Monday, August 13, 2012

Sensei Roy Responds to the Critics

Disclaimer:
Roy is a friend of mine, and in real-life, one of the best coaches I've had the luck of coaching me matside at tournaments. In real grappling tournaments when he's being serious he's coached me to plenty of wins at various tournaments while my coaches were on other mats.

But, here, he's being awesome and hilarious:


Some other nice  REAL TMA for your day

Monday's Multimedia Mailbag



I went 6-4 with my picks Saturday night.
Though, I don't really count Henderson's win b/c honestly, he lost that fight fair and square in my opinion.
Ken Stone won't be getting my bet anymore, after seeing him get TKO'd again by a guy I've never heart of.
Shields won but hardly looked impressive insomuch as he couldn't finish Herman despite having his back and mounting him at different intervals after getting early takedowns in at least 2 of the rounds I can recall despite having had a few beers at that point.

Oh, and Dos Santos Vs Cain Velasquez II is booked for the end of the year card on Decembter 29th.

Highlights from Saturday Night:

Frankie Edgar (not quite robbed, but not getting the nod from the judges) vs Ben Henderson

Donald Cerrone rescuing victory from the jaws of defeat with Guillard

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Predict the Hangover: UFC 150 Edition



Ittttt's Time.



Anyhow, for my picks I have Henderson finally putting away Edgar (unlike the last bunch of Edgar fights in the UFC) as he'll pour it on more this time and batter him more convincingly for a 4th or 5th round late stoppage. Henderson has become more and more dominating in each of his UFC appearances. A hard to submit guy with a guillotine has become an animal throwing kness, punches, kicks, takedowns, submission attempts and punches along with the kitchen sink. This fight will be a bloodier, more dominating version of the first.
Edgar wakes up with a hangover via 4th or 5th round TKO.

Those discounting Shields are counting his poor UFC showings at 170 and a bad weight cut against Kampmann. Before that Shields was serving guys like Lawler, Daley, and dominating Dan Henderson double Gin & Tonics for trips to the promised land of Blackout-ville. Herman will likely on instinct finish a takedown following some strikes that get through Shield's porous stand-up defense. Shields will quickly turn the tide and finish Herman. 
Herman wakes up with a hangover via 2nd round submission.

I think as long as Cerrone doesn't turn in a mind numbingly stupid performance like he did against Nate Diaz, he'll tap Guillard in a round or two. Guillard was mounted with little in the way of defense inside the first round of an unheralded newcomer to the UFC in his most recent UFC appearance. He won't escape such a position against Cerrone. Cerrone has one of the best transition to submission games in his weight class (watch his first fight with Ben Henderson for proof among others), and Guillard seems impossible to not avoid dumb lapses in judgment in his fights.
Guillard wakes up with a hangover via 1st round submission.

Jared Hamman wakes up with a hangover after 4 min's of the first round due to taking one too many shots to the chin/face/jaw.

Eiji Mitsuoka is bartending tonight and Nik Lentz is on a bender.
Nik Lentz wakes up with a hangover via split decision.

Bermudez wins against a guy I've never heard of.
Hayden wakes up with a hangover the likes of which you have after your first weekend in college.


Justin Lawrence dishes out a TKO stoppage to the guy with the creeper 'stache.
Creeper-stache aside, Holloway gets TKO'd in the 1st or 2nd round for another freshmen weekend type college hangover.


Okami is serving up penny draft tonight and some guy I've never heard of has a fistful of dollar bills and some girls from his college dorm on his arm that he wants to impress.


Dustin Pague and Ken Stone are also getting tossed some softballs and lightweights which should make them look like the best damn bartenders on the prelims in the business.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Interview Thursday: Ryan Hall


Whilst I was chilling at US Grappling Richmond this past weekend, I was lucky and fortunate enough to look over and realize Ryan Hall was sitting next to me.
I thanked him for his triangle series back in the day as it was the first video I ever saw that got me consistent submissions as a lowly white belt.

At any rate, I figured he should be the centerpiece for Interview Thursday.
He struck me as a completely normal guy, who was surprised I even recognized him.

Oh, and Hector Lombard was injured (so as to explain his dismal performance against the guy he was supposed to buzzsaw in his debut).

Cerrone thinks he has dibs on Pettis after (he assumes) he'll beat Guillard this weekend. Cerrone should beat Guillard unless he turns in a fight like he did against Nate Diaz.

On to Ryan Hall borrowed from Open Mat Radio:

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Quick Links & Thesis Wednesday: Status Quo?



Quick Links for your Wednesday Morning at Work:
Women getting some press-love from the MMA media machine on Showtime

Click HERE to watch the Countdown Show to this weekend's Ben Henderson Vs Frankie Edgar Rematch

I went 6-3 for picks on the UFC on Fox 4. Omigawa, whom I chose against my better judgment, dropped a split decision to Gamburyan. Nam Pham did his usual switcheroo by winning a fight just often enough to keep his UFC job. Ulysses Gomez lived up to his nickname and blew my pick for the 125 lb bout.

Onto the Thesis:
I've posted at various times on different grappling forums, Sherdog, Judoforum, et cetera.
The make-up of the forums range in seriousness depending on the moderators and the style of martial arts allegedly trained by most of the serious commenters. The internet, as always, remains the wild west of martial arts. The last bastion of those who pretend, hide behind anonymity, and say what they think rather
The internet with it's armchair experts can be like walking through Dante's Inferno with Raoul Duke as your personal guide. At any rate, the internet is a powerful medium, but one that must be challenged, plugged through, and perhaps, if someone out there seeks an answer (silver bullets are few and far between), they might just take the plunge and go check out a gym.

The first obstacle those that have started training and managed some moderate competency in that system or gym i s when you challenge the status quo, or challenge what long-time practitioners see "as the way things should be done" comes the common "who are you to question the methods?"

A valid question. But, if Helio had not taken it upon himself to teach class one day, how might Jiu-Jitsu now be different?

If Carlson or Helio had not been willing to back up their claims in competition, where would vale tudo, mixed martial arts, and Jiu-Jitsu be?

If Count Koma had not traveled the world there might not be Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?

If a Russian man had not traveled to the Kodokan, Sambo would not exist in the capacity it does today (which later influenced Judo with the collapse of the Soviet bloc).

- The obvious answer is you, as a lowly practitioner are none of those people...but then, in their own time, neither were they. We blow them up in our minds to these myths and legends, when at the end of our day and simultaneously the start of their day, they put on their gear, showed up to train, and for a long time just did that.
But over time, they had questions. They decided to step outside of the box.
And the world is better for it.

The tie that binds the above men is they were unsatisfied with their own knowledge and mastery.
They believed in finding, trying, failing, and searching...and ultimately distilling what they saw down into an roughly organized system. And testing those techniques against unwilling opponents.

Their actions demonstrate a belief that there is no "one answer'.
Not to make this an argument of semantics, but the "one answer" is to "always look for more answers or be prepared to question what you know".

When Kano felt unsatisfied with the training he received, what did he do?
From Judoinfo.com: "Jigoro Kano ...started his training in jujitsu at the age of 17, but his instructor, Ryuji Katagiri, felt he was too young for serious training. As a result, Katagiri gave him only a few formal exercises for study and let it go at that. The determined young man was not about to be put off so easily, however, and finally wound up at the dojo of Hachinosuke Fukuda."

"The 19-year-old... soon joined another branch ...Over the next two years, Jigoro Kano ate, drank and slept jujitsu, practicing night and day at the point of exhaustion. ...Kano decided to move on, feeling he still had much to learn and wanting to study rather than teach."

Those familiar with samurai films see the clear parallel of the wandering student, in search of a master. Luck, fate, determination, and chance bring him to the home/dojo/school of someone from whom he learns. Circumstances beyond his control force him onto the next stead, the next challenge, but he continues doggedly in pursuit of this elusive truth, of more knowledge. For "more knowledge" or the state of being open to "more knowledge" is the only real truth. 

"This generation gives a rebel his grave, the one after gives him a monument, and there is no exception to it."
Keep your mind open. When you think you know everything have nothing left to learn, or your style knows everything there is to know because 90% of fights go to the ground and somehow has ALL the answers, because it is an Olympic sport and thus commands more respect than other grappling styles you sound like a Scientologist arguing with a Mormon over whose beliefs make more sense.


Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Just Say No!: Nick Delpopolo/Metabolite Edition


Well, Phelps has company. And Nick Diaz.
Nick Delpopolo failed an IOC/Olympic Drug test for marijuana metabolites.
He claims he unknowingly ingested food containing marijuana before leaving for the games.

It is what it is. Insert jokes here I 'spose.

Tourament Proof Tuesday: What Mistakes in Judo Look Like




The above is from March of 2011. I hadn't competed since the previous August.
I'd just finished a round of BJJ tournaments but opted to compete anyway b/c time on the mat is always good time.

I'm the smaller/shorter player (wearing the white belt) and this was the next weight division up from my natural weight class.
You can tell immediately my legs are much too far apart rather than adopting an upright stance.
You can see clearly that had my opponent been a competent uchimata player, I would have been toast in about 7 seconds.

I'm also lazy about my cross gripping (feeding the opponent's lapel to my dominant hand with my rear hand) and as a result I end up in neutral grips with my opponent (where we each have a hand on the other's sleeve and lapel). Neither of us is anywhere near optimal throwing range and position, hampered even further by his being taller yet playing more bent over than I, the shorter player.

Compounding that fact is that my style of play makes clear I don't really know how or what I want to do. My feet aren't moving (foot sweeps) and I'm lost out there as we move around the mat. My timing is off and I'm not really setting anything up except for the occasional over the back grip his posture gives me.

You can also see I make virtually zero effort to transition to mat work even when in top position.

The referee calls "matte" (stop) and I relax, then my opponent hits a semi-suplex. I'm hoping to pull a penalty or something else to get him to open up his game as he's playing even more bent over than I am.

At any rate, at 3:08 I hit an uchimata-counter to an outside trip for a waza ari (half point).

You'll notice in the 2 scoring attacks by me (at 3:08 and 4:20) I control his left grip at the outset of the gripping exchange. When he adjusts his grip, I adopt my position-ally stronger grip, throw, and score.

Takeaways:
I neglected to follow the gripping sequence. I simply walked forward, and put my hands out to grab my opponent. My gripping was lazy. I didn't circle, move my feet, I went for virtually no foot sweeps. My posture was atrocious. 
And on a technical/game planning level, I simply did not have one. I had not decided and specifically trained the combinations that are tested at the local level of tournaments.
 
It was an ugly match on my part and proof that the fundamentals create the opportunities for good Judo and avoid many of the positions and situations that lead to losing matches.
I was fortunate my changes in gripping for stronger grips led to 2 scoring opportunities.