Almost all of these are from the past year and a half, and all are at either purple belt or Advanced NoGi level, -145, -155.
Showing posts with label toe hold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toe hold. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Sunday, November 25, 2018
Some Recent Submission Wins of Mine @ Grappling Industries NYC & Boston
Awhile back I went 4-0 for the day at a Grappling Industries Advanced -145 in Boston, all submissions, about 10 mins of mat time total. Most recently I went 3-0 for the day at Grappling Industries in NYC at -145 with 2 submissions and a ref's decision. Sometime in the fall I did another Grappling Industries at -155 in NYC but picked up 2 wins on points and a walkover with a teammate (quite a frustrating run of a day of not getting any submission wins).
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Lose the Underhook? Attack the Knee! Attack the feets!
Found this over at BJJ News!
With the advent of guys hunting for outside half-guard or you simply make a mistake and lose the underhook battle, here's a solid, basic, funamental series to pursue. I use the backstep almost immediately upon losing the underhook battle because I've learned the hard way from that position the power of the outside half-guard. I also like positions and moves/series I can train without necessarily telling my training partners. To practice this, all I have to do is pressure the knee through/slice pass, and allow him to do good Jiu-Jitsu which is win the underhook battle.
I'll be trying this out this weekend in live rolling.
With the advent of guys hunting for outside half-guard or you simply make a mistake and lose the underhook battle, here's a solid, basic, funamental series to pursue. I use the backstep almost immediately upon losing the underhook battle because I've learned the hard way from that position the power of the outside half-guard. I also like positions and moves/series I can train without necessarily telling my training partners. To practice this, all I have to do is pressure the knee through/slice pass, and allow him to do good Jiu-Jitsu which is win the underhook battle.
I'll be trying this out this weekend in live rolling.
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Day 3 of 7 on Attacking the F33ts: Masakazu Imanari
Starting in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu after having done Judo, I forget when I first became familiar with leg locks. I knew a rudimentary ankle lock moreso for a turnover than a submission, but that was about it.
I had occasionally seen them in MMA and submission grappling tournaments, but knew little if anything about them. As I got ready for my 3rd MMA fight, one of my coaches went over some basics of the heel hook as it was the most dangerous of the leg attacks legal in MMA in my home state where I would be fighting. As it is, the figure four toe hold/"Comprido" is my favorite foot/leg attack in terms of having submitted with it in training.
I did some research and found that foot locks and leg attacks in general have long been viewed as cheap, a move of the suburbs, less qualitative than other submissions in the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu arsenal.
I'm a big fan of "what works" and that if "it works" then it's not all that cheap, lame, gay, or whatever else one might say to decry it.
A bit of history on the footlock and leg attacks from wikipedia and Oswaldo Fadda:
"Despite being regarded by the Gracie family as an outcast, Fadda managed to open his own academy on the outskirts of Rio on January 27, 1950. He and his students began specialising in the use of footlocks, an often ignored part of the jiu-jitsu curriculum. The next year, Fadda felt confident that his school was ready for the next step and issued a challenge to the Gracies through the media: "We wish to challenge the Gracies, we respect them like the formidable adversaries they are but we do not fear them. We have 20 pupils ready for the dispute... Fadda's team emerged victorious, making good use of their knowledge of footlocks, in which the opposition was lacking."
Since I've decided to devote a week/7 days worth of posts to attacking below the belt, the time has come to discuss Masakazu Imanari, the "10th Dan of leg locks" as he is known.
He has something like 9 submission victories via toe hold or heel hook in MMA and highlights of his grappling tournaments make clear he wins with them in non-MMA matchs as well. He also has wins by RNC and armbar as well.
Masakazu on wikipedia
Masakazu's fight record on sherdog
The Definitive Masakazu Imanari Interview via The Grappling Dummy (a great website and online store in it's own right):
Happy Trainingz!
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