Bro I train mma. And do 1 private session a week. Been training for about a year and half full time. And I spar good white belts. An sometimes what I learn don’t work. But you gotta keep training and try new things. Sometimes different things work on different weeks.
@@assassin7250 just keep going brother. Honestly it Mike not work straight away. But you will have a good session. Where it will work. And you’ll be thinking. Wow this is actually working. Just keep training 👍🏼
what ur not told , different people different technique , also can be different situation . find people that will work find that dont . & u kinda get the scale in between .
I really like the frame of foot on knee/thigh to provide structure and the pronounced change of angle of your body for the sweep. The expectation that he'll punch after sweep is good too, though often they glom.
Okay, the great thing about this is you're actually using your shortness as an advantage. Because that's the main issue when someone's mounting you and they're bigger. You're all within their striking range. And so pushing them up and then locking your legs with each other to force them to stay face into the ground, they've lost all of the advantage of being mounted over you. Then, you can figure out a way to slip out. That's good technique, great counter. It's also very simple, which is really good in terms of teaching people self-defense when they're in a brawling situation, and they're trying to get out of it. You don't want to trade blows regardless of the physical position you're in. Getting in a position where your trading blows is already making an assumption that you think you can win that brawl. That's a no-no for self-defense. that will get you killed. Break up their ability to trade blows, take the advantage, make it impossible for them to pursue and leave. Usually, I would recommend a break of some sort. Break the knee and/or break the elbow as those are some of the easiest breaks for someone to get ahold of. You want to immobilize the person. I normally don't suggest wrist or handbreaks on their own, as it's something that probably won't demobilize the person. People fight through broken hands all the time. You gotta take that entire limb from them, and it's easier to do that from the middle of the limb. I'm saying this pretty early on in the video. Because I already see the potential for an elbow, or forearm, break with the person's hand already being attached to your body. You got them off-balance, and there is a technique that I learned in mixed martial arts that we used to do with kendo sticks. You have 1 AM on the outside of the kendo stick and 1 AM inside with your body period use the outside arm to create your leverage, you use the inside arm to go for the break, and the goal is to break the kendo stick. That strike at the very least, would make the person gripping. Someone else's throat very uncomfortable and will make them want to take their handback. Receiving those attacks is not pleasant.
If bumping him in the butt with your knee doesn't work you can grab his collar or wrap your arms around his back to pull him down so he can't beat your face in.. that hook and how you flip him is smart though.. if you have to you can roll over and expose your back so you can get up on your hands and knees and stand up and get them off of you but you better keep your chin ducked and keep them from getting head control while you get up because they can get you in a rear naked choke if you aren't fast about doing it and expose your neck.. which is why your way is probably better but if you cant hook there leg like that and have to think fast my reaction has always been trying to get on my knees because you can always get a better position or get up if you are on your knees.. fighting from my back is a last resort and something I don't prefer.. and if I do fight from my back i make sure to have a guard at least so I can flip him easier and defend myself better and if I manage to get a high guard I can beat the crap out of someone from my back until they try to pick me up and slam me.. lol then i just let go and scramble to get up before they pick me all the way up.. but with a high guard i can hit someone alot without them hardly being able to swing but a big guy can pick you up and try to slam you
Works great when youre on a mat and the person is helping you. This would never work in the streets with someone determined to stay on top and theyre punching you.
There will be more success if there is sufficient practice where all the movements are rehearsed with the correct technique and sequence involved and practice it some more. It doesn't help if your partner knows the technique is coming and is prepared to resist more easily. With practice and experience you can read and anticipate the on coming mount or any other attack. As you harness your opponents' momentum at the right time, the technique will have the potential to be exponentially successful. Minimum effort, maximum efficiency - the Gentle Way.
A lot of difficult techniques need to be practiced and practiced and practiced. When you become proficient, the technique can possibly be an easy technique to achieve success. You will need to have other techniques to compliment the first one and be less predictable.
That leg to the hip will not work when someone is using real force, bridging with you body so far sideways takes away the power from the thrust. This might work for having a smaller opponent on you, that's it tho.
Honestly, a guy who is thowing a punch is pretty easy to off balance and put his hands down, since hes doing a lot of the weight transfer for you. Might need to move your head from side to side once or twice, but a good bridge timed as hes throwing the punch will bring him down. Then hit the rest of the technique.
Lol. Thats why you practice it! And no, you dont have to be lightning quick with it. Once you get the opponents hands down (the 1st step), you have some time to get set up.
I don’t think anyone above white belt is gonna do a single hand choke like that. 😅😅. That knee bump goes with your bridge. It’s very commonly used in Jiu Jitsu. 🙏🏼
Lol, no. Have you ever hit this escape? Rolling to the side is the number 1 reason why people cant get this to work. Never roll them to the side. Always roll them more towards your shoulder, which is what he did.
And then you leave your face wide open for a big blow to the face, which immediately knocks you out, which means youre no longer squeezing the nuts. So no, thats a horrible plan. The "I'd just hit the nuts" people crack me up.
Yea, but that's just how the position is, but it's hard to punch with strength when your balance is being attacked, if you're able to break his balance before he punches you may get away, but you'll never do that if you don't know and the technique.
Rape chokes aren't legal in any competition and also if someone does that then they're even easier to roll over since they can't post if unbalanced. If someone was like 40kg heavier, got low and tucked their elbows to your chest maybe they could put you out too quick. It would be interesting to see how that choke would change grappling and MMA, if you had ferocious grip strength you could really put people in danger from almost any angle
@@hunterprovencal1684 this is not jiu jitsu. The knee doesn’t stay up since you need it for a proper bridge, and even with the knee behind the butt he can still just straighten his back and sit up. If it’s supposed to be bjj, it’s improper technique.
Thought he was gonna teach a basic practical knee elbow escape. Bro reversed that unresisting opponent like he weighed nothing. I can surely promise you, as a practitioner, this is not reliable and won’t usually work.