05/02/2013 – RapeCrisis GrappleThon Request for Donations

Class #486
Gracie Barra Bristol, (BJJ), Nicolai ‘Geeza’ Holt, Bristol, UK – 05/02/2013

For a long time now, a major goal of mine has been to support women already in jiu jitsu and encourage others to give BJJ a try. I was therefore appalled when I read that a woman had been raped by two of her team mates. I would like to turn the strong feelings about that incident towards something positive. Hence why I’ve decided to run another GrappleThon (you can read about last year’s event here) in aid of the important work undertaken by the charity Rape Crisis.

My fundraising page is here. Please donate whatever you can spare to make a positive change (JustGiving functions outside the UK too). You can also donate via text message, by texting GRAP54 拢1 to 70070.

The GrappleThon will take place on the 4th May 2013. Just like last time, we’re planning to stream it live over the internet: Steve has some gadgetry up his sleeve. 馃檪

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No D贸nal tonight, as his partner was in the process of having a baby. That meant that instead Geeza was taking class, which means a very different atmosphere and class structure. It has been quite a while since I last made it down to one of Geeza’s classes (I think I may not have been since the last GrappleThon, so that’s about four or five months), so I had forgotten how Geeza often has small variations to the standard technique. Although it’s also possible this was just material of the Gracie Barra curriculum, but I’m not sure.

Either way, it was basic mount escapes tonight, with a twist. I was expecting the typical elbow escape to start with, but Geeza combined it with the heel drag and releasing the hooks from low mount. They have grapevines, so first circle your leg around to free your leg, just like in Gracie Combatives. Put that leg flat, then circle the other trapped leg free and immediately bring it right across, moving into the heel drag. Shrimp out to half guard, then switch so your outside foot is hooking inside, rather than your inside foot hooking out. Geeza prefers this, even naming them ‘good half guard’ and ‘bad half guard’. The reason he likes it is because having the outside foot hooking gives you greater mobility when recovering full guard, which is the next step..

That was followed by another basic escape, the bridge and roll. Interestingly, Geeza didn’t emphasise the bridge with his version, instead focusing on trapping the arm. If they grab your collar to look for an attack, grab their wrist with your opposite hand and their triceps with your same side hand. Again, this follows the method in Gracie Combatives, although the reasoning is different. Rener does this because he says it makes it harder for them to pull their arm back and punch you.

Geeza’s explanation was that grabbing the triceps means you can use your elbow to block their knee, while still being able to drive your elbow into their ribs with the wrist hand. That makes sense, although you can also do that if you grab their wrist with your same side hand and the inside of their elbow with your opposite hand. The difference is that the former is better for blocking the knee, the latter is better for bracing your elbow and arm into them when bridging.

The other option was for when they wrap under your head, where again Geeza advised grabbing the triceps. That’s as opposed to the ‘comb your hair’ grip which I’m more used to, but both will work. Geeza then drives his other arm into their same side armpit to roll them over. Once again, that closely follows the methodology of Gracie Combatives. The main alternative is to instead push on their hip, as per Roy Dean and others.

As ever I couldn’t join in properly on the sparring, so instead tried various drills to work around my injury. With one of the blue belts I worked on the pass D贸nal taught me last week, where my main concern is avoiding that triangle. Obviously he won’t be available for the private tomorrow, but possibly next week. I’m expecting that his schedule may be a little erratic over the next few months, which would be totally understandable for a new parent. 馃檪

After that I did some specific sparring under side control with Geeza’s eldest son, who is a good technical rolling partner. We kept it fairly light, with Oli trying out various submission attempts. Not being able to use my left leg properly is an annoying hindrance, but I can still work on staying tight and observing the kind of attacks people try in certain positions.

Finally I did some open guard with Berry, which is one of my default positions when I can’t use one of my legs properly. I aim to go to the Xande spider guard variation where you’re pressing into their bicep and pulling on the same side collar. It doesn’t always work, but as long as the other person is much bigger or a lot more experienced than me, I can at least use it to hold them off for a while.


29/01/2013 – Gracie Barra Bristol (Top Side Control)

Class #483
Gracie Barra Bristol, (BJJ), D贸nal Carmody, Bristol, UK – 29/01/2013

As always with D贸nal’s lessons, there were some interesting drills. Particularly useful today, as I was trying to think of more top side control drills when I taught last Saturday, so these should come in handy. For the first one, you’re in a standard side control, then they turn towards you and try to secure an underhook. Put the arm you have nearest their legs by their near side hip, with your fingers pointing towards them. That’s going to be one basing point.

With your other hand, push their head towards you, simultaneously stepping your other leg over their head, keeping your weight on them. As you spin to the other side, bring the elbow of your head-pushing arm inside what was their near hip and is now the far hip. Move back into normal side control, then the process starts again.

The same motion fits well with an armbar drill. This time, you have side control, one arm under head, the other hand reaching under their far arm and cupping their shoulder. Move back slightly for space, then yank their shoulder towards you, putting them on their side. Secure what was the far arm and is now the ‘top’ arm, then push head and step over as before. Grab their same side knee with your free hand, falling back for armbar.

Note that this is for when you have their arm next to your head, leaving it vulnerable. If they have arm in the typical position under side control, pressing into your neck, you’ll need to base forward and wriggle that arm in place, or adjust as you swivel to isolate the arm.

Finally for top side control, D贸nal had a knee on belly drill which moved into an unusual arm control side position. Pop up into knee on belly, one hand gripping their near side collar, the other hand with a firm grasp by their far side hip. Slide your knee into their arm, towards the near side shoulder, dropping your hip so it is your body weight and leg against their one arm.

When you have driven that arm to the floor, step on their wrist with your free foot, trapping it in place. Then shift and twist, so the knee on belly knee points towards their legs, your instep hooking the arm you just stepped on. From there, you’re in a good position to attack their far arm, as you’ve already secured near arm.

Along with side control drills, there was always a good passing drill. You do the knee cut across their leg, your hand on their far hip, using your elbow to block their underhook. Put your knee to the floor. If they manage to get the underhook, put one hand on the floor for base, then swing over, ending up further away rather than super tight: this is to improve your base, according to D贸nal.

That’s where the drill stopped, but you could do an opposite side half guard pass from here, like I taught a little while ago. When swinging over I liked to stay tight with my head into their chest, grabbing around their back and securing an armpit, which sets me up for that opposite side half guard pass.

Like previous lessons, while everyone else sparred I did some drilling. My choice for today was the windscreen wiper sweep. Main thing I took from that was that I need to really control the arm and pull it across, to stop them basing on it. The drill seemed to work ok with my hurt groin, so a good one to drill.