Wednesday 30 October 2013

Classes 86 & 87…



I double-banked two classes in one session today. I knew this would be hard on my body, but I figured if I’m going to do this and fulfill my ambition to compete next year, then a bit of altitude training in terms of body fatigue was no bad thing. And fatiguing it bloody well was…

The first was a beginners class in which we focused on securing a choke from the side with the opponent turtled and the aggressor in side control. This went something like this:
i) Reach over the shoulder of the opponent with your furthest hand and loosen his collar, then thread the nearest hand over his shoulder and underneath his neck, confirming the collar grip with your thumb deep into his collar at his carotid and four fingers outside.
ii) With your non-choking hand, grip his hand nearest you and stuff it between his legs.
iii) Kick your nearest-to-opponent leg out, then walk you other leg out and move your other leg out next. This tightens the choke until the opponent taps.

The defence from this sees the opponent bring his hands up to his neck to prevent the opponent confirming the choke grip.

The counter to this sees you turn 90 degrees from your opponent into a sort of side control and swim your hand near his head underneath to grab his furthest knee and your hand furthest away over to control his foot. With active toes you then drive into him, keeping control of the knee and the foot until you have secured your own knee closest to his hip to prevent him recovering guard. Then drive into him and pancake him out.

The second class was mainly sparring with good white belts or coloured belts.

We did start off with one warm-up drill for passing half-guard. In this, the trapped man:
i) Stood on the trapped leg.
ii) Stood on the non-trapped leg.
iii) Slid the trapped leg through onto the floor
iv) Turned the trapped leg 90 degrees so it is free.
v) Drive into the opponent.

It was then all sparring. I did OK against the other white belts and defended OK, then survived against a very tired blue belt. I also got to spar with a purple belt, who was astonishingly fluid. I lost count of the number of times he passed me or could have tapped me in a five-minute round.

But two classes, one after the other, is a sort of victory. And the plan is this is how I now train at BJJ at least once a week. It’s a plan, Stan.


Things to remember: Choke from side, defending the choke, the drill for escaping half-guard.

Saturday 26 October 2013

Grading...


My first BJJ grading and I went in with no expectations of getting anything. I also didn't know what the format was so I arrived early, warmed up and got my head in the right place.

But the grading was a presentation ceremony rather than the type of grading I'm used to, where you are tested then get the results at a later date. There was then an open mat session after the grading and the chance to roll with new people.

It was a very energising experience. Several of my friends who've really grafted changed belt colours and went from white to blue, while several senior belts I know were also promoted to the next colour up or got stripes.

I went in genuinely expecting nothing so I was delighted to get not one but two stripes on my white belt. My teacher did, however, tell me that I needed to get to more of the intermediate classes because, if I want to move up and get my blue belt, then he needs to see me spar, which is something we don't do in the beginner's classes.

Fortunately, I'm already on the case with this and I'm currently working out a new timetable to fit around my other commitments to ensure this happens. I'm also looking at competing in a few events next year, too, to make me really focus on my game.

It's taken me 84 classes over 22 months to get here. I need to do double that amount of classes in the next year alone to get to where I want to be. Time to commit properly methinks...

Class 85...


Another beginner's class focusing on defending knee on belly.

The key points to this were to bridge while using the nearest hand to push the knee and hip escape to the side. The hip escape, however, turns into a scissor escape as your bottom leg kicks under you body and your top leg spins over so you end up in the position for a single leg takedown as you drive into the opponent.

There was a variation of defending a choke from this position, which involved the opponent securing a grip on your collar and you bringing your hand to your ear so your elbow can apply pressure on his elbow.

I didn't get all the details of this variation but the hand position is similar to a lock I use in another martial art so I'll make a point of remembering this – and using it regularly as I struggle defending against chokes.

LESSON FROM TODAY: Scissor kick of legs to go into single leg takedown is key move. Allows you to switch from defence into attack. The choke defence allowing you to attack the elbow joint is useful.

Friday 18 October 2013

Classes 83 & 84…


Two beginners classes this week and some good stuff at both. Also, on the exercise front, I’m no longer quite so awful at doing press-ups and can bang 20-30 out without worrying too much. It’s progress. Of sorts.

In the first class, we worked on getting the armbar from side control. The first involved prising the opponent’s arm from his body, then ensuring your legs are in position to fall back while taking the opponent’s arm with you. Key points here are being close to the opponent before dropping back and extending the hips to get the tap, and holding the opponent’s trouser leg so he can’t spin out.

The variation on this armbar is when the opponent defends. This sees you attack the same arm of the opponent but spin around and move to the opponent’s other side in three steps. Then, with your outside leg under his body and you inside leg over his head, attack the other arm that is caught up in the mix, before dropping back to secure the tap.

The third variation is a horrible neck choke. This sees the opponent defend the second armbar by holding onto his belt. An answer to this is to scoop the hand holding the trousers inside the elbow of the opponent’s grabbing-belt arm and also grab his belt with your palm facing up. You snake your other hand around his neck and grab his collar with four fingers out. Then bring your knee into play and apply pressure by pressing your knee against the back of his neck and pulling your hands in.

In the second class, it was all work about avoiding your opponent’s guard and we did various exercises about standing passes and preventing passes, preventing versus turtling or recovering guard from side control, and preventing versus turtling or recovering guard from north-south. Key points here are to control the escaping man by wedging your elbow to cut off one of his escape routes, and to trap one of the opponent’s arms using a kimura grip.

LESSON FROM TODAY: Bridge explosively to create the space to turtle or recover guard; and stay close to your work when applying armlocks.

Thursday 10 October 2013

Class 82...



A special seminar today with Jackson Souza, a multiple BJJ championship winner and one of the best brown belts in the world, who’s been teaching at our school for about a year and a half while living in London, competing in Europe and beyond, and adding more titles to his already impressive CV.

You’d expect a man nicknamed ‘The Beast’ to be quite a fearsome prospect, but he’s always positive, humble, upbeat, encouraging and kind, factors that also make him a fantastic teacher.

The three-hour session whizzed by and, even though some of the techniques were above my skill level, I managed to catch some of the basics involved.

We had 90 minutes of no-gi, then had 90 minutes of gi, and we spent most of that time working on defensive posture, escapes and sweeps from half-guard.

The starting position for the man on the bottom in half-guard was always the same: driving in with butterflies underneath and my left hand cross-collar gripping and my right hand grabbing the opponent’s left hand; then it’s up on one hip (the right in my case) with my left arm grabbing the opponent’s collar and my left knee across his chest, with my left foot hooking under his armpit and my left arm inside my knee to add stability to this defensive frame. My right hand is cupping the back of his left elbow/bicep to prevent him getting control of my right hand or moving in for head control, and my right foot is controlling his right leg in a sort of loose half-guard.

From this starting position there was then a back-climb as the man on the bottom tried a butterfly sweep by raising the legs and clasping the hand behind the opponent’s back and pulling him in, but instead using it to come to the side and secure a position at the side. The variations from here that I can remember went something like this:

i) From side position, control his right arm and drag him backwards and over you
 so you end up on top.
ii) From side position, do a knee grab with your hand and drive into him and over him into side control.
iii) From side position, he extends his leg to leg to avoid the knee grab, so hook under his extended leg with your right arm and roll him under you so you come out on top. 


There was also this variation from the initial butterfly sweep attempt:
iv) The opponent tries to prevent the sweep and secure his base by standing, so hip escape to the side and swim underneath his left leg with your right arm and trap it. At the same time, cross over your right leg so it’s on top of your left leg hook at the back of his leg and your legs form an ‘x’ around his right leg. Then extend your legs and body length to take his balance and drop him backwards or forward.

There’s lots of information I’ve forgotten here but some of it may resurface when I’m in those positions again. For example, there was a really cool sweep that involved starting off on one hip and getting both knees under the opponent’s body, then dropping to your back, before hip escaping onto the opposite hip to throw the opponent over your head as you follow him through and end up in side control. There were also details about controlling the opponent’s hands using sleeve grips on the gi and stuffing the hand so the opponent can’t post out.

But it was a great three hours. So thank-you. Jackson, and come back soon!

LESSON FROM TODAY: Defensive position from half-guard and staying on one hip with feet hooks, arm underhook and knee and hand position; the sweeps involving you off-balancing an opponent by taking him over you; the x-guard and arm underhook stretch to off-balance a standing opponent.

Monday 7 October 2013

Class 81...

An open mat session and a bit of sparring, both gi and no-gi, and some basics drilled thanks to a very helpful blue belt, who also showed me a very nifty escape from knee on belly.

This escape involved hip-escaping and driving your high knee between the opponent's legs then catching the top of your knee with both hands and rolling backward so the opponent's trapped knee (and the rest of him) comes with you and you end up in mount or, at worst, half-guard.

I'm going to have a play with this because it's quite useful. I also need to spot the threat of collar chokes much earlier as I'm falling for a few of these at the moment.

LESSON FROM TODAY: Play with the knee on belly escape and work on a strategy to avoid collar chokes.

Wednesday 2 October 2013

Classes 79 & 80...

Two beginners classes covering more of the basic stuff I need to absorb.

In the first, we worked on a couple of hip escape techniques from on the bottom in side control. The first of these involved pushing the opponent's chest to create the space to hip escape, then bringing a knee across and inserting a hook. The second involved hip escaping by driving your forearm under the opponent's throat, then pushing off to create distance and grabbing the free hand of the opponent to prevent him passing to side.

We then did some work on defending the hip escape from on the top in side mount. The first point was to keep tight and deny the opponent space to work. Then it was a matter of crossing your hands and placing one hand on the knee of the opponent to prevent him inserting it into your chest and using the other hand to drive into his armpit to flatten him out and prevent him hip escaping.

In the second class we did some work on the scissor sweep from the bottom, starting out in closed guard. We then did some work on leg triangle set-ups. Hip escaping and using hand grips to break down the opponent's posture was also heavily emphasised here.

LESSON FROM TODAY: Hip escaping, hip escaping, hip escaping... And closing down space to prevent the opponent hip escaping, too.