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Mechafunkzilla posted:Crossface the gently caress out of them and then armbar them when they try to push you away. Works like a charm on less-experienced guys. Kill them by shooting them with a pistol or a nice revolver
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# ? Aug 1, 2014 23:24 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:41 |
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Hey ya'll, I know where you are coming from, sometimes striking sparring is a nightmare against relative newcomers too, especially if they are fast and powerful to boot. Say, a former athlete or a guy who lifts and does a ton of cycling every day decides to come over. The techniques they use in this or that situation often make absolutely no sense... and hit you in the face from the weirdest angles and distances. Then you can't really tag or go that hard on them, because they are newbies after all? But if you let them flail around at the 105% that they use, with their limbs swiging and guard wide open, you'll get your own nose bloody? Aaaaahh?
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# ? Aug 2, 2014 11:54 |
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Thanks for the answers guys, there were some good tips and I'll make sure to try stuff out when I next have the chance. Luckily I'm not the only one to notice the problems of sparring with strong beginners.Xguard86 posted:It is weird how you almost have to practice with white belts to deal with them, like you forget wtf to do when people act kind of dumb or just lockdown and go totally defensive. This is really true, you almost have to practice it. I guess the biggest thing is the 110% power, because when you usually spar, you are, you know, practicing, so you don't go 100% and try to figure good timing and distancing and whatever. When you start a sparring session with a beginner though, you are already behind the curve because the other go literally goes apeshit. Ligur posted:Hey ya'll, I know where you are coming from, sometimes striking sparring is a nightmare against relative newcomers too, especially if they are fast and powerful to boot. Say, a former athlete or a guy who lifts and does a ton of cycling every day decides to come over. The techniques they use in this or that situation often make absolutely no sense... and hit you in the face from the weirdest angles and distances. I just realized that I was one of these people: When I was doing kickboxing at the tender age of 16 and the other guy launched a roundhouse kick for example, I just turtled up and bashed against him with my forearms, not giving him any space, sometimes pushing him away and hitting him with some jabs and hort hooks while he was trying to regain his balance. People literally were so confused that they couldn't do anything, they just weren't used to dealing with that, even if they knew some kickboxing. I remember some dude actually saying "Jesus Christ, that guy is crazy." Another thing I've realized is that sparring with cops is something similiar to this: The also go 110% but they are much more focused, like they have one tried and true technique they have learned in the academy and brutally force it through, no matter what. I lost constantly to a bigger police officer of 15 years when he started grappling but once he learned some sportsmanship and he actually started sparring rather than trying to overpower me, he couldn't do jack poo poo to me anymore. I guess this just underlines how much intensity really matters.
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# ? Aug 2, 2014 14:50 |
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I got some shiner from an unathletic but super anxious newbie once that taught me not to get too relaxed against a new guy, even if you think its for theor benefit. Some guys just haven't learned how to control themselves and so seem more unpredictable than they are. E: the moral of the story is that you shouldn't expect to be able to style on anyone, even some fresh joe off the street, without your due diligence. Novum fucked around with this message at 19:45 on Aug 2, 2014 |
# ? Aug 2, 2014 19:41 |
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Ya my work and travel schedules means I train in the basics class now. It's actually been a blessing in disguise: i can really deep dive on techniques because I control the whole match and like we were talking about earlier: it's experience handling that crazy intensity/flailing.
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# ? Aug 3, 2014 04:25 |
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So the past few days I've been looking at rash guards, gis, videos of BJJ and overall been stoked as hell about starting it and tried to curb my enthusiasm a bit while waiting for the basic course to start. Now... Can someone explain to me why the hell BJJ gis look like big ol' advertisement boards for whoever manufactured them? Also this is a bit embarassing... But I used to be a huge guy and have an.. unusual amount of lose skin. Like.. It's going to be easy to grab. How sturdy is one of those gis? Is there are risk someone will grab at my skin through it? I'll get a heavy-duty compression type rash guard anyway. Those always help until I get someone in a white coat to slice the extra bits off...
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# ? Aug 3, 2014 09:15 |
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BJJ gis are sturdy as gently caress. You can hang a person's full bodyweight off it without any chance of it ripping. It's still possible I guess, but the places they're most likely to be grabbing are your arms and legs. You don't often grab the torso as such, you just kind of hug it.
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# ? Aug 3, 2014 10:45 |
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General Emergency posted:So the past few days I've been looking at rash guards, gis, videos of BJJ and overall been stoked as hell about starting it and tried to curb my enthusiasm a bit while waiting for the basic course to start. Now... Can someone explain to me why the hell BJJ gis look like big ol' advertisement boards for whoever manufactured them? It's not something you'll really have to worry about. Most grips taken are on the end of the sleeves, the lapels, or the belt. Sometimes someone going for your belt over your back won't reach and they'll just grab the gi instead, which is usually when a bunch of skin can get grabbed. Not a big deal either way, it just hurts.
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# ? Aug 3, 2014 23:06 |
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I always find that with newbies the simple poo poo to frustrate them is the most effective. If I'm in guard I just keep their posture off balance and retain my guard over and over and over till they try something in desperation and give up an arm or a sweep. If I'm in their guard I try to work simple passes and wait for them to sperg hard and sell out for an arm bar or triangle. In striking I take a similar approach, I stand just out of range and use footwork to move myself anywhere but where they can load up and crack me or I'll keep changing angles so that they're always having to re-set or over extend to hit me. Sometimes you get caught moving into something that you don't expect but I find that going back to basics and staying relaxed is fine against new comers. Especially striking people hate chasing someone even when I'm in the pocket but just that little bit off their centre line so they have to re-set to throw anything right drives people nuts. Once they're frustrated you can Rory MacDonald someone with your jab for the rest of the round without too much trouble. Not having your poo poo together and walking into an overhand right or head kick sucks though.
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# ? Aug 4, 2014 05:44 |
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Newbie Tales ITT: I had just started boxing a ton more than previously. Head movement was the poo poo during that period, baby. So one summer day I popped by for the first class available, and it happened to be Savate. Cool beans, I just dug out my leg guards and off we went. Being one of the heavier and taller guys (I think was 210 lbs at the time) I was constantly paired with the larger or shredded dudes and I end up with this 6'1 guy who obviously lifts, but not enough to make him incapable of functioning or whatever so he was still waving his arms and legs with vigour after 60 minutes into the class. Sparring starts! Now, remember guyz, Savate is a kickboxing art where you kick with the shoe. This adds up to a different range from, say, MT. If you are too close up or time your kick bad, you end up kneeing or striking with your shin: that's an illegal blow. So savateurs only use certain kicks in certain situations and ranges, right? Confident in my new boxing skillz I feint with a jab to close the distance, slip a counter to my right to avoid his power hand so I can get in close for the bodywork, eyes sparkling and certain of victory! Mid-slip, he panics and throws a front leg roundhouse... kneeing me in the face so hard my head and teeth go numb and I almost topple right over as I basically duck right into his leg. Thing is, he was a bit of a newbie, and no savateur worth his salt would ever use that technique from that range so stupid me totally did not expect him to do that. That was the last time ever I tried an u-slip from up close against against a newb frog shoe fighter
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# ? Aug 4, 2014 17:09 |
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Trip Report: Rio Combat @ Alameda CA. So I went to my first beginner no-gi class today and had a blast. Good stuff: - Pretty small class size - Costs less than Ralph Gracie's and its closer to where I live. - Attached to the monthly cost is unlimited classes (no-gi BJJ, Gi BJJ and Muay Thai) and use of the Gym (The classes are held inside the Baladium Gym) - A fellow co-worker goes to the class too. Bad stuff: - Pretty small class size. - Probably not the best gym I can go to. - I will most likely move out my current place in a couple of months. Paid my first month and I am stocked as gently caress.
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# ? Aug 5, 2014 05:51 |
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Small could be good if it means you get a lot of personal attention from the teachers.
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# ? Aug 5, 2014 14:04 |
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It can also be bad if it means there are only unsuitable training partners, which can also happen. But usually it's good.
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# ? Aug 5, 2014 19:23 |
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Went to my first boxing class last night. It feels like someone drove a truck over my abs. But, y'know, in a good way.
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# ? Aug 5, 2014 19:59 |
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They drove over your abs with a truck? Man that gym is hardcore. We just get pounded with a gym ball sometimes. Glad to hear you seem to have had fun. Didn't really have the best sparring session today. Anyone have any good tips for fighting people who are better than you and larger than you? I'm pretty much the shortest guy at my gym, scrawny and bad at this whole "fight" part of "fightsports". Anyway, there are like two guys smaller or same size as me and both vastly more experienced than me. It's really drat hard to get in on someone with a foot more reach than you and more experience... Somehow everything I planned goes out of the window and I'm just standing there thinking "how the gently caress do I attack?" and can't come up with anything. Also I learned a valuable lesson about people today: They feel far more secure about kicking you in the head if you wear a helmet.
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# ? Aug 5, 2014 20:17 |
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General Emergency posted:Didn't really have the best sparring session today. Anyone have any good tips for fighting people who are better than you and larger than you? I'm pretty much the shortest guy at my gym, scrawny and bad at this whole "fight" part of "fightsports". More work is the tip, sorry, sucks. We go through this pretty often at the place I go to. You really have to outmove and outcardio taller, bigger guys or girls. By and large, the best "trick" is to be in better shape, because that is the best advantage out of the two you can have and probably moving faster and for longer periods is easier if you are the smaller guy so work with that. The other thing is to get inside their lead leg and lead arm, but they'll know this is what you are trying to do so it's a bit of a bitch to accomplish. Step in with a blatant fake, block or deflect the kick or punch they will try to stop you with (and they will) and use the same movement to close in. Block and step in at the same time. So now that's YOUR range you are in. You have to be fearless and trust you can deflect or slip whatever is coming at you on the way, which is scary. There's one place where you have the advantage: forehead to chest, pressed against the ropes, if they can't shove you around too much. Unless you are completely outclassed and they can go all Nate Diaz or Tyson on you, you should be able to dig in uppercuts and hooks to their ribs and face while burying your face at their body, while the only range they can have at that point is hugging. Lengthy arms usually don't make for great infighting, especially if people are not accustomed to that, that said you always have a Jon Jones or someone who can do that too - but most people can't and in general taller people have big issues dealing with shorties who shoot inside and start unleashing torrents of short and quick strikes all over the place.
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# ? Aug 5, 2014 22:23 |
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General Emergency posted:Anyone have any good tips for fighting people who are better than you and larger than you? Don't. Honestly though, just work the stuff you know. If they're bigger AND better it's kind of up to them how much they want to let you work.
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# ? Aug 5, 2014 22:52 |
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Mechafunkzilla posted:Don't. It's a great opportunity to train diminishing your ego haha.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 03:44 |
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02-6611-0142-1 posted:Small could be good if it means you get a lot of personal attention from the teachers. Ligur posted:It can also be bad if it means there are only unsuitable training partners, which can also happen. This is pretty much what I meant with "small class size", all four of us where new to the no-gi class but the Gi class has more people so there is that. Edit: I hurt all over, so it means yesterday's class was a good class.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 04:34 |
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Ligur posted:More work is the tip, sorry, sucks. We go through this pretty often at the place I go to. You really have to outmove and outcardio taller, bigger guys or girls. By and large, the best "trick" is to be in better shape, because that is the best advantage out of the two you can have and probably moving faster and for longer periods is easier if you are the smaller guy so work with that. The other thing is to get inside their lead leg and lead arm, but they'll know this is what you are trying to do so it's a bit of a bitch to accomplish. To add to this: You should watch some videos of guys who are often at a reach disadvantage and try to mimic their footwork. Might sound counter intuitive but I started doing better when I was sparring when I stopped trying to figure out strategies for each opponent and tried to imitate guys I liked to watch.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 06:05 |
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Thanks for the feedback guys. Spar more, learn more, don't be afraid of going in close. The problem has been that we're having the hottest summer ever and that's diminished our little group to like... an average of five or so guys. Not a lot of variation in sparring partners right now. Great for technique practice, but sparring is a ego busting. God drat love this stuff though. Need to practice more.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 08:20 |
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I currently do No-Gi grappling[CSW] and am going to be doing BJJ soon, what are some of the big differences? Can/Do I use pretty much the same tool set?
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 14:58 |
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KildarX posted:I currently do No-Gi grappling[CSW] and am going to be doing BJJ soon, what are some of the big differences? Can/Do I use pretty much the same tool set? Once you get into a non-guard position, things work mostly the same. For guard-work and guard-passing, you're going to have to learn grip-fighting and dealing with the different gi-grips, and that'll take a bit of time.
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 15:27 |
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KildarX posted:I currently do No-Gi grappling[CSW] and am going to be doing BJJ soon, what are some of the big differences? Can/Do I use pretty much the same tool set? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0IUR4gkPIE
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# ? Aug 6, 2014 20:24 |
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I hate no gi, there aren't any Brabo chokes
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 02:32 |
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I went to the "advanced" I.E not labeled beginners no-gi BJJ class today. 30 minutes of warm-ups and going through one technique and then 3 10 minute grappling sessions. Grappeled with a guy that was as heavy or a bit heavier than me, almost passed out twice, was literally out of strength on the last 5 minutes and felt like I needed to puke. God I love BJJ.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 05:04 |
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ElMaligno posted:I went to the "advanced" I.E not labeled beginners no-gi BJJ class today. 30 minutes of warm-ups and going through one technique and then 3 10 minute grappling sessions. Grappeled with a guy that was as heavy or a bit heavier than me, almost passed out twice, was literally out of strength on the last 5 minutes and felt like I needed to puke. On certain days my CSW class has a Striking Portion and a Grappling portion combined into the class. Nothing gets the "oh poo poo why am I so out of shape" thoughts flowing then doing kick boxing pyramids followed directly by about five minutes of rolling.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 14:38 |
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I did judo for the first time last night. Judo owns. The 60 something year old lady who was the only other noob in the class also owns.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 16:02 |
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Iucounu posted:I did judo for the first time last night. Judo owns. The 60 something year old lady who was the only other noob in the class also owns. I decided to double down on BJJ and Judo since the time tables lined up nicely. Can't wait for either to start.
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# ? Aug 8, 2014 16:53 |
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Syphilis Fish posted:I hate no gi, there aren't any Brabo chokes
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# ? Aug 9, 2014 02:35 |
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Yuns posted:What do you mean? There are plenty of Brabos in no gi. I guess I should've specified: with the lapel.
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# ? Aug 9, 2014 06:57 |
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Do you know how weird what you just said is edit: and the no-gi brabo/d'arce is so awesome that I often forget that the gi version is even there 02-6611-0142-1 fucked around with this message at 13:19 on Aug 9, 2014 |
# ? Aug 9, 2014 13:16 |
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Also I am a tough fight guy everyone
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# ? Aug 11, 2014 13:21 |
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Still think you should've gotten teeth but Snuggler's pretty good too. This also reminds me that I need to get a new mouthguard as my $15 cheapo is well into its second year and starting to disintegrate in my mouf
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# ? Aug 11, 2014 13:51 |
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My gym is switching up a lot of things for this coming semester and one of those is that they start offering sambo classes. Now assuming I like it and decide to start attending those classes regurlarly, will I need to get a Sambo gi jacket, or will a regular jacket from a judo gi do?
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# ? Aug 11, 2014 15:13 |
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DekeThornton posted:My gym is switching up a lot of things for this coming semester and one of those is that they start offering sambo classes. Now assuming I like it and decide to start attending those classes regurlarly, will I need to get a Sambo gi jacket, or will a regular jacket from a judo gi do? Kurtka But yeah, a judo gi will be fine.
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# ? Aug 11, 2014 15:16 |
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Cool, thanks. In case the sambo classes will require a jacket it seems like actual sambo jackets are hard to find here in Sweden.
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# ? Aug 11, 2014 15:22 |
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[s]02-6611-0142-1 posted:Do you know how weird what you just said is I'm the other way around, `when you posted that I facepalmed myself. I never call that a brabo choke but it is. I dont do enough nogi clearly
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# ? Aug 11, 2014 19:58 |
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Dumb kids in my muay thai class making fun of my barking and grunts and growling when kicking and kneeing. gently caress that poo poo I will do it forever since that's what we did in Thailand and it's fun, I don't care if I look stupid
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# ? Aug 12, 2014 02:29 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:41 |
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02-6611-0142-1 posted:
Winner.
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# ? Aug 12, 2014 04:01 |