Number 4, triangle, is the first submission I ever got on a live roll, I will always remember that first one as a new white belt. I keep on drilling it ever since, and can now execute it so it is much more fluid. On one of my recent drills you showed me how to correctly "hug the elbow", a detail that I was not properly performing. I had forgotten about all the other options you had taught in class several months ago. Everything came back to me after watching this video. I now plan to be drilling these too. Thank you coach Brown for being so detailed and precise in your instruction!
I ve been playing for a few months with the grip. I cant find all the benefits of it yet but it usually gives me an opportunity for taking away the back, sweep or a choke. I am confident i will get vey soon a reverse kimura or baratoplata situation ready. This also looks like an easy and secure triangle attack position.
Catch most likely got it from judoka anyway. Also yeah we could really use a little better taxonomy because there are two distinct grips that get called the reverse kimura.
Thank you so much! I have been looking for a way to deal with someone shutting down the beginning of this sequence (with the cross-sleeve grip and them flaring out their elbow to stop it) for a while. I really appreciate this! Will be studying this for a while. Question: Do you feel like the reverse kimura is a good setup for a pendulum or similar sweep to the side of the trapped arm?
This is a year after you posted but you can start threatening with the reverse kimura and then go back to trapping the arm across the body for sweeps. It all works well together. This is a great video.
The great thing about the Reverse Kimora is all these submissions cancan be hit nogi as well!
Great summary of attacks!
Number 4, triangle, is the first submission I ever got on a live roll, I will always remember that first one as a new white belt. I keep on drilling it ever since, and can now execute it so it is much more fluid. On one of my recent drills you showed me how to correctly "hug the elbow", a detail that I was not properly performing. I had forgotten about all the other options you had taught in class several months ago. Everything came back to me after watching this video. I now plan to be drilling these too. Thank you coach Brown for being so detailed and precise in your instruction!
The wrist lock though! Slick.
Love this sequence
Awesome instructions!! Love the techniques.
Great video I’ve seen all of these before but you have added a couple details in there I didn’t think about before. I appreciate it thank you.
Yeah. I think he's the first one I've heard teach details about shrimps off the hip into the barata AND using the top leg for control.
Nice baratoplata set up as well!
Always great content
I ve been playing for a few months with the grip. I cant find all the benefits of it yet but it usually gives me an opportunity for taking away the back, sweep or a choke. I am confident i will get vey soon a reverse kimura or baratoplata situation ready. This also looks like an easy and secure triangle attack position.
I am going to try this Friday! Thanks Kenneth
Great appreciations
Devastating. Big OSS
That was great.
New subscriber
Nice!!!
🔥
Some honesty would be nice though. This is an arm drag leading to a figure four wrist lock. Pure catch wrestling.
There are wrist locks in multiple arts. It's not so black and white to say catch wrestling own this technique. (Love catch as catch can btw)
Catch most likely got it from judoka anyway.
Also yeah we could really use a little better taxonomy because there are two distinct grips that get called the reverse kimura.
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Thank you so much! I have been looking for a way to deal with someone shutting down the beginning of this sequence (with the cross-sleeve grip and them flaring out their elbow to stop it) for a while. I really appreciate this! Will be studying this for a while. Question: Do you feel like the reverse kimura is a good setup for a pendulum or similar sweep to the side of the trapped arm?
This is a year after you posted but you can start threatening with the reverse kimura and then go back to trapping the arm across the body for sweeps. It all works well together. This is a great video.