Specializing in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and self-defense, Caique Jiu Jitsu Academy has been helping students understand the art since 2000. Master Carlos "Caique" Elias is the only red & black belt teaching regular classes in the South Bay area. The Caique Jiu Jitsu Academy is located in Lomita, CA and offers classes for veterans, beginners, kids, and all others in between. Visit cjjusa.com/ for more information.
The key is don't get your arm trapped. If you do, it isn't to escape especially if your opponents is trained. That said nothing wrong with the technique
Question for you: one of the most basic guard escapes I learned is put my knee in their butt crack and slide my other leg back to break the guard. When I’m on the bottom in closed guard and I feel them put their knee in my butt, I will move my hips like this to square back up. How do you prevent the top player from using that knee in the crack technique when you move your hips to the side?
this is not Grand Master Rickson concept of Invisible jiujitsu applied to close guard ! The concept of invisible jiujitsu is to prevent the guy on top to STANDUP in your close guard by positioning your leg(not feet) on his hips .
Will not work against a seasoned wrestler, they train to not get rolled through. Wrestling teaches some more techniques to get out of that situation if rolling through doesn’t work.
How would you defend agaisnt this roll over if your the one doing the hold? I can hold down and submit the majority of my club with this (2nd dan Judoka and BJJ purple) but theres a few guys who have this eacape down really well. How do you prevent this escape by keeping the hold.
BJJ blue belt here, in my experience you just change posture, change to side control or mount if they know how to escape, maybe use the movement as an opportunity for a finisher and get the tap, if they know how to counter just change the technique
@@fernandosulantay I'm a Judo black and BJJ purple. This works for me 95% of the time but this specific roll over when done right is basically the only way people escape. Hopeing for some specific info to counter this roll over
@@ryansmith9138 I do BJJ with a guy who is also a black belt in Judo. He said once you get good at escaping kesa getame its impossible to stop them. He said everyone in his judo gym got so good at escaping that they quit even using it on people. There is no counter to this. You switch positions before you end up in a bad position.
If someone is good at kesa katame and they are heavier than you there's very little chance you're getting out of it. The right arm in this clip should be used to post , when you feel change of balance , guys head needs to be closer to the ground and his feet lower and more spread apart. @@mastershake4641
You try to make them fall on their shoulder but they may not let go still. If so then control the top and may also use the elbow when you have a good chance
You're leaving out some very important information. You're doing it, but not talking about it. Bridge into your opponent to break his posture. Take up the space with your hips and try and get as far under his hips as possible by closing the gap between you and him. Bridge to the other side over your face and shoulder. Don't try to drag his weight across your body, i will never happen. Also, once he has the hold it's unlikely you're going to get out of it without wasting a lot of energy, so know it's coming and start the escape before he sets it in.
Re-watching this video I tried it I had some guy put it on and I sat in that headlock position he was still able to choke me from that I’m doing something wrong I’ll figure it out
This escape does not work if the top guy has all his weight on your chest. Just ask Dean Lister who tapped to Josh Barnett in this hold. No way out if the top guy knows what he is doing.
That's ridiculous. This is the easiest version of this side control to get out of. Kezura Kesa Gatame is quite a bit more difficult. Every pin is impossible to get out of if the person on top is better at their game than the person on bottom is at theirs... But with training, none of these pins are impossible to get out of. Just because the weight is on the chest doesn't mean anything. You can move your hips, legs, and you can adjust your shoulders etc. You just have to be comfortable under pressure, and wait for the person on top to give you an opening. If you're good, you can make them react to make an opening, almost every time. Just because some MMA guys that aren't anywhere close to being experts in BJJ or Judo tap to this position, doesn't make it impossible. You know how many mistakes strong guys make because they're used to using their strength? In BJJ and Judo small guys have to deal with talented, stronger guys all the time, being on bottom. Doesn't mean they always get out, but it happens all the time. It's just physics at the end of the day, and which person can get the set up first to counter the other one.
My experience with this is what frustrates me about every single one of these Kesa escape how-to videos. It’s NEVER live rolling. The uke is always way too compliant and isn’t demonstrating the nearly instantaneous movements that allow him to maintain top control and defend the counter. The 12 o’clock leg always always always will instantly move to regain 12 o’clock position and shut down the bottom advancing position to prevent the bridge and roll from succeeding. By the time you’ve burned through your tank with this death dance it’s over. Your not getting out. The key is don’t get here in the first place.
especially in heavyweight, youtube is FULL of terrible advice and very few acknowledge this point if it is applied correctly it is very difficult to escape from. I have been filtering through youtube clips and found a few that I was able to replicate with my similarily heavyweight brother. We are trying every single technique available and filtering out those that are either physically demanding to execute or simply do not work against larger heavyweights like ourselves. If it isn't easy, it isn't working
Of course... BJJ is all about who gets there first, and who gets there more precisely while off balancing their opponent. If someone holds a sloppy pin, it's easy to escape. If someone knows your escapes and reacts before you execute, it's terribly hard to escape. This is a "water is wet" statement.
Thank you master for sharing this knowledge. I am white belt, Gracie Barra Brasil, a more senior student applied this technique to me. I immediately came to look at youTube some defense technique. And thank you for make it available.