Hi everyone! Click this link to watch the full video on "Maintaining Contact And Why It Matters" th-cam.com/video/jgUiDpdShiY/w-d-xo.html Leave thoughts, questions, and comments below!
Imo it depends on how you do it. Some people snap it with too much speed and power giving no time for the opponent to tap. Its dangerous and it could really hurt someone
@@XoxotoMemes I see your point of view, but that's not the competitors problem. A standing Americana is a legal move, there's nothing in any rule set that states that a submission should be applied at a rate that give the opponent enough time to respond. Either learn to defend the move or take the risk of being submitted by it
Hi everyone! Click this link to watch the full video on "Maintaining Contact And Why It Matters"
th-cam.com/video/jgUiDpdShiY/w-d-xo.html
Leave thoughts, questions, and comments below!
This is so great! I cant wait to come back to your classes again!
Thankyou!! Sundays at 10am, we be Rasslin!
a counter everyone should know!
@@naturalHex yes!! I couldn't agree more!!
Dirty technique? Why? Because it works?
Exactly, no different that an americana on the ground
Imo it depends on how you do it. Some people snap it with too much speed and power giving no time for the opponent to tap. Its dangerous and it could really hurt someone
@@XoxotoMemes I see your point of view, but that's not the competitors problem. A standing Americana is a legal move, there's nothing in any rule set that states that a submission should be applied at a rate that give the opponent enough time to respond. Either learn to defend the move or take the risk of being submitted by it
@@XoxotoMemesin training yes, in competition it’s a risk a competitor agrees to subject to.