The secret to his kings move is that he has had so many injuries and surgeries that his arms cannot fully straightened when relaxed. This means the opponent has to not only overpower his muscles but also bend his bone and ligaments as well.
Devon Larratt is the only guy who Found and Made his own homeworks😂 not even joking this guy is the founder of most AW exercises, riser, pronation, etc. He's the founder !
I agree with some others requesting for normal spoken commentary but regardless, some great content brother. Thank you for the time and effort. I enjoyed this one!! Quality 100%
I’m curious how using your back pressure and rise is enough to compensate for a weak pronator I’m not saying it’s wrong i just don’t know how it does could you explain?
I'm not a big guy by any metric, I'm actually quite small. 5'9" carrying 250lbs when genetically I should be carrying 150ish. But life choices growing up made me fat and now I'm just too lazy to lose weight. But small or big, I've always had a natural talent for arm wrestling and if I had actually trained I'd of done well. Not Devon larratt well, but I can hold my own even though I'm in the worst possible shape a human could be in. My other stupid human talent is holding my breath for minutes on end...
7:52 many don't realize or want to admit that this is why Devon looked so deflated and fatigued against Levan when compared to all his other recent matches. He tried to do too much.
7:00 disagree, I think kings move is in a good place, it's still effective at that sideways angle you have to use it now, but we just don't see matches anymore where both guys are under the table with their arm totally flat on the pad, that was juat ridiculous and not good for fans. I could see allowing slightly more in the kings move direction, but I think that it's honestly pretty good whwre it is and there does need to be a rule about it. It's not that it's "overpowered" exactly but it is definitely an advantage and kinda lame.
0:58 this is so accurate lol lat drag is so much stronger than like every other pressure, the only problem is unless your bicep is strong enough you just open your own arm angle 😂
GAWD DAYMN IT SON NOT ANOTHER DEVON VIDEO !!!! You might as well put Devon larratt In your channels name Lmfao allllllll the sweet arm wrestlers we got and he’s the only fuckn one you can talk about ?????
This is wrong. The longer lever is going to have a harder time bc the arm is a third class lever. What the fck is this video talking about. Lift a 50 pound weight at the end of a meter stick using the first 10cm of the handle. Now do the same with a 20cm stick using the first 10cm of the handle.
@@XxPlus6xXnot an issue, but people think Devon held him there. Levon was playing with his wrist just to see, then said fuck it and turned up the power
Someone else may have beening using it unintentionally,but they don't even know what it is and how it works,they don't seriously and fully understand it.And they also are not good at it like Devon,nature have given us all bodies, but many people do not know how to discover and develop them,that's the difference.(This talk is only used to describe in this armwrestling sport)
great analysis. i'm honestly glad there is still a lot of misinformation on training side pressure because most of the time it means my side pressure is stronger then those i compete against 😹
You said you can have all the cup in the world but i doesnt matter. What if his cup is enough to turn you palm up and your cup is also enough to turn him palm up.
I think he knows his bicep is technically a weak point. If he can use his hand/wrist to keep position and his power attached to his frame, he's good. If he's forced to take someone on with his arm (which is guaranteed in a supinated position) prior to having them into his shoulder and pulled away from theirs, he knows he'll just lose. So he built up his pronation to the point where people can't force him onto just his bicep. If he's losing, it's straight up because the other guy was too strong overall, not because he couldn't handle his hand and wrist.