In your presentation where you break down the pros and cons of the old-school Waiter Guard versus the New School, you could’ve also mentioned that the old-school version is more vulnerable to ankle locks since the knee line is between the opponent’s legs. Meanwhile, the New School, with its X-guard-like setup where you tuck your knees under the controlled thigh, helps prevent the ankle lock. Other than that, great video! You really cross-reference your sources to give us a structured, simplified, yet thorough analysis.
Sick content bro.
Thanks for the variety of cross references, the editing is amazing
Soundtrack hall of fame
Thank you ! I try to keep it nostalgic (some may say NEStalgic) 😎
Excellent video. Your channel is one of the best hidden gem
@@kenoh9567 Thank you kindly ! Feel free to share it with your fellow training partners 😁
100% agree
Sorry, no can do. The boys can't know what's coming down the pipe juuust yet.
In your presentation where you break down the pros and cons of the old-school Waiter Guard versus the New School, you could’ve also mentioned that the old-school version is more vulnerable to ankle locks since the knee line is between the opponent’s legs. Meanwhile, the New School, with its X-guard-like setup where you tuck your knees under the controlled thigh, helps prevent the ankle lock.
Other than that, great video! You really cross-reference your sources to give us a structured, simplified, yet thorough analysis.
great video I'm going to use this to catch some leg locks today
The SLX and 70/30 transitions are really nice and easy to implement. You can also catch a saddle somewhere Levi style during scrambles