Question Of course taking the back is great but if you genuinely just wanted..could you just keep top half guard? Do you have to attack the back is what I’m asking After breaking him down to hip He did it a few times briefly.
@anonymous it was an initiation of sorts 🤷 our gym culture is well-mannered and gentle. The upper belts just wanted to make a point that there are weaknesses yet unknown to me in the DLR game, which I played often at the time. To that end, I went the entirety of Blue belt playing with my feet on the inside, such as butterfly guard and the like, to protect them from being submitted.
@anonymous That's a shame to hear! Though I can't say that I agree with reaping being inherently injurious. Several other entanglements, like Single Leg X or 50/50, lock down the hip and leg of your opponent, and are not considered illegal by the sport, at least not while in the gi. Injuries from those sort of positions occur because the top person abruptly turns against the direction of their controlled joints (ie forward pressure as a means of crushing the 50/50).
@anonymous a knee bar is not so dangerous if you don't crank on it, by the time you are blue belt it's good to start thinking about leg locks, really only the heel hook needs to be treated with extra caution imo
@anonymous I was more just talking about defense, if a position you're playing has a common leg lock counter it's appropriate for higher belts to do these attacks so you can start thinking about defending them
@anonymous this is very dependent on gym culture. My gym teaches heel hooks to white belts, though they're very clear on just holding the foot for 3 seconds to count as the submission until you're more familiar. Attempting leg locks on your black belts and even the owner is encouraged, but we're not exactly an "old school" gym ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I love how simple it looks in the close to full speed demonstration yet there are so many little complexities that make it actually effective.
Bernando has never looked better. I like his new haircut
I came for the “huge honor”, left disappointed
Lol 😂 Lachlan faria
😂
What a huge honour for Joey
Learned this lesson the hard way this morning. No more long de la riva. Thanks for this video.
This is sick, because now we have to come up with sexier ways of acquiring and maintaining the saddle
LOL
Beautiful technique
Thanks again Lachlan!! I think this is gonna be a very helpful to my game, Oss!!
Excelente!
Levi jones did the exact same thing on Oliver Taza .
Question
Of course taking the back is great but if you genuinely just wanted..could you just keep top half guard? Do you have to attack the back is what I’m asking
After breaking him down to hip
He did it a few times briefly.
You should be able to push yourself into mount if you abandon the bolo halfway
I got knee-barred while using DLR by a brown belt mentor when we rolled directly after getting my blue belt. If only I knew this then! 😅
@anonymous it was an initiation of sorts 🤷 our gym culture is well-mannered and gentle. The upper belts just wanted to make a point that there are weaknesses yet unknown to me in the DLR game, which I played often at the time.
To that end, I went the entirety of Blue belt playing with my feet on the inside, such as butterfly guard and the like, to protect them from being submitted.
@anonymous That's a shame to hear! Though I can't say that I agree with reaping being inherently injurious. Several other entanglements, like Single Leg X or 50/50, lock down the hip and leg of your opponent, and are not considered illegal by the sport, at least not while in the gi. Injuries from those sort of positions occur because the top person abruptly turns against the direction of their controlled joints (ie forward pressure as a means of crushing the 50/50).
@anonymous a knee bar is not so dangerous if you don't crank on it, by the time you are blue belt it's good to start thinking about leg locks, really only the heel hook needs to be treated with extra caution imo
@anonymous I was more just talking about defense, if a position you're playing has a common leg lock counter it's appropriate for higher belts to do these attacks so you can start thinking about defending them
@anonymous this is very dependent on gym culture. My gym teaches heel hooks to white belts, though they're very clear on just holding the foot for 3 seconds to count as the submission until you're more familiar. Attempting leg locks on your black belts and even the owner is encouraged, but we're not exactly an "old school" gym ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
nice
Juicy kneeline concepts
Well shit.. there goes my one move.
These moves do not appear to be "Fat Friendly"......
Lmao
i would love nothing more than to see a big fat guy be a berimbolo specialist
@@bradbettis9210 Check out Felipe Pena 😊😋
This video is very underexposed and looks extremely dark.