You were wrecking people this season with the 3 point takedown, and I plan on doing the same in high school next year with the rule change. I’m going to work on these techniques.
When you watch the best wrestlers - not the strongest - not those in the best shape - but the best wrestlers - they are perpetual "chain" wrestlers. One move to the next to the setup to the execution to the counter to the counter to the win. - GREAT VIDEOS - GREAT NARRATION!
That's was sweet the ability to move from your knees and get an angle when you were on a single leg was impressive... I'm always looking for wrestling content to improve my ability to get a takedown or stop one
Good question, I haven't done a lot of that the last few years. I think I just started to focus on different attacks to the legs from the underhook position. It is a great position to be good in though!
The switch-sides/kneeslide is slick. Is there anything you did over the years to develop your recovery capability, or does it feel like it's a combination of talent and getting reps in on those positions? I'd like to hear about what things you feel you do in the underhook that others (other than AB I guess?) aren't really doing - for example, you do a "shot" that's basically shrugging your underhook arm (I think you kind of shrug upwards and slightly elevate them on the underhook side, but maybe that's not what's actually going on?) and just getting behind them - what's the deal with that!? It's sort of like a duckunder out of the underhook, but maybe that resemblance is what's throwing me off of understanding it well.
Do you have a specific preferred attack that leads you to the forced whizzer? Is it more when they try to whizzer kick\uchi mata? And what finishes do you like once you’re parallel with them in that kneeling underhook vs overlook battle? Might be a cool vid
Yes-I do not want to stay on my knees too long. Needs to be a quick adjustment to knee slide and get your hips back under neath you as you change angles.