Matt nails it on the pressure passing. Empirically, the more effectively you can exert force on your opponent's guard, the easier you can pin him/her in place. Such achieved, you have greater liberty to attempt the pass, while also exerting smothering pressure to negate any possible counters. Great video. As an _amuse bouche,_ I am thoroughly saciated. :-)
How about an ankle lock for a figure four leg lock from the guard. Second part around 20:00 take his left wrist to uke center line then tori pulls upper body to the right and anchor neck with left leg.
Find a good club. Then get on the mat. _Then,_ when you're confronted with the absolutely crushing difficulty curve, *do not give up.* BJJ is hard, it is demanding, and it will smash your piss poor notions of technique to smithereens. Without focus, a proper plan, you *will* fail. That said, BJJ is never soul crushing. The lessons are there, for you to learn on them and improve. So go train! 😃
@@tojiroh ive heard really good things about the club near me. Trainers are both blackbelts now, but im really nervous and im not sure whaat to expect from my 1st week
for some reason the 2 finger grip is stronger/makes for a stronger finish (if i remember correctly from a session I attended regarding the bow and arrow choke)
Your wrist bends around the curve of your neck better with 2. 4 finger your grips stronger but your wrist is more rigid and leaves alittle space because it doesn't bend as much. I'm no expert. Just watched a video on it recently
We're spoiled these days. Seems it's mostly old schoolers who can truly appreciate all the excellent free materials these days. From what I read for the most part. We used to have to Sacrifice meals or travel to get ahold of info before the wwWeb started being weaved. They even held back. Now it's crazy how greatful we are for all these great vids by so many incredible instructors.
Well fundamental by definition is something we all need to know, so why would the belt mix matter? The difference between sticking to fundamentals and a class for beginners is that a good beginner's class would be cyclical and would stick to covering the most common problems in those positions. IE Jiu Jitsu vs. the world is more important for beginners where as Jiu Jitsu vs Jiu Jitsu would be outside of a beginner's program.
I still see a few purps, browns, and blacks every now and then at fundamentals at my gym. I know some of them pop in as a refresher if they've ever had to take time off training depending on the unit we're covering.
Second coach is obviously knows what he's talking about when he's speaking strictly BJJ but dude needs to brush up on his anatomy. The collar bone runs from the top of the rib cage/sternum to the scapula and acts as a strut to stabilize the shoulder against the pectorals. What he's grabbing near/ touching is either the cervical spine (C7 vertebra) or the top of the thoracic spine (T1 vertebra.)
@@sbgdraytonvalley7944 beside half of what he demonstrated doesn't have pressure through the forearm to the collar bone but through the collar of the gi through the spine.
@@k.levirusco3834 it's both. While only applying force on the spine, _uke_ is free to twist around your grip. The way it's done properly, with the edge of your forearm, there is great pressure applied on the collar bone as well. As a judoka of some vintage, I can attest to the efficacy of this grip, even if the mechanics may not be immediately clear.
@@tojiroh my comment is not about the efficacy of his technique but his ability to explain it because when he pulls his hand back to say collar bone, it looks like he's pointing at the neck as his wrist is behind the collar bone and is in no way indicating the location of the collar bone. This makes his instruction confusing to a white belt with strong anatomical knowledge. If you tell me to grip a gi at the collar bone, I'll grab the lapel (which he complains about.) His phrasing indicates no qualifiers as to location (such as saying 'under my forearm') and as such would defer to the default human behavior of focusing on the hand when people say 'this.'
Matt nails it on the pressure passing. Empirically, the more effectively you can exert force on your opponent's guard, the easier you can pin him/her in place. Such achieved, you have greater liberty to attempt the pass, while also exerting smothering pressure to negate any possible counters.
Great video. As an _amuse bouche,_ I am thoroughly saciated. :-)
I concur on the pressure passing!
I liked the comments from all of the coaches. Great details.
"I go 3,2,1 because it's like a rocket. I like rockets."
Hell. Yes.
This is gold! Thank you
I like the way they show different techniques
This is free gold!
Has Matt Thornton ever fought MMA or VT ?
Pure wisdom
Love this !
How about an ankle lock for a figure four leg lock from the guard. Second part around 20:00 take his left wrist to uke center line then tori pulls upper body to the right and anchor neck with left leg.
All of these coaches are absolute beauties!
The beauty lies in the teaching. ;-)
1:30 *BRO foot rub*
Bruh 😂thought I was trippin
loooooooool
I was scrolling down the comments to see if anyone else was creeped out by that. Lmfaooo
Overall just fantastic details thanks!
I havent even started BJJ yet and im watching a bunch of these in great detail like i understand lol
Brandon Gold good, now all you have to do is go to your first class 😉
Find a good club. Then get on the mat. _Then,_ when you're confronted with the absolutely crushing difficulty curve, *do not give up.*
BJJ is hard, it is demanding, and it will smash your piss poor notions of technique to smithereens. Without focus, a proper plan, you *will* fail.
That said, BJJ is never soul crushing. The lessons are there, for you to learn on them and improve.
So go train! 😃
@@Fais-pas-le-fou467 i plan on doing the intro to BJJ class this saturday and then hopefully continuing to classes
@@tojiroh ive heard really good things about the club near me. Trainers are both blackbelts now, but im really nervous and im not sure whaat to expect from my 1st week
@@brandongold6180 check them out. A good environment is paramount to progress. And fun. ;-)
9:17 was that sound his wrist cracking?? Either way, it looked painful, i don't think Cody was too happy.
Will this be up in sbguniversity? I'm already fascinated with the small tidbits that are presented in this video.
great stuff....damn microphone had me thinking i was learning from Vader
What is that dude doing with a pink belt? Did he color his white belt? I am so lost on that one.
Was a fundraiser for cancer. Happens every October.
@@sbgdraytonvalley7944 That's dope, also great vid!
Is there a benefit to the two finger grip vs four? I noticed it in the first segment.
for some reason the 2 finger grip is stronger/makes for a stronger finish (if i remember correctly from a session I attended regarding the bow and arrow choke)
Plus is more mobility for a better angle, minus is less strength. Try losing the pinky, see how it goes
Your wrist bends around the curve of your neck better with 2. 4 finger your grips stronger but your wrist is more rigid and leaves alittle space because it doesn't bend as much. I'm no expert. Just watched a video on it recently
Many videos end far too early, so you miss critical concepts. Poorly edited.
Yeah they're trying to sell you something
We're spoiled these days. Seems it's mostly old schoolers who can truly appreciate all the excellent free materials these days. From what I read for the most part.
We used to have to Sacrifice meals or travel to get ahold of info before the wwWeb started being weaved. They even held back. Now it's crazy how greatful we are for all these great vids by so many incredible instructors.
Thanks.
Great stuff
G + P Kabib style controls 26:20
I want to know the 4 thumbs down and why? Great Stuff
describes guard passing as a water fall, in Niagara Falls. Does -_- face.
Tobi is a good boy..
if it's fundamentals why is there a mix of black belts and purple belts and blue belts there? is beginner class and fundamentals different?
Well fundamental by definition is something we all need to know, so why would the belt mix matter? The difference between sticking to fundamentals and a class for beginners is that a good beginner's class would be cyclical and would stick to covering the most common problems in those positions. IE Jiu Jitsu vs. the world is more important for beginners where as Jiu Jitsu vs Jiu Jitsu would be outside of a beginner's program.
I still see a few purps, browns, and blacks every now and then at fundamentals at my gym. I know some of them pop in as a refresher if they've ever had to take time off training depending on the unit we're covering.
321 OSS
🔥🔥🔥
fair fight
1:29 💖🥊🧡
👇👇👇👇👇🥊
Second coach is obviously knows what he's talking about when he's speaking strictly BJJ but dude needs to brush up on his anatomy. The collar bone runs from the top of the rib cage/sternum to the scapula and acts as a strut to stabilize the shoulder against the pectorals. What he's grabbing near/ touching is either the cervical spine (C7 vertebra) or the top of the thoracic spine (T1 vertebra.)
Check the connection of the forearm. Its not him, its you ;)
@@sbgdraytonvalley7944 then its his phrasing because it sounds like he's saying it's on the back of your neck.
@@sbgdraytonvalley7944 beside half of what he demonstrated doesn't have pressure through the forearm to the collar bone but through the collar of the gi through the spine.
@@k.levirusco3834 it's both. While only applying force on the spine, _uke_ is free to twist around your grip. The way it's done properly, with the edge of your forearm, there is great pressure applied on the collar bone as well.
As a judoka of some vintage, I can attest to the efficacy of this grip, even if the mechanics may not be immediately clear.
@@tojiroh my comment is not about the efficacy of his technique but his ability to explain it because when he pulls his hand back to say collar bone, it looks like he's pointing at the neck as his wrist is behind the collar bone and is in no way indicating the location of the collar bone. This makes his instruction confusing to a white belt with strong anatomical knowledge. If you tell me to grip a gi at the collar bone, I'll grab the lapel (which he complains about.) His phrasing indicates no qualifiers as to location (such as saying 'under my forearm') and as such would defer to the default human behavior of focusing on the hand when people say 'this.'
talk to much