I don't train to be better than you. I train to be better than me.

I don't train to be better than you. I train to be better than me.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Some good / Some bad

Saturday proved to me that I can fight pretty proficiently from my guard, but I do not do well from someones side control.

First the good...
I fought my way out of an ugly situation after pulling a more advanced opponent into my guard. I didn't want to stay on my back for nearly as long as I ended up being there, but I was able to survive and eventually trive from there.
I had a 4th stripe white belt in my guard, and he grabbed my left sleeve, and stood up to try and stand out of my guard. I tried to grab his left leg with my right arm for a sweep and he managed to reach under my hips and snag my sleeve, he then stepped over my arm so he had my right arm pulled tight behind and across my back, and he had my left pulled across my front. Now I can't use either of my arms, but I have a real solid lock on my guard, and he doesn't have a free hand to break it. He tried to crush me by rolling me up onto my shoulders and sprawling, but my answer was to stretch out in my guard with my feet locked behind his back- just applying squeezing pressure to his midsection and stretching out effectively minimizing the pressure he had on me. I have extremely strong legs, so I could afford the effort, and it worked considering my position  Eventually, through squeezing and pulling with my legs I managed to work my arms free. I'm not sure if it was due to him letting go to look for another opportunity or not, but I got them free. I started looking for opportunities. I thought about omoplata, and I thought about an armbar. I decided to try faking a telegraph for omoplata, intending to get grip on his right arm for the armbar, but his wrist slipped from my grip and I ended up with his right arm clutched chickenwing style to my chest. No go on the arm bar, but a positive was that he read my fakeout as I had intended. I know this because he pointed out that I ought not go for an omoplata when he had his arm where he had had it- so he got the message I was trying to send, and he moved his arm to where I want to move it, but I missed my opportunity by botching the wrist grab.
So there we are, he is in my guard, and on his knees so I tried pulling him forward off his base. I got him in tight once and swapped my closed guard for a body triangle, but that was ineffective so, as I switched back he backed out- but when he did that he had his hands on my chest- I grabbed his sleeves, and put my feet up onto his shoulders in the spider guard. I caught him smiling, as I am sure he thought he was going to pass at that point, but then I sprang up off my shoulders hooking my left leg over his right shoulder, while shooting my right leg under his left armpit, immediately hooking my left foot under my right knee in a perfect triangle. At that point I figured- he is tapping I've got this, but it ended up being what felt like an eternity before I was able to submit him. It didn't help much that our professor was standing over us. I am sure my opponent didn't want to tap in front of the professor- we white belts are pretty ego driven at times as if we are out to prove something. Tapping to a guy that is a stripe below you can feel like failure. I had him, he should have tapped- he didn't so I started putting on the triangle pressure, making small adjustments- and ultimately grabbing him by the back of his head and pulling him down into me- and then the tap. It was a good moment, but I was totally spent from the effort. We had gone the whole 7 minutes of the drill, and we had gone through them as hard as possible.
The professor then went to check my class attendance- which can mean that he is thinking about promotion. I was kind of excited, but then came the bad round...

The Bad...
If I thought it mattered I'd caveat that I had just fought the hardest round of my training career, but it doesn't matter. I was spent, and had very little gas in the tank going into the round with my next partner- also a white belt one level above me. I was dragging for air, and felt like gumby. He had just fought a 7 minute round too though, so it is no excuse. He easily passed my guard, and got himself into a side control position and that was pretty much it. I had no tactic, and no juice to get out from under him. I was pretty pathetic- and the professor was still watching. No belt promotion on that day, and that is quite ok because unless I can escape from side control I don't have what it takes at this moment.  For this reason this month November 2010 is now "Escape From Side Control Month". I can ill afford to be crushed like that any longer, so my studies will be dedicated to getting out from under.

P

2 comments:

  1. Heh - the other bad news is that escaping from side control doesn't get a whole lot easier. ;p

    I was once chatting to a guy after class at the Roger Gracie Academy. He told me about a private lesson he had with Roger. At one point, he said to Roger "I have trouble escaping from side control."

    The most dominant competitor of the last decade nodded, and replied "Me too."

    Main thing is to stay calm, get a good frame, keep your elbows in, and concentrate on the components of the technique you're looking to improve (e.g., where are your hands, what are you doing with your knees, how are you moving your hips, where is your forearm, is your partner applying pressure high or low on your torso etc)

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  2. Hey, thanks for reading my blog. It is nice to know that what I am writing occasionally gets read rather than just hanging out there in the ether.

    I agree, it is all about keeping your head about you. Side control is just that- control. I am just trying to stay calm and look for opportunity to improve my position.

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