I'm so glad you posted this. I really think this encapsulates the idea of the whole being the sum of its parts, and attention to detail. I think there are far too many LEOs that were trained inadequately, and therefore train inadequately as a result; if they even keep their training sharp at all.
We just taught an iteration of the arm bar where we did an arm drag, to the two on one, then we bow and drove the person to the ground, keeping wrist control, and then to a cuffing position utilizing a preacher curl technique. We were constantly telling our guys to take the space away from the bad guy when doing any control technique, and you're correct cops have a really hard time understanding this. Great stuff 👍!
My friend, who was a doorman now has pins and rods in his arm:- @8.00 what happens to Brian's wrist, forearm and right elbow if he takes the assailant to the concrete, out on the street?
I'm a fan of the 1st 2 I'd be curious to see what c4c teaches for pistol/ECW retention in the holster- esp from a rear grab. Our agency still uses the pin and spin aka the washing machine but it has a terrible success rate in training.
Is the pistol coming out on the spin?? Or are you unable to get the suspect off of the gun?? How is it failing? And we C4C teach some very specific principles there...I will shoot a video for you after Thanksgiving!!
@@code4conceptschadlyman807 2 issues with the pin and spin. Blackhawk holsters are defective and allow the pistol to be removed by the opponent with the force generated by your own spin. The 2nd issue is with female or small male LEO vs larger opponents- the LEO lose the encounter greater than 50% of the time in training. Instead I've opted to push the standing kimura- it's a little more successful in at least fighting to a stalemate
Another fantastic video, Chad -- thank you for the continuous inspiration and focus on true street practicality !
Thanks Chris...more to come
Simple and good technique!
Nice explenained, thank you guys
We do all three of these in our self defense curriculum. Glad to see we are on the right track. Solid instruction guys. Great job.
This is awesome. Great video guys!!
I'm so glad you posted this. I really think this encapsulates the idea of the whole being the sum of its parts, and attention to detail. I think there are far too many LEOs that were trained inadequately, and therefore train inadequately as a result; if they even keep their training sharp at all.
We just taught an iteration of the arm bar where we did an arm drag, to the two on one, then we bow and drove the person to the ground, keeping wrist control, and then to a cuffing position utilizing a preacher curl technique. We were constantly telling our guys to take the space away from the bad guy when doing any control technique, and you're correct cops have a really hard time understanding this. Great stuff 👍!
I love this Video 🙏
Muchas gracias !!
Great videos.
I absolute love your work. Amazing
Thx Austin...I have been training with high level dudes for years and I am blessed that the training and experience in the street has paid off for me
Every single word and every move is true ! 👍👊
Always precious tips
Thx sir...stay safe during this crazy time
GREAT video Chad! Lots of good info!!!
My friend, who was a doorman now has pins and rods in his arm:- @8.00 what happens to Brian's wrist, forearm and right elbow if he takes the assailant to the concrete, out on the street?
Golden
I'm a fan of the 1st 2 I'd be curious to see what c4c teaches for pistol/ECW retention in the holster- esp from a rear grab. Our agency still uses the pin and spin aka the washing machine but it has a terrible success rate in training.
Is the pistol coming out on the spin?? Or are you unable to get the suspect off of the gun?? How is it failing? And we C4C teach some very specific principles there...I will shoot a video for you after Thanksgiving!!
@@code4conceptschadlyman807 2 issues with the pin and spin. Blackhawk holsters are defective and allow the pistol to be removed by the opponent with the force generated by your own spin. The 2nd issue is with female or small male LEO vs larger opponents- the LEO lose the encounter greater than 50% of the time in training. Instead I've opted to push the standing kimura- it's a little more successful in at least fighting to a stalemate
@@patrullero35 Copy all...are the Black Hawks Serpas
is he Sinok?
5:08;11:21
The pointless wasp universally brake because ease reversely whirl save a vast error. quickest, educated permission