Gene Mills comes to mind. As he would drive his opponent forward, they would, more often than not, work their way back up to their base, he would then utilize their momentum and knee them in their chest area, creating more momentum forward for an easier pin. John Smith utilizes the 'karate chop' , LOL, half nelson across the back of his opponent's head, though, claiming the slight variation to be more power driven in nature. Also, pulling in the far wrist was always beneficial for me. The transfer from the far wrist to a 'hook' is very genius, too. Thank You.
hey can we make requests? I'm looking for some setups for the double (maybe some of your own high percentage stuff, the things you had success with in competition or sparring frequently..), it would be great if you could do videos on this topic, like the drag double video maybe ;) sorry for bad english :(
For beginners yes, but for more advanced wrestlers that is not the case. Winging down will setup the "crab-ride." Watch my live matches, it's all I do.
No... I've experimented heavily with both, the neck is better. The idea of having it on the head is to add leverage, but the half used in this video uses 0 arm strength; it is all legs. Also, hand on the head will not transition well to crab-ride attacks.
Hello this is brendan graves i am on the wrestling team and i would like to know if i can give you my email and show me more of this step by step because at one part it got confusing and im an beginner