INVERTING to Retain the Guard (BJJ): Cross-Grip Frame to Manage Distance (PART TWO)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 15

  • @aidanlee8804
    @aidanlee8804 3 года назад +2

    This is so useful. I’ve been having this exact problem recently. I keep the cross collar and can recover most of the time, but other times before you know it they’re round the back and I turtle up instead of this. Thank you!

    • @bzglick
      @bzglick  3 года назад

      Great to hear - thank you!

  • @danielfloyd396
    @danielfloyd396 3 года назад +1

    excellent, this really helped my game. thanks for the vid Professor!

    • @bzglick
      @bzglick  3 года назад +1

      great to hear 👊🏼

  • @ArielTabak
    @ArielTabak 3 года назад +2

    really well explained!

    • @bzglick
      @bzglick  3 года назад

      🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @marcelmutsaarts6058
    @marcelmutsaarts6058 3 года назад

    Thx again Brian. Really nice entry👌

    • @bzglick
      @bzglick  3 года назад +1

      Any time - appreciate your watching :)

  • @MrUnderrated
    @MrUnderrated 3 года назад +1

    Brian I am loving this content! A trouble I am having outside of guard retaining is connecting gi passes. Do you believe in connecting loose passes such as torreando with tight passing such as over-unders? What do you find most effective and what do you think modern day gi competition lacks or doesn't focus on enough such as half-guard which seems played very little across the board. sorry for the loaded question just really enjoy your insight!

    • @bzglick
      @bzglick  3 года назад +2

      Thanks :) One thing that people often struggle with concerning guard passing is the idea that passing is a *process* rather than a single event. Great passers always chain techniques together in order to account for an ever-changing terrain (guard defenses, retention and counter-attacks). Connecting passes in a way that includes various approaches - loose and tight, advance and retreat, high and low - tends to produce the best results across levels because its both adaptive and disruptive. This doesn't cover it all, but it's a start. We'll talk more about it soon :)

  • @Lyte23
    @Lyte23 3 года назад +1

    Hi coach loving all the content. My hamstrings are not super flexible so I can't invert and get my legs over my body. Do you have any tips for people like me?

    • @bzglick
      @bzglick  3 года назад

      Thanks. Yes - one thing you can work on right away is the shoulder roll to recover guard from turtle. It isn't technically an inversion but it uses a similar skill to fold the body. There are also a few drills you can do to develop the *feel* for the inversion even if you're not 100% there yet, to get you acclimated to the idea of the movement as your body catches up. We'll cover them soon. 😉

  • @rickb_NYC
    @rickb_NYC 3 года назад +1

    Great if you can do it. Inversion is the only movement I can think of in jiu jitsu that requires physicality beyond the capability of many people, me for one. Watching people with a strong inversion game is sort of like watching people dunk basketballs. Fortunately, it is skill you can work around.

    • @bzglick
      @bzglick  3 года назад

      :) as with many things in jiu-jitsu, there are definitely workarounds and alternatives. We'll cover some ways to develop your inversion skills in a future video set for sure

  • @armandberkut6021
    @armandberkut6021 3 года назад +1

    Get Inverted by all means ; Correcting your opponent when they make mistakes like these is Bad Manners ! LOL