @eyoutube1
    @eyoutube1 Год назад +252

    The fact that this kid quickly released him to go right into victory pose shoes you that was the endgame for him. He was going for a knee break. To him, that's how you win. Like going for the knockout.

    • @raeban7295
      @raeban7295 Год назад

      Kid is ruining lives

    • @daveperron
      @daveperron Год назад

      Which is garbage etiquette. Anyone who trains jujitsu knows there’s a level of respect we have for each other. Your opponent is not your enemy. This kid choosing to rip his opponents leg like that and possibly end his career on purpose, is a total pos move. He’s painted a pointless target on his head and he’s too young to comprehend what goes around comes around. He’s gonna meet his match one day and they’ll show him the same respect he showed this guy. And no one will have an ounce of sympathy for him. If that were me and my jujitsu career was over because of this kid, fuck that, I’d even the score and shoot him in the damn knee cap 🤷🏼‍♂️ Little fucking punk.

    • @Semipropp
      @Semipropp 7 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly

    • @N5elix
      @N5elix 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah it really does "shoe" 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Fabianwew
      @Fabianwew 5 месяцев назад

      He won

  • @CasualGamerJay
    @CasualGamerJay Год назад +876

    I was taking some Jiu-Jitsu classes for a while and I remember the time when our coach started teaching us about leg locks, heel hooks, kneebars, etc. He put a LOT of emphasis on how easily you can mess somebody's leg up with something as simple as a heel hook and stressed to us that you do NOT need to apply much pressure do serious damage. He even went as far as to tell us "Don't wait until you feel pain to tap, by that point it's usually too late" (this, of course, pertains to practice). The 16-year-old went way too hard IMO, and did not need to apply so much torque and force when applying the lock.

    • @SUPADUDE4070
      @SUPADUDE4070 Год назад +21

      Yeah, leg locks and heel hooks have a very thin line between tapping out vs mangling a joint. Its a dangerous game. In practice it’s easy to wreck your training partner accidentally, in competition you gotta avoid that position, or tap early to avoid injury. It’s a thin line, I don’t know that the kid deserves too much negative attention. It’s not like a choke at all

    • @CasualGamerJay
      @CasualGamerJay Год назад +50

      @@SUPADUDE4070 I agree with tapping early to avoid further harm, but I still put alot of blame on the 16yo. He was in deep on that heel hook and then forcefully torqued on it. That's where I have an issue, that forceful torque was completely unnecessary.

    • @drogerflav6350
      @drogerflav6350 Год назад +13

      I feel he likes the violence of the sport the speed of his technique was far
      To exercise for the control he had of the position i bet he new he had already won and planed to make the opponent pay

    • @SUPADUDE4070
      @SUPADUDE4070 Год назад +9

      @@CasualGamerJay I saw him hit this same sub at the EBI invitational, he didn't hurt the opponent that time because he tapped quick. if this were practice i'd agree with you, but this EBI one of the biggest stages in grappling rn. the kid is definitely jacked on adrenaline fighting a guy with tons of experience. He's a rookie and a kid. he deserves some slack

    • @SabastianBeGamin
      @SabastianBeGamin Год назад +7

      its EBI. The 16 year old didn't "go too hard" this isn't an in the gym roll

  • @FinalQueue007
    @FinalQueue007 Год назад +739

    He's going to gain a reputation of intentionally hurting people and it will lead to his career ending super fast (if he goes that far). He needlessly is putting a target on his back and it will lead to him also receiving a significant injury (possibly multiple times).

    • @JLewis1979
      @JLewis1979 Год назад +131

      He'll eventually run up against a superior grappler that will teach him a lesson. Hopefully he learns his lesson when they do.

    • @michaelb1761
      @michaelb1761 Год назад +61

      The first time he finds someone better than him, he may be made to pay, but I honestly doubt it because most of those high end grapplers have so much honor, they will allow him the chance to tap that he doesn't give his opponents. Most BJJ and MMA competitors aren't lookng to end someone's career and give them a life-long limp.

    • @paleojournee7864
      @paleojournee7864 Год назад +23

      I would think everyone will refuse to go up against him and that will end his career. Bad reputation to have.

    • @KevinDeVriesbjj
      @KevinDeVriesbjj Год назад +1

      @@paleojournee7864 no they wont because they are not scared like you guys. stay at open mat dont compete

    • @a.c.slater7989
      @a.c.slater7989 Год назад +44

      @@KevinDeVriesbjj People hate cheaters and dirty fighters. People will stop rolling with him if he continuously does this no matter how good or bad they are

  • @StrumVogel
    @StrumVogel Год назад +69

    I had a spat with him on Instagram, he said he’ll leg lock me. I said I can roll for 3 hour straight, with no breaks, no water, without getting a heart attack. 😂

    • @tigermike74
      @tigermike74 Год назад +33

      He can try to leg lock you if he doesn't get punched and kicked in the face before trying to grab the leg.

    • @chrisdinke271
      @chrisdinke271 Год назад +1

      @@tigermike74 It's gonna be hilarious when someone drops 250 lbs on his knee, and fucking shatters it, he'll never try this shit again.

    • @LuisRomero-kr7is
      @LuisRomero-kr7is 5 месяцев назад +10

      Whats his ig?

  • @michaelvineyard3209
    @michaelvineyard3209 Год назад +268

    This crosses the boundary from “sport” to “assault”.

    • @subradiant_music
      @subradiant_music Год назад +9

      Granted a 4th degree black belt should know better than playing 50/50 with any leg locker even if he's a white belt

    • @strafer8764
      @strafer8764 Год назад

      Problem is there are too many idiots that think this is fighting and not a sport. They think they are warriors instead of athletes and winning is all that matters. The lack of sportsmanship will grow. Just look at the responses you’ve gotten for proof.

    • @howardroark3670
      @howardroark3670 Год назад

      No it doesn't. You sound ridiculous.

    • @phatalbert9310
      @phatalbert9310 Год назад

      @Ernie Strother could you?

    • @phatalbert9310
      @phatalbert9310 Год назад

      @Ernie Strother could you grapple him in real life it's pretty much different than vid games

  • @peteypablo9488
    @peteypablo9488 Год назад +352

    The submission is not the issue, but the application of it. This guy had no regard for his partner. He gripped it and ripped it. The way he got up after ripping it shows he planned on breaking it from the get go. No time for his opponent to tap at all. Disgraceful.

    • @bernard5645
      @bernard5645 Год назад +20

      He will find someone who will hurt him

    • @Nothingz3dge
      @Nothingz3dge Год назад +9

      He wasn't a partner, and this wasn't consensual training. This is a competitive match at EBI, one of the biggest BJJ competitions in the United States. They were both going for the kill, because that's what they voluntarily agreed upon by taking part. You have never competed in BJJ.

    • @tabasco.15
      @tabasco.15 Год назад +56

      ​@@Nothingz3dge As someone who's competed in high level Taekwondo, respect is always #1 no matter what. Not trying to go in to kill or be killed. It's a competition, not a lion trying to eat you. Not taking away from your point that they were both in the competition willingly but c'mon this isn't fucking Bloodsport. If you're in any martial art to try and maim your opponent, you shouldn't be a practitioner simple as that.

    • @Zsnow41
      @Zsnow41 Год назад +12

      @@Nothingz3dge I guarantee that person will get what's coming to him, and I can't wait to see his reaction when he gets humbled, and most likely forced to retire....if I was him I'd retire now, he already fked his future in these sports

    • @Daireishi
      @Daireishi Год назад +3

      He had time, he just didn't recognize it.

  • @nerdobject5351
    @nerdobject5351 Год назад +438

    For those don’t know this is considered the most dangerous move in Jiu Jitsu. You apply it SLOWLY. Even at the highest level. What make this move really dangerous is that it’s life altering and if applied even slowly can cause a lot of damage to someone who doesn’t know about it as it doesn’t cause immediate pain.
    I watched this event live and this kid is incredibly sloppy. He won’t find opponents if he keeps doing this.

    • @changeminds2736
      @changeminds2736 Год назад +22

      *You didn't actually watch this event or any other BJJ event. Because if you did you you would know that your statement is untrue.*
      First- The guy that didn't tap is a 3rd degree black belt.
      Second- After that submission the crowd cheered loudly.
      Third- Just in this event there were at least 50+ heel hook attempts
      Fourth- This is *not* the most dangerous move in BJJ.
      Fifth- Everyone wants to roll with him, he is a phenom. People travel to his gym from all over the world.

    • @fakefriendocrat9324
      @fakefriendocrat9324 Год назад +28

      @@changeminds2736 So this phenom is about to have a long successful career?

    • @grandmastershek
      @grandmastershek Год назад +47

      @@changeminds2736 it's probably the most dangerous move that is allowed in competition. Dangerous in the senae that there is very little noticeable pain initially, and the potential kind of damage it causes.

    • @boscopappas234
      @boscopappas234 Год назад

      He wont find opponents because he is a spectacular athlete and deserves all the praise coming his way!

    • @invictusbp1prop143
      @invictusbp1prop143 Год назад +19

      @@changeminds2736 maybe Rousimar Palhares should travel to this phenom’s gym…

  • @AnthonyMcNeil
    @AnthonyMcNeil Год назад +580

    I'm not pro, but had a teacher teach me some of the basics of Jui Jitsu and you're supposed to give your opponent a chance to tap. Especially because they know how dangerous and how quickly they can break something. There's still sportsmanship in these sports, you don't just go directly to ruining someone's career.

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад +16

      you’re supposed to? said who tho? it’s a fight not a roll in the gym

    • @mosstwig3591
      @mosstwig3591 Год назад +144

      @@damnson6556 this ain't the streets dude

    • @Magnumcells
      @Magnumcells Год назад +10

      IMO he had time to tap you usually can tell when someone is better then you in that 50/50 position and when you need to get out

    • @brianvaldez1444
      @brianvaldez1444 Год назад +20

      @@damnson6556 didn’t go into that move thinking let me make him tap out, she went straight for it and that’s someone else’s career, don’t be so close minded.

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад

      @@mosstwig3591 you’re right cause if you win you get paid which is why he put the correct breaking mechanics

  • @12SamuraiX
    @12SamuraiX Год назад +201

    This Scares me so much as a grappler.

    • @nerdobject5351
      @nerdobject5351 Год назад +57

      Guys like this convince me not to compete. Could you imagine him in a Naga tournament not knowing anything about him and he does this.

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад +13

      @@nerdobject5351 if you compete at the level that allows heel hooks you better be confident in your defense and awareness. otherwise sign up for the beginner level cause it’s super dangerous

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Год назад +43

      We play BJJ because it's relatively safe.
      If you take the safety away it just becomes a really gay fight.
      Might as well play MMA and sniff a little less crotch

    • @seagreen01
      @seagreen01 Год назад +9

      @@damnson6556 I mean everyone else can get the tap on heel hooks without intentionally hurting them

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад +2

      @@seagreen01 gianni grippo kade ruotolo jacob couch have all popped ppls knees before by ripping a heel hook. it happens it’s part of the competition game. you gotta be ready to tap early

  • @WhatsPassive
    @WhatsPassive Год назад +63

    Even the slightest turn of the leg locks can break or tear someone’s knee this kid out here completely ripping peoples legs is crazy he’s debilitating people for life , word goes around quick in the bjj community trust he will get humbled soon enough

  • @tylermerrell6457
    @tylermerrell6457 Год назад +22

    The lack of discipline and respect is absolutely disgusting. Classless and completely lacking morality with no regards to the impact of his actions. I never wish injury upon anyone in SPORT but some lessons are best learned the hard way kid.

  • @CronosXIIII
    @CronosXIIII Год назад +21

    This is why I will never do BJJ.
    One wrong sparring partner and you get a debilitating life long injury.

  • @ls1jeeper
    @ls1jeeper Год назад +320

    Have grappled for a while. Competition is way different than rolling in your home gym. It's super dangerous because of situations like this can easily happen. You know if you have someone in a spot where you can really duck something up. You gradually apply more force to get the tap. In a competition you might get this guy that doesn't care if you get hurt and will apply maximum force to whatever. Then you are having surgery for a $14 gold medal 🤷

    • @pranavgainz4180
      @pranavgainz4180 Год назад +16

      Correction. $50,000

    • @ls1jeeper
      @ls1jeeper Год назад +46

      @@pranavgainz4180 I meant in general terms.. but IMO still 50k isn't worth that injury..and he obviously didn't win. Everyone has the risk/reward valued differently

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад +7

      facts. you sign waivers for a reason

    • @mramechi300
      @mramechi300 Год назад +5

      I dont understand why people are complaining. the entire sport of MMA/UFC is to break bones, wreck joints, tear ligaments. Thats what people have been enjoying for the past 20 years. The only thing they dont enjoy is videos getting shared on Social Media.

    • @larrythecableman6963
      @larrythecableman6963 Год назад +47

      @@mramechi300 no quite literally it’s absolutely not

  • @sanatsrivastava2814
    @sanatsrivastava2814 Год назад +14

    He'll come across somebody that he does not want to fuck with and get annihilated.

  • @armandotorres4421
    @armandotorres4421 7 месяцев назад +13

    His name is pat shagahogli people think he’s a bad BJJ competitor and will brake people on purpose

  • @jamescolachis8454
    @jamescolachis8454 Год назад +16

    In combat sports, respect is a huge thing. If he doesn’t learn real quick that you need to give a chance for a tap, you’re opponents will refuse to fight or will wreck you if given the chance.

    • @yaboi-km2qn
      @yaboi-km2qn Год назад +1

      connor mcgreggor would disagree.

    • @btf_flotsam478
      @btf_flotsam478 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@yaboi-km2qn He's only won one fight by submission, and the majority of his losses comes from him tapping out. You picked a terrible example, meathead.

  • @bsenka
    @bsenka Год назад +48

    There is a reason why, under most rule sets, heel hooks are not allowed for teens and not allowed until black belt. You need experience and maturity to be able to do them in a controlled way that gives your opponent time to tap.
    If you have the correct positioning (both the keg entanglement and the grips) it takes very little pressure to get the submission.

    • @dantro6594
      @dantro6594 Год назад +2

      ehh, in 10 years this kid could be like Palhares. There's no "maturity test" (or hell, psychological tests to make sure competitors aren't sociopaths) and merely being 18, or 20 years old or w/e is not an adequate test imo.

  • @medicineandbrazilianjiujit8511
    @medicineandbrazilianjiujit8511 Год назад +7

    The inside heel hook from the saddle position is the most devastating submission (excluding the lateral vascular restraint and tracheal crush) in submission grappling.
    The saddle controls your opponent’s knee line in a flexed knee position, making it very difficult to disengage.
    1 cm of rotational force on the flexed knee is enough to devastate the knee.
    Tough to watch.

    • @cavbaron3634
      @cavbaron3634 Год назад

      They were in 50/50 but yeah... really dangerous regardless

    • @medicineandbrazilianjiujit8511
      @medicineandbrazilianjiujit8511 Год назад

      @@cavbaron3634
      Thanks.
      I couldn’t see the initial set up from that clip length and angle, i.e. saddle, 411, 50/50.

  • @chazmiller1444
    @chazmiller1444 Год назад +6

    If we are being honest, those of us who have trained and competed understand it is clear the kid fully intended on destroying his opponent's knee for whatever reason bragging.. rights, who knows.. the position was so deep there was no need to fall back that violently with all his weight and what appears to be100% full torque..age is no excuse, no one does that without malice!!

  • @terrystokes2948
    @terrystokes2948 Год назад +63

    When i became a Paramedic the first thing the instructor said was "Now you have the ability to kill someone!" (because paramedics can administer powerful cardiac meds, sedatives etc.). And with that comes great responsibility!" The same with grappling. I tell my son that the grappling skills I show him come with great responsibility because you can kill or seriously injure someone with these techniques. You give your opponent time to tap ESPECIALLY with this technique. The goal of submission fighting is to end a fight without serious injury by giving your opponent a chance to tap out.

    • @saintbenitz6291
      @saintbenitz6291 Год назад +1

      Not in competition.

    • @leaster7248
      @leaster7248 Год назад

      I would agree but its competition

    • @davidbehrendsen4635
      @davidbehrendsen4635 Год назад +8

      Guys. 95 percent of people in BJJ gyms AND COMPETITIONS are fathers mothers with jobs and a life. Also this kid is know for doing this RIPPING instead of submitting. Comments like this prove you know nothing of true injury and responsibility. It’s called submission grappling! That implies restraint esp on a heel hook.

    • @mrexpose2790
      @mrexpose2790 Год назад +4

      @@saintbenitz6291 even in UFC, fighters don't get to that extreme they let the chance to tap

    • @DreadMaximus
      @DreadMaximus Год назад

      @@mrexpose2790 and that’s why no one will remember their name

  • @ryankelly8077
    @ryankelly8077 Год назад +24

    This is how u cause life-altering injuries - as in - the person will not only have to retire, but they’ll potentially never be able to walk, run, exercise, or sleep the same ever again…

    • @strafer8764
      @strafer8764 Год назад +4

      Yea that knee will never be the same. There is always a jerk or maniac out there that will push it too far and intentionally cripple people. I would argue that the move should just be banned to avoid something like this happening again. That move can only cause severe injuries.

  • @Patri_Fides
    @Patri_Fides Год назад +24

    His lack of compassion is a weakness.

  • @philliproberts4103
    @philliproberts4103 Год назад +94

    Man what's wrong with that dude. Who does that

  • @zachdancy5828
    @zachdancy5828 Год назад +26

    Sounds like this kid needs to be taught a lesson!

  • @72cgray
    @72cgray Год назад +15

    100% agreed Dr. Sutterer. Thank you for posting this video and I truly hope this video or at min the information contained makes its way to this competitor. Hopefully we can all continue to train, learn, and compete against one another in the safest manner for all those who practice allowing the sport to grow and evolve. If we can continue to keep all participants safe and healthy enough to train regularly BJJ will continue to become even more effective in real world self defense situations. Save ripping opponents limbs off for the criminals not the competitors.

  • @io1921
    @io1921 Год назад +23

    Khabib : "Careful, careful."

  • @ilovedevinj
    @ilovedevinj Год назад +26

    That was brutal man.

  • @ThunderGoatz
    @ThunderGoatz Год назад +52

    im no expert but that should be illegal. Not the move, but the intention of it. Nobody heel hooks like that in the UFC. And they have way more on the line than these two bozos.

    • @quintinmccollum4782
      @quintinmccollum4782 Год назад +20

      Exactly! I think this kid should be banned apparently its not his first time doing it to someone

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад

      lol cause ufc fighters are doing it wrong. this kid understands the *breaking mechanics* and ufc fighters don’t

    • @agh9224
      @agh9224 Год назад +9

      @@damnson6556 actually the kids technique is not great lol. He cranks to compensate for lack of technique and control. But yeah, unfortunately he does have the breaking mechanics down in the most literal sense

    • @ramirr
      @ramirr Год назад +10

      @@damnson6556 yeah you're right people like gilbert burns just don't understand the mechanics of BJJ. They just aren't as skilled as this fat 16 year old blue belt to be able to crank a heel hook with all your weight.

    • @bige311
      @bige311 Год назад

      @@damnson6556 lol! Just bleed baby! Plenty of amazing bjj pracrioners in mma.

  • @samuelault4723
    @samuelault4723 Год назад +7

    Idk if it should be banned cus I know nothing about BJJ. What I can say is it’s a dick move to torque a submission before your opponent has an opportunity to tap out.

  • @JLewis1979
    @JLewis1979 Год назад +10

    Phenom: People like Gordon Ryan or Craig Jones who are elite world level leg attackers, but almost always give the opponent time to tap after they establish control of the heel. If you don't tap, they they will proceed in destroying the leg.
    Aggro kid good at leglocks: Grabs whatever is out there and tries to take it home as the trophy. He reminds me a bit of Ruosimar Palhares in that he doesn't give opponents even a split second to tap.

    • @joeallan3706
      @joeallan3706 Год назад

      palhares wouldnt let go after the tap, thats what got him in trouble, this kid didnt do that

    • @JLewis1979
      @JLewis1979 Год назад

      @@joeallan3706 But same as Palhares he showed no restraint in injuring his opponent.

    • @joeallan3706
      @joeallan3706 Год назад

      @@JLewis1979 you mean he went for the sub full on? thats the point i thought. he followed the rules, didnt hold the sub longer then he had to. all on the up and up imo

    • @JLewis1979
      @JLewis1979 Год назад +1

      @@joeallan3706 He followed the rules, just not the etiquette of giving your opponent a chance to tap before seriously injuring them.

    • @michaelb1761
      @michaelb1761 Год назад +3

      ​@@joeallan3706 He didn't go for a submission; he went for an injury. There's a difference.

  • @Natureboypkr2
    @Natureboypkr2 Год назад +88

    I’m sure someone will return the favor to that guy. There’s always someone that’s a bit more savage.

    • @EmbddedJiuSage
      @EmbddedJiuSage Год назад +6

      Paul Harris should

    • @Quocalimar
      @Quocalimar Год назад +8

      @@EmbddedJiuSage You mean Rousimar Pularhes?

    • @iamdamo
      @iamdamo Год назад +1

      @@Quocalimar whoosh

    • @Quocalimar
      @Quocalimar Год назад

      @@iamdamo ya got me. I'm still confused

    • @iamdamo
      @iamdamo Год назад +6

      @@Quocalimar Paul Harris = Palhares

  • @seanbell69
    @seanbell69 Год назад +140

    There is a reason that leg submissions are so frowned upon in the grappling community. It is frustratingly easy to do major damage without much effort, and the fact that we can call him a 16 year old phenom but he doesn't understand that already is disgusting.

    • @BrianSuttererMD
      @BrianSuttererMD  Год назад +39

      Are you a grappler? Is it wrong to consider him a phenom? Idk the line between danger and skill in this case. Not critical of your comment, I’m genuinely asking since I’m not in the community

    • @samuelwahls8315
      @samuelwahls8315 Год назад

      @@BrianSuttererMD even in the Marine Corps leg locks were forbidden when grappling. The technique was trained but forbidden unless in an actual fight. The kid is a jackass and menace not a phenom

    • @joe94c
      @joe94c Год назад +36

      @@BrianSuttererMD I think the problem is his fast rise without understanding the sportsmanship behind it all

    • @seanbell69
      @seanbell69 Год назад +18

      @@BrianSuttererMD @Brian Sutterer MD I wouldn't call myself an avid grappler, but I have some understanding of the sports goings on. It's not wrong to call him a phenom in a technical sense, he does understand what he is doing practically.
      There is always some assumption of risk in BJJ because of the way the sport tends to isolate joints and move them in ways that could conceivably cause damage. Longtime practitioners will tell you, though, that there are unwritten rules that exist. Leg submissions are considered especially dangerous, and are not typically allowed to be used by anyone below a certain level of belt in practice settings.
      "Phenomenal" in my mind, is an overall term, and refers to a level of understanding that most others cannot meet. Not understanding how dangerous those submissions can be, or not understanding why you should be careful in applying them, is an indication that this teenager is not ready to be competing at the level he is currently at.
      It's not that he isn't skilled, it's that his overall ability doesn't mesh with the expectations of his competition.

    • @johnd1655
      @johnd1655 Год назад +9

      @@BrianSuttererMD as a bjj guy he isn't a phenom really and this event had 50k on the line, an insane amt for these level of grapplers. He ripped the inside heel hook which doesn't require a lot of technique, he didn't engage his hips even (which usually is the breaking mechanism), but he was going for the 50k. It is almost more on the guy who got injured for not tapping quicker or defending in a more meaningful way than hand fighting.

  • @josephs.7496
    @josephs.7496 Год назад +5

    I’ve been training for sometime. This is what you do when you can’t properly execute a controlled heel hook and rely on your explosiveness to finish it rather than controlling and locking the entire limb and letting your opponent feel the breaking pressure. When you do it correctly your opponent is entirely locked down and you have full control of their lower half and any pressure applied is enough to tap. I don’t want to say Pat is malicious here, just poorly executed and relying on muscle over technique. It’s unfortunate and a really bad look on the sport.
    When training with someone like Gordon and Nicky Rod in the past, there was never a need to rip the heel like that. You just feel the level of control and the breaking pressure with ample time to tap. Even at the highest level of comp (ADCC) you will not see this type of spaz behavior.

    • @antisocialantihero3464
      @antisocialantihero3464 Год назад +1

      That is definitely malicious explosiveness has no place in submissions im all for snappin arms or legs if they dont tap when given the opportunity but to just rip a sub straight to the snap is ridiculous id have filled that kid with lead in the parking lot lol

  • @LeDardeursPalace
    @LeDardeursPalace Год назад +31

    I usually tap as soon as someone has control of my heel, but I only do it because a lot of people are dirty or just careless. But it should not be like that, I have a couple of good partners whom I trust and with them it is possible to work a bit more on heel hooks.
    I never want to see these moves being banned but there is a need for some rules around these, there's a couple already but it's not enough to me. Not allowing whithe belts to use em is fine but it still allows careless people to earn their right to ruin someone's knee when they are promoted to blue belt. I do not know what should be done, but we need to deal with this.

    • @jmieles1983
      @jmieles1983 Год назад +3

      Yea like there is a check mate. Knee is controlled, check, bite on the heel, TAP

  • @liquidbeefbag
    @liquidbeefbag Год назад +3

    His application is the truly dangerous part. Any submission if gripped and ripped like that will cause severe injury. That is the purpose of submission; either submit or you will get injured. His attitude implies he intended to injure. He didn’t give a chance for submission, he ripped and stood up knowing that he ended his opponent in that moment. Imagine if he did this on a neck crank.

  • @JoeSokolsDystopia
    @JoeSokolsDystopia Год назад +3

    You train to break limbs. The person who is grappling must tap

  • @shrimuyopa8117
    @shrimuyopa8117 Год назад +4

    You can see the look in his face as Shahgholi is starting to apply the heel hook. He was actually tapping as Shahgholi continued to follow through with the move.
    The biggest issue I see here is a young man who isn't focused on the well being of his opponents. I am NOT saying Shahgholi is being malicious in nature. Being focused on protecting a fellow competitor is just a skill that takes building upon and this young man hasn't learned that skill yet. In this footage here, he is clearly controlling the situation, his opponent has no where to go. He could have taken this much slower than he did.
    Its the equivalency of being bit by a baby rattlesnake versus an adult rattlesnake. The baby delivers a greater portion of poison because it doesn't know how to control its flow of venom. Shahgholi is like a baby rattlesnake, he only knows how to rip these heel hooks, making him super dangerous.

    • @paddymcdoogle4025
      @paddymcdoogle4025 5 месяцев назад +1

      He’s not focusing on the welfare of his opponents, yet isn’t malicious.. 😂

  • @matthershman6791
    @matthershman6791 Год назад +11

    More medical breakdowns of jiu jitsu please!!!

  • @stevena8719
    @stevena8719 Год назад +4

    This is an example of someone using large amounts of force in place of good technique. No one whos a prolific leg locker performs heel hooks like this.

  • @DropTheBunny
    @DropTheBunny Год назад +103

    I'll start off by saying I know nothing about the MMA community but I imagine there is a certain level of respect and restraint exercised and given to your opponent. Intentionally trying to injure someone so severely sounds like a great way to get caught outside the ring if you know what I mean.

    • @jasonsharpe9963
      @jasonsharpe9963 Год назад +30

      Coming from a 12 year BJJ guy. if I see this guy in a gym somewhere(I travel a lot), I am breaking something of his. No respect for him whatsoever

    • @Natureboypkr2
      @Natureboypkr2 Год назад

      @@jasonsharpe9963 Yes and step over him after you do it.

    • @justincarter1217
      @justincarter1217 Год назад

      @@jasonsharpe9963 because he ripped a submission? Against someone in a tournament that had 50k on the line?

    • @jasonsharpe9963
      @jasonsharpe9963 Год назад +20

      @@justincarter1217 tournament or not. You don’t purposely rip someone’s knee out of place. That type of demeanor has no place in this sport. He will find someone that will break him…hopefully. If not, he’s going to be on the wrong end of a gun if he continues.
      I’m assuming you don’t train, not compete in BJJ?
      Edit: AHH sorry didn’t see your profile picture. I’m going to assume you are a blue belt? Probably 2-3 years into the sport? If so, I don’t mean to be ‘that guy’ but, you still have a long way to go.
      Leg locks are more dangerous than mostly every other submission in the game; Especially heel hooks.
      Even if it is for money, or fame, or both. You do not yank into a heel hook with all of your might like he does.
      And if you do, you will find that many BJJ guys take it personal and will see to it that you are held responsible.
      In some places, like on the US, that means an ass whooping.
      In places like São Paulo, Colombia, Russia, many Eastern European countries; this will get you killed.
      This kid is lucky he lives and trains in the US.

    • @davidbehrendsen4635
      @davidbehrendsen4635 Год назад

      @@jasonsharpe9963 best comment ever. This kid is lucky. Even 50 years ago he would be a TARRRRRGEEEET. In every country in the world. America is soft so I guess he has some protection, and he better not ever do that in those places you mentioned.

  • @MARDOMfilms
    @MARDOMfilms Год назад +7

    It's a move that should be taught for real life situations. My opinions on competition are a bit mixed. Im not the biggest guy and this move has saved me from getting destroyed on the matt but because of how damaging it can be, I leave it as a last resort.

  • @JEZZE4322
    @JEZZE4322 Год назад +15

    I don’t even wanna watch the video it will just upset me but I’m just here to say to any new martial artists, have respect for the people willing to go head to head with you

    • @nickslick6
      @nickslick6 Год назад +4

      It frustrates me greatly to see

  • @Kikibrat2
    @Kikibrat2 Год назад +40

    So when I roll, I do no leg locks. I can’t risk some guy yanking my ankle when I have work the next day. I don’t do competitions and won’t. An injury like this scares me, but I do think more people should try BJJ. This may scare some people off though.

    • @JLewis1979
      @JLewis1979 Год назад +8

      I agree. Leglocks are so dangerous if BJJ/grappling isn't your main income. An average family man can't afford to be out of work for 6 months+ if they have a job that involves labor or a lot of walking.

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Год назад

      I once popped my knee out trying to scramble under someone for the heel hook.
      Heel hooks are fine as long as you train with people who don't put it on.
      I actually don't even know how to finish a heel hook. Never learned. I just hold them tight.

    • @JLewis1979
      @JLewis1979 Год назад

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Well that's simply flawed training. Either don't train them at all or train them properly. How can you train a heel hook if you don't know how to finish it? Even though I don't roll with leg attacks, I have trained the techniques and escapes in slow motion during very controlled technique training (Not rolling, simple demonstration of the technique with no force at all.) so if all else fails I at least know the basic escapes and how to finish it myself. You can train every technique without actually putting yourself or your partner in danger. (Except explosive techniques like flying triangles/armbars, etc.) That doesn't mean you have to use that technique while live rolling.

    • @isupportthecurrentthing.1514
      @isupportthecurrentthing.1514 Год назад

      @@JLewis1979 I assume I just pull and twist , right ?

    • @JLewis1979
      @JLewis1979 Год назад

      @@isupportthecurrentthing.1514 There's a lot more involved than just that, such as different leg placements, defending your own legs in the process, whether it's an outside or inside heel hook, or even a straight anklelock. I'm not qualified to be a teacher, so I won't give specific technique advice, but there are good BJJ dojos and even great instructionals that could do a much better job than I ever could with mere typed words being just a hobby grappler myself.

  • @tristancollette1553
    @tristancollette1553 Год назад +18

    Hey Brian, Thanks for your content, i always find it super interesting. I was wondering whether you also could explain some of the healing procedures to those injuries, how it gets repaired in operations and the kind of training afterwards. Im not sure thats feasible, nor whether it is commercially viable, but yeah... i think that would be great :)

  • @e.paradigm7415
    @e.paradigm7415 Год назад +5

    At a bjj school I visited for about 2 months, leg attacks seemed encouraged to white belts. I didn’t think this was a good idea since anyone rolling with a white belt can understand why. Anyway, I saw a wb injure another wb with something like that and eventually the student was kicked out because of his behavior. I think the school needed to reassess their approach to teaching wb leg locks. As most beginners focus on the win instead of shaping their technique.

  • @tjboylan20
    @tjboylan20 Год назад +8

    There is a reason why Leg locks are banned in many tournaments, this is why. Usually the minimum amount of “skill” needed is a brown or black belt. If you don’t do it properly in a nondestructive manner this happens.

  • @jbdlr13
    @jbdlr13 Год назад +2

    Totally agree 💯. The best in the sport in leg locks gives time for their opponent to tap.

  • @kairoswave
    @kairoswave Год назад +8

    I am a black belt and love your breakdowns of these techniques / injuries. Leglocks are amazing but are scary when these things happen.
    I find it very Interesting to hear the anatomy of the knee and the pressure a heel hook causes, Lachlan Giles also speaks wisdom when it comes to the knee and grappling.
    Great vid! keep it up.

  • @franciscolaurean8550
    @franciscolaurean8550 Год назад +2

    Kid had 0 regard for his opponent he just woke up and chose violence

  • @JacksonLane02
    @JacksonLane02 Год назад +65

    Geez that 16 year old kid is brutal. I get wanting to submit his opponent, but nearly breaking their ankle is too dangerous he should've just lock it it until the opponent gave up instead of nearly breaking the ankle unless the opponent was showing reliance which in that case props to them on being resilient

    • @sladewilson9741
      @sladewilson9741 Год назад +9

      That is what the fighter is SUPPOSED to do.

    • @quintinmccollum4782
      @quintinmccollum4782 Год назад

      Fuck the ankle that dudes knee is literally shredded

    • @AnthonyMcNeil
      @AnthonyMcNeil Год назад +24

      @@sladewilson9741 Sportsmanship is giving the opponent a chance to tap. That's why you see people tap quickly when in an arm bar because they know they can get out of it. The other guy knew he couldn't get out and would have tapped if given the chance. If they don't tap then you know what to do. Ruining someone's career isn't the first goal.

    • @toocanny
      @toocanny Год назад

      @@AnthonyMcNeil it’s a fight cry about it

    • @brockfg
      @brockfg Год назад

      idiot above me^

  • @hanson2331
    @hanson2331 Год назад +2

    Craziest part is youll get people on twitter trying to defend this.

  • @Feldsomethin
    @Feldsomethin Год назад +5

    Might as well be a white belt with disrespect like that and shows his immaturity too. There was one guy that was around 17 that I used to roll w/ and he tried wrenching my shoulder twice two separate times with an Americana and I got super pissed at him. I quit rolling with him after that because there's no reason to forcefully go for a joint submission. It takes hardly any real pressure when applying a joint submission like a heel hook or shoulder lock which is why they are so effective.
    You nailed it and agree 110% that I hope someone is coaching him better in how to handle these types of things better with respect for his opponents and their livelihood that he could potentially be destroying.

  • @0xBerto
    @0xBerto Год назад +1

    Even Gordon Ryan doesn’t collect knees like that. So for everyone saying “money on the line blah blah” even Gordon Ryan doesn’t snap people’s shit like that. Control is key and that’s why he is King

  • @allaneeckhoudt878
    @allaneeckhoudt878 Год назад +1

    Martial art you can give up at any moment. If you TAP too late it's over, you can be injured. This kid do the job and nothing is wrong with his attitude.

    • @tigermike74
      @tigermike74 Год назад

      Are you kidding? These was no chance given to tap. It's like scoring a knockout punch and delivering 5 or 6 shots after and saying "well he didn't say I give up."

  • @samuelpetkac7455
    @samuelpetkac7455 Год назад +8

    Jiu-Jitsu blue belt here. As someone who does leg locks frequently, this was hard to watch. It is well known to be safe with applying heel hooks like this, and watching this was very frustrating. You have to give your opponent the chance to tap

    • @aaronunderwood3545
      @aaronunderwood3545 Год назад +1

      Bro this is a competition. And I know of pat. I’ve trained with him. That kid is a thoroughbred killer. Born to take limbs home. He doesn’t play a soft man’s game. In your gym everyone’s just learning. In competition, it’s kill. And the slightest time you give a good black belt to slip his heel and your heel hook is gone. If this bothers people I’d recommend watch baseball instead. Pat might be a blue belt right now, but that kid has brown/black belt level submission grappling. He’s leagues and leagues and leagues better than your average blue belt. This kids gonna be a pro. You will see him at ADCC in a couple years it would not surprise me.

    • @anthonygrizzly6924
      @anthonygrizzly6924 Год назад

      Give them a chance to tap in training, not in competition/fight. How do you get to blue belt without knowing this?

    • @samuelpetkac7455
      @samuelpetkac7455 Год назад

      Obviously in competition, the speed of any submission is going to be faster than in the training room. With any submission though, if you have enough control, you don’t need to go from 0 to 100 right away. When I’ve competed, I apply submissions quickly, but I don’t feel the need to immediately break their limbs. Just my thoughts on the issue

    • @jimjam9387
      @jimjam9387 Год назад

      @@aaronunderwood3545 The fat kid is so good at BJJ he has to use brute force and the full weight of his breasts in lieu of technique. I don’t understand how people can post this trite mouthbreather shit online with their real names. This is a real Aaron take buddy hopefully you grow up some day bud.

  • @Alex-xi3bw
    @Alex-xi3bw Год назад +1

    You may not like it, but Pat Shagholi is what peak athletic performance looks like

  • @justinjosephson6727
    @justinjosephson6727 Год назад +5

    I am most certainly not a fighting expert or medical but I like to learn a lot about both of these fields and I think pretty much all submissions other than choking ones are very dangerous because, at any moment a submission is attempted you could snap a whole bunch of different things on the other fighter if you pull hard enough

    • @norwegroletsplay2250
      @norwegroletsplay2250 Год назад

      That’s why you train, the first thing you learn is how to protect yourself. The problem is there are killers and dreamers and when they meet it’s not good.

  • @Macktube
    @Macktube Год назад +2

    I'm glad to see EBI is getting some love it's the best submission only tournament out there in my opinion also he'll hugs have been prevalent for the last 6 years since the den of her death squad debuted everyone's doing them it's not going anywhere

  • @TheBurner98
    @TheBurner98 Год назад +6

    Can you do a video on Giants TE Daniel Bellinger? Got poked in the face mask and somehow broke his eye socket, and his septum.

  • @A19csd
    @A19csd Год назад +1

    Allowing kicks to the face on a grounded opponent will solve all the footsies. They want to start treating it like a street fight and permanently injure people, then go fight with strikes and see if you can dive for an ankle still.

  • @archangel5972
    @archangel5972 Год назад +3

    This kind of thing happens frequently. Shagholi did nothing wrong here. He had submitted 6 other high level black belts with this heel hook coming into this tournament, you’d think his opponents would’ve been careful of it, but each and every one sits right into 50/50 and doesn’t tap early enough. At a competition at this high of a level and this amount of competition, this is perfectly acceptable. Everyone has to practice their own self preservation in this sport. Respect was shown by Pat before, after, and during his matches to each opponent, and they didn’t respect his danger back.

    • @kickboxing3728
      @kickboxing3728 Год назад +4

      What kind of a brain dead take is this? There was 0 chance to tap. You’re implying that the opponent should have immediately tapped the moment he entered 50/50, since there was no chance to tap thereafter. The kid was reckless and should be instant,y banned from all grappling competition

    • @archangel5972
      @archangel5972 Год назад +1

      @@kickboxing3728 you ever watch the best leg lockers in high level comp? They don’t crank legs because the tap comes out the second their hands lock. Look at Gordon Ryan’s matches from adcc. This kid is a top level leg locker, that tap didn’t come at the lock, and in comps like these if you sub slow or give the time to tap, people of that level are already escaping. That’s how the game is up there

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад +1

      FACTS

    • @damnson6556
      @damnson6556 Год назад +1

      @@kickboxing3728 opponent should’ve tapped the second his legs were separated and his heel was caught

  • @fightfan9739
    @fightfan9739 Год назад +1

    That hair is ‘too dangerous’ for society💯🤣🤣

  • @michaeltalksanime
    @michaeltalksanime Год назад +8

    The problem with heel hooks is that part of making the move sucessful is that you kinda need to commit to it fast. Especially since the grappling meta today is so centered around leg locks/leg entanglements so people know their way around the leg lock game. But it's also a move that is so dangerous, especially when done fast.

    • @holdenmuganda97
      @holdenmuganda97 Год назад +4

      Yes guys at the professional won’t tap a move if it’s applied slowly. That’s just the nature of competition. They push themselves to limit and hold out in submissions far longer than a normal hobbyist would so I think telling guys to go slow and give time to tap at a high level competition isn’t going to resonate with those competitors. If it’s truely too dangerous then perhaps it should just be banned in wider competition.
      This is the reason the kani basami and full Nelson and standing waki gatame are banned techniques it’s not that they can’t be done safely but it’s the problems that arise when an opponent refuses to yield which leads to the person applying to do it harder and faster since they have less control to apply it in a controlled manner.
      What’s ironic is that we often chide traditional and non sparring martial arts about moves that are “too dangerous” but that’s exactly what these moves are. There are techniques out there that are very dangerous to apply safely and in a controlled manner and once they are removed from competition they usually become lost to the art if it’s a sport focused art. You can’t really have it both ways with the high level competition and the dangerous techniques.

    • @michaeltalksanime
      @michaeltalksanime Год назад +2

      @@holdenmuganda97 couldn't agree more, the Kani basami is another great example. No way you can do that slow to another high level opponent who is resisting

  • @WeAreTheQs
    @WeAreTheQs Год назад +1

    His club is rubber bones with a broken bone underneath, I feel like this is being taught to him as a mentality

  • @fromulus
    @fromulus Год назад +9

    Looks pretty malicious to me. This kid has done this enough to know how far you can go, and he just blew right past it and didn't seem phased at all. The honor system ain't what it used to be.

    • @agh9224
      @agh9224 Год назад +2

      Kids a psycho

  • @mramechi300
    @mramechi300 Год назад

    I dont understand why people are complaining. the entire sport of MMA/UFC is to break bones, wreck joints, tear ligaments. Thats what people have been enjoying for the past 20 years. The only thing they dont enjoy is videos getting shared on Social Media.

  • @tariklewis5238
    @tariklewis5238 Год назад +2

    Complete scumbag move you don't maim someone for life like that just ridiculous

  • @emceesupremejustice
    @emceesupremejustice Год назад +1

    anyone who knows the leg lock game on a high level understands 2 things 1. the dude who got heel hooked is a 4th degree black belt and a full grown man in a tournament for 50,000$ - prolly wouldn’t have wanted to tap if Pat - the 16 year old kid who was a blue belt at the time didn’t go any less than 100% and 2. he DID have a second where he could have tapped there’s a spot where if you know what you’re doing you can tap before they really crank on it that being said I do think he went too hard and he ripped a couple other peoples knees in the Qualifiers poor sportsmanship

  • @BigTInTheMorning
    @BigTInTheMorning Год назад +11

    The child’s family should pay ALL this man’s medical bills

    • @ThePries
      @ThePries Год назад

      Fully agree and stil that knee will never be the same so a life time ban on top of that.

    • @tigermike74
      @tigermike74 Год назад

      This injury is life long so they should be responsible for his lifelong care and rehab. This kid had no regard to safety or the opponent's life. Absolutely disgusting.

  • @ChrisCapoccia
    @ChrisCapoccia Год назад +1

    IBJJF prohibits leg locks. If people are competing in MMA, they need to be able to defend themselves at all times and not hope the ref will save them. The best way to defend a leg lock is not hoping you have enough time to tap, but not giving your opponent your leg

  • @chadc703
    @chadc703 Год назад +3

    Heel hooks are why I stopped BJJ

  • @jacktaylor8872
    @jacktaylor8872 Год назад +1

    And he’s taking the piss on his social media out of ruining someone’s leg

  • @caleb.gray92
    @caleb.gray92 Год назад +3

    Thank you for showing some love to BJJ/grappling!

  • @kameronatake4573
    @kameronatake4573 Год назад +1

    He shouldn’t be allowed to compete anymore he’s done it before and he’ll prolly do it again. Zero restraint or empathy and bad sportsmanship.

  • @joe94c
    @joe94c Год назад +11

    I was considering getting back into martial arts and starting bjj after my ACL tore for a second time last year. I considered bjj because i dont risk the concussive force of a leg kick rupturing the ACL again... i think I'll pass now

    • @dantro6594
      @dantro6594 Год назад

      do boxing, relatively harmless on most of the body (except brain damage, but if you find a gym where you can do lighter sparring and where people aren't dicks, you're fine)

    • @zleggitt1989
      @zleggitt1989 Год назад

      Risk of injury in bjj is actually quite low. There are always exceptions and there is always complete a holes like this kid. I've been doing bjj for about 2 years and have been injured only once on a white belt mistake of my own. We train leg locks and emphasize how dangerous they can be and how little effort it takes to destroy someone's knees. This kid either has had terrible coaching or just plain doesn't care about hurting people. If I was his coach I would kick him out of my school and I know most instructors that would and would not tolerate this at all. If you look up high level ju jitsu and leg locks you can see that once the submission is locked in, the tap is either instant or very little pressure is applied to get the tap.

    • @joe94c
      @joe94c Год назад

      @@zleggitt1989 even still, I've had repeat knee injuries. 2 ACL tears and 3 meniscus tears all in the same knee. If there's a small risk for you it's probably bigger for myself. Didn't consider that until watching this video

    • @dantro6594
      @dantro6594 Год назад

      @@zleggitt1989 I personally have had neck/back issues from a can opener, no knee injuries bc I tap whenever I lose control of their hands in a leg entanglement (even if people think I'm tapping too early, I don't care, I need my legs to make a living). I bet spine and knee problems are the most common from grappling

  • @mckendrick7672
    @mckendrick7672 4 месяца назад +1

    And this is why Ashi Garami was banned in sport Judo in the first place. There is too little room for error between just a little pain, and your leg being obliterated. It should be trained and taught, but to execute under pressure in competition is just irresponsible for the rules to allow. An arm injury can be life altering, a leg injury can be life ruining. If your leg goes, that's almost certainly the end of your grappling journey, and possibly any other intense sporting activity for the rest of your life. You shouldn't have to rely on your opponent having the self-control not to execute such a dangerous move too quickly in a sport competition.

  • @krombopulosrick7920
    @krombopulosrick7920 Год назад +1

    Send a Gracie after him for a few hours of no let up. I'm sure he'll learn.

  • @BacatauMania
    @BacatauMania Год назад +13

    I checked this kid's Instagram profile and he's joking about this whole situation. He is provoking, like "this is what happens when you roll with me 🔥" and the fans are laughing about it and hyping him for doing this shit.
    It's really sad to see how stupid some teenagers are

  • @SamuraiKidMusic
    @SamuraiKidMusic Год назад

    if you're a black belt competitor wary of knee injury, focus on the gi, as heel hooks are still banned in that category

  • @bitcoinethereum9702
    @bitcoinethereum9702 Год назад +1

    Anyone who is a fan of knee mutilations go check out the Ikuhisa "Minowaman" Minowa Japanese and Swedish rookie Goran Jettingstad

  • @therhythmatic
    @therhythmatic Год назад +4

    I’m a 45+ purple belt and every minor I roll against will attempt this move on me. Some kids don’t even know how to shrimp out of bottom side control but they’re able to do these leg locks successfully. It’s one of those things where regardless of the age, you can’t take it easy on anyone and always expect that they’ll try to break you. If you go into it with that in mind, I feel you’ll be better prepared.

  • @arantxaurrutia0
    @arantxaurrutia0 Год назад +2

    The thing is, it's not the first time. He' going to get the same treatment by someone else. The result? at least 1,5 year out, endless problems, etc...where's the point of all this?

  • @sputnikalgrim
    @sputnikalgrim Год назад +5

    I’d love to hear the thoughts of a competitor. An actual competitor… this is in fact a legal move or no? If it is legal are there rules governing the application of it? Was this a one time bang bang type of situation? It happened very fast by my very untrained eye. We don’t want to see people get injured but is this a calculated risk when competing? It looks brutal but I’m not sure if I should be outraged like everyone else in the comments.

    • @Arcadia907
      @Arcadia907 Год назад +8

      This move is called a heel hook and it is legal under most no gi rule sets for purple belts and above. Generally, it is considered courteous and sportsmanlike to slowly apply submissions. However, there is no rule in any organization which says that you must apply a submission in a way that will not injure your opponent. A rule like that, in fact, cannot exist because all submissions are meant to hurt your opponent in some way if they do not submit in time.

    • @bsenka
      @bsenka Год назад +1

      Yeah, it's legal in even lower level competitions for purple belt and up adults. I've competed in masters (old man) divisions where they were allowed, but you didn't see them much.
      16 yr olds are NOT allowed to -- for this very reason. They don't have the maturity. No control, no sense of consequences.
      Check out this year's ADCC finals match between Gordon Ryan and Nick Rodriguez. All control, no crank, no injury. Nick knew when to tap and Gordon gave him time to do it.

    • @aaronunderwood3545
      @aaronunderwood3545 Год назад

      @@bsenka bro you’re speaking on young men, that COMPETE. You realize this 16 year old young man is competing against grown ass black belts that been training in some cases longer than he’s been alive? Please chill with this soft shit. You just compared a 16 year old kid competing at black belt to gordon Ryan. Are you mentally deficient?

    • @aaronunderwood3545
      @aaronunderwood3545 Год назад +1

      I’m a purple belt competed for awhile. This kid didn’t do a DAMN thing wrong. Our soft ass society just isn’t prepared for any of the ugly of life. Nobody likes seeing a dude get injured… but these boys ain’t playing paddy cake. These guys are modern day unarmed assassins. Don’t let any of these soy dieting untrained soft peoole speak negatively on patty’s name. Put some respecccc on it.

    • @bsenka
      @bsenka Год назад +2

      @@aaronunderwood3545 I didn't 'compare' them, I specifically said there was a big difference between them -- that huge difference is the reason this move is generally not allowed for lower level competitors and for teenagers. A wild kid with no control can easily seriously injure people, while mature, experienced high-level competitors hardly ever do.

  • @OWELZIGEN
    @OWELZIGEN Год назад +1

    His shirt alone is a big red flag.

  • @insidetrip101
    @insidetrip101 Год назад

    I respect that you acknowledge that you don't know much about grappling, and are completely correct: you have no idea what you're talking about. Look at the video, Pat gets a nice bite on that heel several seconds before he rips it--in grappling time that's like a decade of time to tap.
    They guy didn't tap because he didn't want to lose to a 16 year old kid and thought that he could bamboozle his way out of the position. He was gravely mistaken. Heel hooks shouldn't be banned, but if you compete, you should know what you're getting into and know how to defend yourself. Tapping is part of that process, which is an admission that you can no longer defend yourself.

  • @letstalkcaliber704
    @letstalkcaliber704 Год назад +3

    The position is called 50/50. They both have a heal hook from there. Not the first time I've seen this happen. Heal hooks have just become legal in ibjjf nogi competitions for brown and blackbelt adult competitors a couple years ago. Before that they were totally banned. In a lot of other tournaments they have been legal for a while. Ripping the submission is a mixed bag. On one hand you are injuring your opponent who might have a job, family and kids to feed. On the other hand if you don't you might not get the submission. I've given people time to tap only for them to wiggle out. Typically if it's an important tournament I just rip it and let go as soon as I here or feel a tap. If I'm beating up an old guy at a local match I'll never rip anything and just win by points. Part of the sport but yeah the guy seems like a d-bag. The bigger no no is the fact that the guy probably verbally tapped and the guy kept moving and holding the lock.

    • @strafer8764
      @strafer8764 Год назад +1

      You are watering it down. This isn’t a bruise that will heal in a week that causes a slight limp. It’s a permanent injury that will never heal completely. That’s why we have rules in most sports that attempt to remove the possibility for permanent injuries. With your mentality I would say it’s better to just ban the move entirely so somebody doesn’t end up crippled because you think it’s more important to win a competition

    • @letstalkcaliber704
      @letstalkcaliber704 Год назад

      @@strafer8764 it's just a brutal sport man. Look at this video ruclips.net/video/IvCeSK5guUM/видео.html Craig jones pops the guys knee in the first minute and the guy refuses to tap. He pops it again and the guy won't tap. Craig literally has to talk to him down and convince him to stop. Many world titles have been won because people choose to let their own arms break and won by points. Heel hooks are dangerous because you don't feel the pain much before the break. It's the responsibility of the athlete to tap. Like I said I'm more mad as the guy not because he cranked the knee but because he obvious didn't respect the tap. If you scream in pain it's a verbal tap. I partially toor my mcl because I tried to move my body in a strange way to take the back. I continued fighting and got on the podium because of it. It was a three month recovery but well worth it. The high level athletes don't need people protecting them they choose to put themselves in those situations. It all just comes down to respecting the tap. If we want to protect athletes from injuries we should just ban football. It causes more injuries and deaths than anything else. 8-10 high schoolers die every year. One of are teenagers has been doing bjj all his life and after one season of football he's already sustained a major sholder injury. Heal hooks and all bjj it pretty safe.

  • @graywolfgaming2722
    @graywolfgaming2722 3 месяца назад

    Kid needs to be taught a lesson, the number one rule for heel hooks is to show restraint, in both training and competition, and him just getting up to celebrate after shredding his opponents knee, really shows you his character

  • @jimmorrison5520
    @jimmorrison5520 Год назад +1

    Absolute disaster. As someone who grapples on a regular basis this gets me really mad. I once had a similar situation when I got locked in an armbar and the guy was way too fast and too much in his zone that he responded to my double tap (universal sign to submit) when my elbow was already hyperextended.
    I was unable to train BJJ for more than half a year because of it. People like that should be put in their place and humbled, if you ask me. This has nothing to do with sport and/ or competition anymore - simply brutish. He should definitely be banned.
    Thank you doc for poiting this out.
    I hope it will reach a lot of people, especially of the grappling world.
    Should serve as a prime example in any gym how NOT to behave.

  • @SabastianBeGamin
    @SabastianBeGamin Год назад +5

    Why would anyone try and give their opponent a fair opportunity to tap in a highly competitive contest

    • @JonBankes
      @JonBankes Год назад +6

      Because it’s how you win. The only way someone should be injured in tournament play is if they refuse to tap. Trying to cause injury in a tournament is total bs

  • @thomas_lale
    @thomas_lale Год назад +1

    Heel hooks are known to be a more dangerous move than most most. Once we fell to his back he should have slowly rotated, giving his opponent the chance to tap.

  • @songodan45
    @songodan45 Год назад +3

    This is exactly how I feel about those low side kicks in mma. Purposely destroying someone’s joint to the point they have medical issues from it for life and affects their career forever is completely wrong. Should be banned from sports. Use them when defending yourself… not for sport.

    • @leaster7248
      @leaster7248 Год назад

      Unfortunately if your gonna do mma serious injuries can be part of it. That's the point of the sport. I believe if a fighter can send someone to the shadow realm they should be able to kick the knee

  • @fractalzoomgoggles
    @fractalzoomgoggles Год назад +2

    The opponent knew what position he was in or could give up

    • @NWLMAMMAL
      @NWLMAMMAL 5 месяцев назад

      He had less than a second stop coping for your reddit mod looking grappler

  • @paleamigo8575
    @paleamigo8575 Год назад +2

    The sport has a tap system for a reason and regardless of how competitive it is, it's just a sport. This guy needs to be nudged into the right direction with his thinking on how to properly compete.

  • @olivercrespo2329
    @olivercrespo2329 Год назад +2

    Think they should only be allowed in black belt high level competition. Letting any purple belt start grabbing those a lot of egos are going to get people hurt. Also if someone has an inside heel hook, just tap and give it up. That’s a seriously dangerous position even without that much torque on it.

  • @TheMarkemmy
    @TheMarkemmy Год назад

    This kid will get payback when someone gets him a arm bar and just breaks his arm and not work for a submission. A first class D-bag move right there.

  • @landenx
    @landenx Год назад +1

    Karma will get him soon enough. One day someone is going to catch his leg, and remember these moments 😊

  • @VinegarAndSaltedFries
    @VinegarAndSaltedFries Год назад +1

    That’s so dirty in my opinion.

  • @LoadingNPC04
    @LoadingNPC04 Год назад +1

    Weight classes seem to need to be implemented. No way these dudes should be grappling together