Love that you kept in the armbar. That's realism. Even if you have the best escape technique in the world, you're still under mount! It's still bad, it doesn't magically become a good position just from a good escape. Also this escape is amazing
Thank you for this. I remember you made a short of this years ago that I saw and always needed a bit more details. Cheers for providing a much more in depth video.
Did this and training partner flew off me. This is a game changer. This is without proper drilling. Replaying it all back in my mind it seems the major thing is to keep the connection of the elbow to their hips. I shall buy your book as a thank you.
I remember seeing your video on the Legion channel, but I really struggle to get this. When you're first rotating to get on your side, what is the mechanic of doing so. Is it just a bridge onto your side? The same bridge in a upa?
@@stateofnomind Just want to say thanks. I've been working on this for the past month and I've finally had some success with it. I find that I struggle against bigger guys that really try to smother me though. They'll usually do the first reaction where they don't do anything and I'm not able to roll through. Any tips there?
@@SlashnKashmir nice!!...really appreciate it...From watching Priit i didnt catch the detail of the elbow connecting to the opponent's hip. I thought the framing arm stayed glued to your own body while cupping the opponent's hip with the hand.
I take the initiative keeping him off balance. If he did try I would unwind and escape in the other direction. This looks like an obvious option, but it's not, which is one of the things that makes this so effective.
Props for not editing out the escape where you got caught. 🙏
Always keeping it 💯
Agreed. Also, a really nice armlock from Austin.
Love that you kept in the armbar. That's realism. Even if you have the best escape technique in the world, you're still under mount! It's still bad, it doesn't magically become a good position just from a good escape.
Also this escape is amazing
Thank you for this. I remember you made a short of this years ago that I saw and always needed a bit more details. Cheers for providing a much more in depth video.
Glad it was helpful!
Did this and training partner flew off me. This is a game changer. This is without proper drilling. Replaying it all back in my mind it seems the major thing is to keep the connection of the elbow to their hips. I shall buy your book as a thank you.
I love to hear it!
Just learned this in your book. This has been a game changer for my mount escapes.
Love these videos Miha. These are gems. Thanks a lot
Was this filmed in limbo?
Hyperbolic time chamber, you mean.
I will never be the same. Thank you.
Dope technique bro.i like the style of your video, Doing the technique in actual roll after the instruction. subscribed 🤙
Awesome! Thank you!
I really like this, thank you. One question: what are the options if they get a kimura grip on that framing arm?
Great video. What do you do if they have their feet wrapped around tour waist?
it does work and nobody can stay on mount anymore that is really life changer lol
Yes.
Nice escape !
Thanks, big fan of your videos BTW
@@stateofnomind appreciate it!
This works
Would this work in the gi aswell ? Great instruction btw 👍
Yes it does!
I remember seeing your video on the Legion channel, but I really struggle to get this. When you're first rotating to get on your side, what is the mechanic of doing so. Is it just a bridge onto your side? The same bridge in a upa?
Bridge + twist + build up on the bottom forearm. Then from there everything is based off of what the opponent does.
@@stateofnomind Just want to say thanks. I've been working on this for the past month and I've finally had some success with it. I find that I struggle against bigger guys that really try to smother me though. They'll usually do the first reaction where they don't do anything and I'm not able to roll through. Any tips there?
will try this tmmrw, i'll be back if it works
Did it work?
Kipping escape is king
With this one you'll most likely end up on top tough. MMA priorities.
@rendarecorrentecomopcoes2336 good way to not keep jiu jitsu gay mate thanks 👍
80% escape chance....I think that's quite a bargain :D
How about the guy on top attack your hands….
That PriitShit#
Thats correct, I am using similar escape method which I learned from him
@@SlashnKashmir nice!!...really appreciate it...From watching Priit i didnt catch the detail of the elbow connecting to the opponent's hip. I thought the framing arm stayed glued to your own body while cupping the opponent's hip with the hand.
@@peekaboojujitsoo525 yes body connection is important otherwise that body turn do not create unbalance to opponent
he never once tried to undercook your head or go for head and arm control to stop your movement... why ?
I take the initiative keeping him off balance. If he did try I would unwind and escape in the other direction. This looks like an obvious option, but it's not, which is one of the things that makes this so effective.
It looks like you can easily get into a triangle when you are on the bottom and laying on your forearm
If only I explained it thoroughly and let a black belt try and triangle me in the video.
won't he just balance by planting his right foot and left knee and then go for a gift wrap?
That was literally the second technique he showed.
@@LemonNationtime stamp? I can't seem to find it😮
If he tried to take your back, turn your butt 180 degrees and you will end up on top