Agreed 100%. I'm a 2nd degree Jiu Jitsu black belt with 18 years in BJJ, 14 years freestyle Karate and 28 years in Muay Thai (overlapping periods totalling 32 years to date) and I've coached MMA for around 9 years, and I can tell you from experience that BJJ is even easier when the other guy is intent on hitting you. Let me also say - as an experienced BJJ practitioner - that your page is by far the one I find most useful among all the information on RUclips. Why? For me it's your wrestlers' viewpoint on BJJ and the wrestling technique that BJJ largely lacks. So keep up the great content. Guys, be respectful - you don't have to agree with everything, but Brian is inviting you all into his house and going to the effort of preparing the best meal he can every day. Let's bring back the respect that Fighting Arts and sports are so very lacking these days. Thanks for what you do Coach. Dean from Sydney Oz.
Steve MacInnis Hi Mate. You're right, you don't see it much, but it is used now and then. In my opinion, so many guys - even at the level of UFC competition - only learn enough BJJ to either get a position for ground and pound, or to try and stand back up. With the exception of guys like Demian Maia (hope I spelled that right). And the gift wrap is way under utilised. It's also not that hard to escape though - people just tend to panic when faced with it. Demian is a great example of BJJ in MMA. Like any fighting art, the way you train it is far more important that what style it is - case in point Lyoto Machida, Randy Couture, Matt Hughes. It's been a bit of a peeve of mine, that at top level competition, the men even seem to forget that they can still strike from the bottom to set up attacks and escapes. The women do this beautifully - see Rousey v Tate for example. An issue also, is how MMA fighters tend to train. In my experience, they tend to prepare by doing a BBJ session, a Boxing session, a Thai Boxing session, etc., but without modifying them for an MMA situation. For example, their BJJ sessions should be based around a striking opponent - not just a plain BJJ session. Does that make sense? Everything they do should be trained with an MMA focus. But MMA is an ever evolving beast, as is BJJ. BJJ today is very different from when Royce stepped into the octagon in UFC 1. I think what it comes down to, is that the fighters' dominant method is always what they will revert to under pressure or excitement until they are equally comfortable in all aspects of MMA. And let's be honest, that is a rare competitor indeed. Happy training Mate! I hope I didn't ramble too much.
Steve MacInnis I thought it's just because it's too hard to get against a trained person, kind of like tapping someone out with omoplata. How often do you get gift wrap on blue belt or above?
Was not going to watch until I read your endorsement and you qualifications so thank you. If you’re in Seattle area, please stop by; will be nice to learn from such a veteran.
Thanks for being the coach putting in the mouth guard so as to eat a couple punches to prove a point...!!! Haters gonna hate. The rest of us appreciate it! Thank you for the constant flow of good information.
"Every Jiujitsu black belt becomes white belt when punched in the face." - Rickson Gracie This is the best grappling coach on RUclips with the best grappling tutorials. And he's very humble.
Rick Workman because when you elbow you have to lower your upper body even closer to your opponent. You’ll definitely save your knuckles, but you’re also far more likely to get tied up. However, when you sit up higher to punch, you’re also more subject to losing control when your opponent lifts his hips. Pros and cons to everything you do. You just have to be aware so you’ll have the advantage of foresight and how to shut down their defenses.
I never thought of it this way, but it makes sense when someone is trying to throw a punch they can't be controlling you that well as we do in a scenario where they aren't punching and controlling with the hands, just subscribed.
Universal Kombat".............universal, I'm not sure how you are meaning to come across and I know boards it's hard to communicate effectively, but I was just trying to tell the guy thanks and what he was saying made sense, as I was one of the people who had some doubts about whether my Jiu Jitsu was directly applicable to a real world street brawl, so this made me feel better about it......hopefully makes sense.
yes true you need all limbs to control a trained opponent the reason its hard for people to get out in mma is because of fatigue and most of the time they already are rocked before they even hit the ground
Perfectly answered what I was thinking seeing the previous video. "Hmm the top guy could throw punches, but he'd quickly be off balance and the escape would be on its way, I wonder, probably totally viable escape but I'd like to see it" Thank you for making it extra clear :)
I think that it is good when the haters express their criticism. Some of your best videos are responses to criticism. So to the haters keep it up. To Brain, keep proving them wrong.
Not really the same thing but our professor has always said, "Everytime you get hit your Jiu-Jitsu gets worse so protect yourself from getting hit or get better at Jiu-Jitsu."
Ive fought MMA as a heavyweight an one thing us certain. You have to be calm. Yes hes totally right the more you throw the more you're off balance an your opponent has opportunity to escape. Its the same in MMA position before submission. Even if that submission it do to strikes. You have to have good position an agility to transition when your opponent moves when he moves you move. You dont just swing away you pick your shots while using control. Props Brian. Like all you videos good detail keep it up brotha.
What if’s will always come. What if the bottom man is better at double under escape than the top man is at holding mount? It never ends. The more you know the better prepared you are when opportunity knocks. Thanks for the comments! 👍
Simply the best Coach Brian. Love all your work, it has by far helped me the most practically and holistically. Your systematic easy to digest breakdowns are the best.
Great explanation and great demonstration. what people need to understand for that to actually be effective in a real fight they need to be training for a long time competitively once or twice a week for a few months is not going to get you anything you can use in real life. The stuff works but it's a big commitment.
Excellent and Extremely Valid Points !! GREAT JOB MAN !!! KEEP UP THE GREAT VIDS. You're a credit and valuable part of the overall Martial Arts Community. Most people don't even experience or experiment with Live Resistance training not to mention training that includes Realistic movements and reactions. Every person who really takes Martial Arts, self defense, MMA, etc. Seriously, MUST do Live, Realistic reaction and movement training in order to really Learn for themselves what works and doesn't work for them. Good stuff Brotha. ....
I tell my kids all the time about this position. The shrimp is one of the most affected escapes in JJ. It's the lighter weights that usually have the most affecting shrimping techniques because they are always dealing with the heavyweights in class. It's the heavyweights that usually get KO'ed here because they are so used to being on top they don't have feel for it. They don't understand how important the shrimp is. Having said all of this, it's a lot like anything else, conceptionally you understand it, but there is feel and timing of it that takes a long time to figure out. Combat BJJ has shown some flaws in sport BJJ artists where they work so much on the inverted Leck Lock game, that those beginning white belt techniques start disappearing from the repertoire and their not thinking about the basics to alleviate the pressure of a top mount attack. They litterally forget the basics and clam up when the blows start coming down.
I am one of your amateurs (lover). I am old, don't compete, train rarely (all my coaching is from youtube). Love your videos and wanted to tell you that this escape should work for my 10 yr old escaping my 14 yr old. Neither trains except for what they learn from me. Big size difference means bridge is not enough!
The answer is simple.... It's called commit! He committed to the back door as soon as the shrimping to guard was blocked... At the same time still being viable by as a guard retention if the back door was blocked. Keep it up guys
A very good example of this idea is Demian Maia trapping the far arm from the bottom of half guard. It baits a punch from the near arm, allowing Maia to get an underhook and improve his position.
This is a great example of why you dont punch and you should always maintain your close position and never posture up and if you are going to strike you should use elbows along with forearm control on the neck.Now if the rules were to allow head butt strikes this would be a very different outcome and it would show how dangerous being mounted would be but head butt strikes are not allowed anywhere expect in a street fight.
Blows my mind hearing people speak so confidently about something they have zero experience in. Brilliant display of jiu jitsu in a terrible real life example. Don’t get mounted, you’re gonna have a bad time lol
wyzr 12358 sure if you are in mounted position your striking power seriously decreased because of gravity, otherwise if you are in top of the mount you get extra leverage from gravity and the mat itself.
Not everyone is looking to throw a punch that close in range. We have elbow's that are much more devastating and being a smaller fighter our base is tighter. But yes throwing punches does offset your position and make it easier to escape from the bottom.
Thanks , it's very instructive . You're right, sometimes it's important to answer to idiot , because it help each personn afraid of martial art to understand the Principles of it . If you don't make it for you make it for the truth.
What about just turning over to your hands and knees and as they try to take your back and choke you ,just shaking them off as you stand up. Its easy i also strike with my hands down and block punches with my chin. Occasionly i will put my leg into my opponents ashi garami and attack their wrist with my heal
Agreed. It's much easier to pull off BJJ techniques against someone who is striking than someone who is totally focused on grappling. That's not to say there aren't huge risks in that situation, and different risks, but most of your escapes, sweeps and submissions are more accessible from positions where your opponent is able to strike than when they are killing space and actively blocking techniques. People outside of jiujitsu, and even some within jiujitsu, get that wrong all the time. I do feel like some people, like myself, are over-reliant on certain positions like deep half, which seems to be suboptimal at MMA/SD at best, although I try not to do the deep half and hang out approach that a lot of guys like.
On a tarmac road you may not have the same success as the friction will be far greater and more painful , I'm not a hater , I respect this sport I'm from a boxing background
TeachMeGrappling Coach Brian hell yes. And also, I don’t usually go out naked, so I’m gonna have a shirt on at least, and probably a coat up here in the north.
Agree that escaping from a puncher may be easier but your technique may only work 10% of the time. The BJJ guy was going maybe 70-80% but the puncher was only going 30-40%. Put most punchers in that same position and they will go high mount making your bumping ineffective. You start covering up and a puncher will hand trap with one hand and doing the beat-down with the other hand. Good tip though.
Punching on the ground is not easy task as we can see in the UFC cage where many ground masters fight, So. what I want to know is How to punch on the ground.from your point of view, Thanks for advice,
Okay I understand what you're saying however in that scenario he did not try to use one of his hands to hold your wrist and still try to hit you he just hit you with both hands what would you do if he try to control you with one hand hit you the other but you still try to exit through the back
I would love to practice that way from time to time but I'm afraid to ask to my professor...and I don't want to go to MMA class, but I do would love to practice this things
I think some people may be misunderstanding that you are allowing him to strike before you commence these escapes. And not understanding that you could actually move as soon as he attempts to strike. Cool videos though 🤙
@6:15 the top guy's left glove is flush against the side of the bottom guy's head above his ear. There are many other times when the side and back of the head are exposed. Even one good shot there at full speed and everything changes.
Martial arts has changed a lot ! , I started Tae kwon do in 1978 . Then Was wild ,so street fights showed me , Wrestlers can get a takedown , and I was a junior high and high school wrestler , Then I went in the job corps and got on the boxing team , Met with cambodians escaping the KMER ROUGE , They knew a nasty form of kickboxing , That is similar but different from Muay Thai , They would lace their fingers behind your head , make you fall with them on their knee , They showed me stiff legged kicks , Which was so different from Taikwondo , During this , I always thought , There will be a day when a guy could wrestle box and Kick , Then in the Days of Bennie the Jet , We all Thought Bennie was it ,the new final frontier , Then Bennie fought Muay thai ,And Felipe Garcia was from where I wass in denver , World champion ISKA .Also K1. Then after that , Gracies and shamrock and all those guys with , Catch Wrestling , and that Japanese arena many of them fought in Japan , We didn't know what Judo or jiujitsu was ., Then the Gracies came out with it , I will garuntee , we thought ,,, full contact was " It" and Bennie the Jet " Was It" And The graicies" Catch wrestling , The Japanese thing , I forgot . was it All of this will continue to change , I have also been around people that did finger locks [Japanese ] And they could basicly In somewhat of a artfull way , Simply ... Get your fingers of one hand separated with two of their hands , Your fingers would be broke if you continued , This was just Practice and not serious , So IDK know how it would pan out , But the What If ? And Nay sayers . Are always good . Because .... I knew , When I was 15 or 16 JV wrestler at Peninsula High , I took down Karate people in real fights , And everyoen learned if you High kick in a fight , They could grab youir leg and get you down , My point is ,The What if is good . And nay sayers are good . When you guys are young get in their and try it ! See what happens , I was in the beggining , We learned the hard way . DO NOT , Duck like a boxer when you kick box , We saw some brutal KOs , and Holding a leg and kicking could result in them turning their knee into your leg and You kick your leg into their knee . And yor legg is done . So Many changes and lesson s
...if ur a dude that strictly trains grappling and has never sparred in a striking scenario...as Mike tyson once said "everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face." If u get lit up, your mind goes blank and you'll strictly fight on instincts/adrenaline. Everyone should train a little boxing/striking imo
I don’t think we should be learning or teaching moves that only work on beginners. Why not do the moves that work on the champions, then you know it will work on everyone else. My philosophy
If you watch the champions of MMA they are not using fancy, complicated moves. They do the basics at a high level. For example, when mounted, they do the hip escape and not the trap and roll.
Agreed 100%. I'm a 2nd degree Jiu Jitsu black belt with 18 years in BJJ, 14 years freestyle Karate and 28 years in Muay Thai (overlapping periods totalling 32 years to date) and I've coached MMA for around 9 years, and I can tell you from experience that BJJ is even easier when the other guy is intent on hitting you. Let me also say - as an experienced BJJ practitioner - that your page is by far the one I find most useful among all the information on RUclips. Why? For me it's your wrestlers' viewpoint on BJJ and the wrestling technique that BJJ largely lacks. So keep up the great content. Guys, be respectful - you don't have to agree with everything, but Brian is inviting you all into his house and going to the effort of preparing the best meal he can every day. Let's bring back the respect that Fighting Arts and sports are so very lacking these days. Thanks for what you do Coach. Dean from Sydney Oz.
Steve MacInnis Hi Mate. You're right, you don't see it much, but it is used now and then. In my opinion, so many guys - even at the level of UFC competition - only learn enough BJJ to either get a position for ground and pound, or to try and stand back up. With the exception of guys like Demian Maia (hope I spelled that right). And the gift wrap is way under utilised. It's also not that hard to escape though - people just tend to panic when faced with it. Demian is a great example of BJJ in MMA. Like any fighting art, the way you train it is far more important that what style it is - case in point Lyoto Machida, Randy Couture, Matt Hughes. It's been a bit of a peeve of mine, that at top level competition, the men even seem to forget that they can still strike from the bottom to set up attacks and escapes. The women do this beautifully - see Rousey v Tate for example. An issue also, is how MMA fighters tend to train. In my experience, they tend to prepare by doing a BBJ session, a Boxing session, a Thai Boxing session, etc., but without modifying them for an MMA situation. For example, their BJJ sessions should be based around a striking opponent - not just a plain BJJ session. Does that make sense? Everything they do should be trained with an MMA focus. But MMA is an ever evolving beast, as is BJJ. BJJ today is very different from when Royce stepped into the octagon in UFC 1. I think what it comes down to, is that the fighters' dominant method is always what they will revert to under pressure or excitement until they are equally comfortable in all aspects of MMA. And let's be honest, that is a rare competitor indeed. Happy training Mate! I hope I didn't ramble too much.
Steve MacInnis I thought it's just because it's too hard to get against a trained person, kind of like tapping someone out with omoplata. How often do you get gift wrap on blue belt or above?
@Steve MacInnis ruclips.net/video/voi3t1d2dO8/видео.html rickson uses the gift wrap towards the end of the fight.
Was not going to watch until I read your endorsement and you qualifications so thank you. If you’re in Seattle area, please stop by; will be nice to learn from such a veteran.
It makes sense, its hard enough controlling someone when you're using your arms to hold them down and use your weight properly.
"Jiu jitsu in MMA is still the same, just faster" Daniel Cormier. The same escapes work, you just cant be too slow in the movement
Thanks for being the coach putting in the mouth guard so as to eat a couple punches to prove a point...!!! Haters gonna hate. The rest of us appreciate it! Thank you for the constant flow of good information.
"Every Jiujitsu black belt becomes white belt when punched in the face." - Rickson Gracie
This is the best grappling coach on RUclips with the best grappling tutorials. And he's very humble.
This was by far the best défense of Jiu Jitsu I’ve ever seen.
Haters? I can't believe you have haters. I never seen you be anything but humble and informative.
Right on - I’m just a GJJ blue belt, but we put the gloves on all the time. Punching definitely provides openings & sacrifices the striker’s base.
Rick Workman because when you elbow you have to lower your upper body even closer to your opponent.
You’ll definitely save your knuckles, but you’re also far more likely to get tied up.
However, when you sit up higher to punch, you’re also more subject to losing control when your opponent lifts his hips.
Pros and cons to everything you do.
You just have to be aware so you’ll have the advantage of foresight and how to shut down their defenses.
I never thought of it this way, but it makes sense when someone is trying to throw a punch they can't be controlling you that well as we do in a scenario where they aren't punching and controlling with the hands, just subscribed.
Universal Kombat".............universal, I'm not sure how you are meaning to come across and I know boards it's hard to communicate effectively, but I was just trying to tell the guy thanks and what he was saying made sense, as I was one of the people who had some doubts about whether my Jiu Jitsu was directly applicable to a real world street brawl, so this made me feel better about it......hopefully makes sense.
Thanks universal. I would have to agree, I was a doubter myself but everything he was saying made perfect sense. God bless!
yes true you need all limbs to control a trained opponent the reason its hard for people to get out in mma is because of fatigue and most of the time they already are rocked before they even hit the ground
Perfectly answered what I was thinking seeing the previous video. "Hmm the top guy could throw punches, but he'd quickly be off balance and the escape would be on its way, I wonder, probably totally viable escape but I'd like to see it"
Thank you for making it extra clear :)
I think that it is good when the haters express their criticism. Some of your best videos are responses to criticism.
So to the haters keep it up. To Brain, keep proving them wrong.
Very practical approach. You're a great teacher with a realistic approach. Much better than the pure sports/gi based nonsense.
There's a place for both. Most guys who teach/compete in sports BJJ in the gi don't profess to be masters of MMA/self-defense.
7:01, yes you CAN slow the video down on RUclips. RUclips settings allow you to adjust the playback speed faster or slower by 25% increments.
Not really the same thing but our professor has always said, "Everytime you get hit your Jiu-Jitsu gets worse so protect yourself from getting hit or get better at Jiu-Jitsu."
F the haters! Love your videos! Very articulate and detailed oriented and it has tightened up my game!!
Don't hate the haters bro. Remember grappling exists by challenging status quo. Healthy skepticism not blind faith.
Ive fought MMA as a heavyweight an one thing us certain. You have to be calm. Yes hes totally right the more you throw the more you're off balance an your opponent has opportunity to escape. Its the same in MMA position before submission. Even if that submission it do to strikes. You have to have good position an agility to transition when your opponent moves when he moves you move. You dont just swing away you pick your shots while using control.
Props Brian. Like all you videos good detail keep it up brotha.
What if’s will always come. What if the bottom man is better at double under escape than the top man is at holding mount? It never ends. The more you know the better prepared you are when opportunity knocks. Thanks for the comments! 👍
Simply the best Coach Brian. Love all your work, it has by far helped me the most practically and holistically. Your systematic easy to digest breakdowns are the best.
Great explanation and great demonstration. what people need to understand for that to actually be effective in a real fight they need to be training for a long time competitively once or twice a week for a few months is not going to get you anything you can use in real life. The stuff works but it's a big commitment.
Yup!
Man I love you’re channel.
That was a great example of real world application.
I fuckin love this video man. People who don't train grappling don't know its power.
Excellent and Extremely Valid Points !! GREAT JOB MAN !!! KEEP UP THE GREAT VIDS. You're a credit and valuable part of the overall Martial Arts Community.
Most people don't even experience or experiment with Live Resistance training not to mention training that includes Realistic movements and reactions. Every person who really takes Martial Arts, self defense, MMA, etc. Seriously, MUST do Live, Realistic reaction and movement training in order to really Learn for themselves what works and doesn't work for them.
Good stuff Brotha. ....
most underrated martial arts channel "how to" on youtube
Those demos were awesome.
Depends on the position.
I tell my kids all the time about this position. The shrimp is one of the most affected escapes in JJ. It's the lighter weights that usually have the most affecting shrimping techniques because they are always dealing with the heavyweights in class. It's the heavyweights that usually get KO'ed here because they are so used to being on top they don't have feel for it. They don't understand how important the shrimp is. Having said all of this, it's a lot like anything else, conceptionally you understand it, but there is feel and timing of it that takes a long time to figure out. Combat BJJ has shown some flaws in sport BJJ artists where they work so much on the inverted Leck Lock game, that those beginning white belt techniques start disappearing from the repertoire and their not thinking about the basics to alleviate the pressure of a top mount attack. They litterally forget the basics and clam up when the blows start coming down.
I am one of your amateurs (lover). I am old, don't compete, train rarely (all my coaching is from youtube). Love your videos and wanted to tell you that this escape should work for my 10 yr old escaping my 14 yr old. Neither trains except for what they learn from me. Big size difference means bridge is not enough!
The answer is simple.... It's called commit! He committed to the back door as soon as the shrimping to guard was blocked... At the same time still being viable by as a guard retention if the back door was blocked. Keep it up guys
I like what you are teaching.
A very good example of this idea is Demian Maia trapping the far arm from the bottom of half guard. It baits a punch from the near arm, allowing Maia to get an underhook and improve his position.
Thanks Brian for all the things you share !
This is a great example of why you dont punch and you should always maintain your close position and never posture up and if you are going to strike you should use elbows along with forearm control on the neck.Now if the rules were to allow head butt strikes this would be a very different outcome and it would show how dangerous being mounted would be but head butt strikes are not allowed anywhere expect in a street fight.
Blows my mind hearing people speak so confidently about something they have zero experience in. Brilliant display of jiu jitsu in a terrible real life example. Don’t get mounted, you’re gonna have a bad time lol
wyzr 12358 sure if you are in mounted position your striking power seriously decreased because of gravity, otherwise if you are in top of the mount you get extra leverage from gravity and the mat itself.
@@kwarijanuar6044 Not because of gravity, but because of being unable to use your whole body as a spring.
7:01 We can slow it down, the three dots at the top right of the video has a "Playback Speed" option
Very informative, thank you! You can slowmo RUclips by the way by adjusting play speed in settings.
Sorry Brian I totally missed the lesson because it was so funny and i can really relate to the exhaustion level John was in. 😂 Great video brother
Great work I would rather go top arm escape controlling ankle with bottom hand. One of my favourite escapes !
That wounded gazelle is a lion to the layperson...
🦁
Not everyone is looking to throw a punch that close in range. We have elbow's that are much more devastating and being a smaller fighter our base is tighter. But yes throwing punches does offset your position and make it easier to escape from the bottom.
Thanks for your work JOHN!
Coach Brian rules !!!
The american grapplin is very good.... I remember of Dan Henderson because I'm your fan... sorry for not speaking English very well....oss
i too, but i think it is not a problem to follow this channel , the SPORT is democratic
Thank you very clear and nice presentation
Nicely explained.
Fantastic coach.... I learn very with you....thanks oss
Vitor needed this against Chris in UFC
Great video ! Greetings from the guys from Mayriver Bjj Bluffton SC
Beautiful drills really impressed
Great Job coach Brian! very well put :) Sometimes I wish YT had that Reddit feature, were you had to put your belt level beside your username :)
Great video! They hate you 'cause they ain't you!
Lol James Franco the best
Love this channel.
Thanks , it's very instructive . You're right, sometimes it's important to answer to idiot , because it help each personn afraid of martial art to understand the Principles of it . If you don't make it for you make it for the truth.
What about just turning over to your hands and knees and as they try to take your back and choke you ,just shaking them off as you stand up. Its easy i also strike with my hands down and block punches with my chin. Occasionly i will put my leg into my opponents ashi garami and attack their wrist with my heal
Lmao!
5:04 I don’t train BJJ but I did it to my friend once sparring. Pinned his arms down and (lightly) slapped him silly.
Youre amazing coach
Once again nice stuff i like your videos alot they helped me many times thank you greeting from Austria!
Great video as always!
Agreed. It's much easier to pull off BJJ techniques against someone who is striking than someone who is totally focused on grappling. That's not to say there aren't huge risks in that situation, and different risks, but most of your escapes, sweeps and submissions are more accessible from positions where your opponent is able to strike than when they are killing space and actively blocking techniques. People outside of jiujitsu, and even some within jiujitsu, get that wrong all the time. I do feel like some people, like myself, are over-reliant on certain positions like deep half, which seems to be suboptimal at MMA/SD at best, although I try not to do the deep half and hang out approach that a lot of guys like.
Smart man! 👍
On a tarmac road you may not have the same success as the friction will be far greater and more painful , I'm not a hater , I respect this sport I'm from a boxing background
I understand you. Sure it’s not peaches and cream but neither is being mounted in the first place. The alternative to being scuffed up is worse. 👍
TeachMeGrappling Coach Brian hell yes. And also, I don’t usually go out naked, so I’m gonna have a shirt on at least, and probably a coat up here in the north.
Agree that escaping from a puncher may be easier but your technique may only work 10% of the time. The BJJ guy was going maybe 70-80% but the puncher was only going 30-40%. Put most punchers in that same position and they will go high mount making your bumping ineffective. You start covering up and a puncher will hand trap with one hand and doing the beat-down with the other hand. Good tip though.
Great content.
wounded gazelle...love it :)
Challenge the haters, call them out coach.
Awesome coach!
I use the double under as my go to in bjj
Always great, great, great !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
great explanation thank you
Get 'em, Coach!
Great channel bro, wish I would have found you sooner, subbed!
Punching on the ground is not easy task as we can see in the UFC cage where many ground masters fight,
So. what I want to know is How to punch on the ground.from your point of view,
Thanks for advice,
really good mma channel
Great job
I have 1000 million years training jiu jitsu, 2000 amature boxing fights, I wrestled as a child and I invented Muay Thai
Got it I do understand that yes sir 👍
Great video
I'm a White belt and alredy thinks I'm the best.
Same
That's cuz you are . Facts
This is the problem people who practis ju jutsu. They think they are the best🤣
@@pawelczapla8733 I am the best
how could you be the best, when im a white belt that just started and im the best!😂🤣😂🤣🥋
Much respect
Okay I understand what you're saying however in that scenario he did not try to use one of his hands to hold your wrist and still try to hit you he just hit you with both hands what would you do if he try to control you with one hand hit you the other but you still try to exit through the back
I always tot the same, if you punch you cant control so its more easy for the other one to move. Now I can see that I was right
I would love to practice that way from time to time but I'm afraid to ask to my professor...and I don't want to go to MMA class, but I do would love to practice this things
I think some people may be misunderstanding that you are allowing him to strike before you commence these escapes. And not understanding that you could actually move as soon as he attempts to strike. Cool videos though 🤙
Yes exactly! Thank you sir! 🤙
Cool video
Khabib would disagree lol 😂
Khabib doesn’t do bjj.
It's a joke guys
@@brianmccullough8493 Jistin Gaethje in a triangle choke would like to talk to you.
@6:15 the top guy's left glove is flush against the side of the bottom guy's head above his ear. There are many other times when the side and back of the head are exposed. Even one good shot there at full speed and everything changes.
From my experience; guys trying to throw really powerful punches throw their own balance off pretty easily
Where is the gym?
Peterson Grapplers
25583 Avenue Stanford
Valencia, CA 91355
What city is the gym based in?
poor john what did you do to that gazelle???
coach, is your mouthguard custom fit from a professional?? i don't think it is
Martial arts has changed a lot ! , I started Tae kwon do in 1978 . Then Was wild ,so street fights showed me , Wrestlers can get a takedown , and I was a junior high and high school wrestler , Then I went in the job corps and got on the boxing team , Met with cambodians escaping the KMER ROUGE , They knew a nasty form of kickboxing , That is similar but different from Muay Thai , They would lace their fingers behind your head , make you fall with them on their knee , They showed me stiff legged kicks , Which was so different from Taikwondo , During this , I always thought , There will be a day when a guy could wrestle box and Kick , Then in the Days of Bennie the Jet , We all Thought Bennie was it ,the new final frontier , Then Bennie fought Muay thai ,And Felipe Garcia was from where I wass in denver , World champion ISKA .Also K1. Then after that , Gracies and shamrock and all those guys with , Catch Wrestling , and that Japanese arena many of them fought in Japan , We didn't know what Judo or jiujitsu was ., Then the Gracies came out with it , I will garuntee , we thought ,,, full contact was " It" and Bennie the Jet " Was It" And The graicies" Catch wrestling , The Japanese thing , I forgot . was it All of this will continue to change , I have also been around people that did finger locks [Japanese ] And they could basicly In somewhat of a artfull way , Simply ... Get your fingers of one hand separated with two of their hands , Your fingers would be broke if you continued , This was just Practice and not serious , So IDK know how it would pan out , But the What If ? And Nay sayers . Are always good . Because .... I knew , When I was 15 or 16 JV wrestler at Peninsula High , I took down Karate people in real fights , And everyoen learned if you High kick in a fight , They could grab youir leg and get you down , My point is ,The What if is good . And nay sayers are good . When you guys are young get in their and try it ! See what happens , I was in the beggining , We learned the hard way . DO NOT , Duck like a boxer when you kick box , We saw some brutal KOs , and Holding a leg and kicking could result in them turning their knee into your leg and You kick your leg into their knee . And yor legg is done . So Many changes and lesson s
I learned from this.. Thx
interesting video
Awesome!
Khabib was just showing this on RUclips video posted a week or 2 ago with b the "huge honor guys" Jiujitsu dude
Agree 100%👍
very wise
Hey... I'm an insurance salesman. Lol
This just in: RUclips videos have a slow motion option.
...if ur a dude that strictly trains grappling and has never sparred in a striking scenario...as Mike tyson once said "everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face." If u get lit up, your mind goes blank and you'll strictly fight on instincts/adrenaline. Everyone should train a little boxing/striking imo
What on earth did you do to him before the video started? Lol
In all seriousness though, excellent video!
I don’t think we should be learning or teaching moves that only work on beginners. Why not do the moves that work on the champions, then you know it will work on everyone else. My philosophy
If you're in a fight w a trained opponent on the street & moving from dela riva to berembolo, stop him, go to a bar w him & talk about juijutsu.
If you watch the champions of MMA they are not using fancy, complicated moves. They do the basics at a high level. For example, when mounted, they do the hip escape and not the trap and roll.
I'm thinking more about in terms of MMA as a sport
Nice