I met Peter about 30 years ago, he was putting on a class in Manchester, NH, at Terry's place and he was awesome. Literally dropping one's jaw in awe type awesome. So not full of s***, and just practical. His philosophy is on point. If you want to stay alive in a real confrontation, he can help.
Erik was one of my instructors, great guy, amazing teacher. And yes, I totally relate. I was working out all day and night too ,30+ years ago, fighting and street fights. I was superman. I'll be turning 60 this year. My ambition is to be able to walk and hike without pain! My how the tables have turned!
Tony's Lost Art of Hooking from 1990s is still my favorite instructional of all times! Well explained; building wrestlers from the basic fundamentals, not just showing bunch of random techniques to wow the audience. Really ahead of its time. 👏👏👏
I love Tony’s detailed explanation and approach in applying the top wrist lock. I have studied Tony‘s DVDs and have shown this top wrist lock to my students and they love it 👍
This fuckin guy is super insecure. I saw some other videos like bulldog choke, where there a guy he is demonstration the choke on, and poor guy is there to help him to earn money, (because this is video he sells on his webpage, i didmt buy it just watched 1min demo he has for free) and he pulls his hair hard as fuck, but thant not it. Rhen he slames punches him with his biceps straight to the neck then with most violence chokes him out, then asks "are you ok bro" 🤦🏻. And its all a demo for a stupid video. Wow. Debile.
You are super insecure. I saw some other videos like bulldog choke, where there a guy he is demonstration the choke on, and poor guy is there to help him to earn money, (because this is video he sells on his webpage, i didmt buy it just watched 1min demo he has for free) and he pulls his hair hard as fuck, but thant not it. Rhen he slames punches him with his biceps straight to the neck then with most violence chokes him out, then asks "are you ok bro" 🤦🏻. And its all a demo for a stupid video. Wow. Debile.
Not that this doesn't work but there are a few things wrong. First this is a different technique than what in BJJ is called Kimura and what is technically called Ude Hishigi Ude Garami which is a bent Elbow lock. Nobody ever claimed Kimura invented; it predates Kimura, Kano and probably the Meiji restoration. What he is showing here is what in Old Judo/Jiu Jitsu is referred to as Kanuki Gatame and is a completely different thing. It does work and I teach it in Judo too, but it is very finicky to apply and easily defeated if one knows and understands.
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I rolled with Erik paulson for a couple years 30 years ago. I do a a little BJJ every few years, and I always end up doing some bizzare catch wrestling move, that catches BJJ guys by surprise. Honestly, It's because I remember very littl BJJ though!
The forearm is so much stronger than a fleshy bicep. I think BJJ sees the double wrist lock, Kimura, as more of a submission that puts stress on the shoulder. It's not wrong, it's just different. The original, catch as catch can version is meant to break bones! I wish we did catch wrestling in Britain more. Billy Robinson taught this to the Japanese and many American wrestlers, yet it's so obscure over here.
Hello, Mr. Cecchine. I discovered your videos a few weeks ago. I am not only very impressed with your instruction/knowledge, but am even fascinated regarding how it seems like nobody else is talking about so many of the very important, key details that you bring out. For example, in my BJJ and MMA classes when I do the keylock, I started utilizing the motorcycle grip of twisting the hand/wrist of my opponent and then grabbing my hand with the other hand (as opposed to grabbing my own wrist). The amount of pain and discomfort it causes is surprising, and the amount of leverage you get from your technique is awesome. Quick question - almost everyone I'm doing it on starts tapping before I can even pin their hand to the ground. Just the sheer pain and discomfort of using the motorcycle grip/twisting the hand/wrist is causing them to tap before I can get their hand to the ground, let alone reach through and grab my hand. Is this normal?? Thank you for your time.
Yes that's normal, usually when we're practicing we have to break the move into two parts and slightly release the twist so we can complete the rest of the move
I am Kali silat guy with some Spanish destreza thrown in for good measure....I bought tonys catch wrestling videos an have been sold on him ever since...keep up the good work guys
At 10:45 you're 100% right and I just thought of that when i was taught to bos everything is quick and you have to think quickly but in jujitsu it's the complete opposite you're taught to slowly set up moves and it's foolishness