The Bystander Effect: Perception vs Reality in real world violence

As a doorman, I’ve seen more violence and conflict than the average person. In fact, I have a fascination with conflict and how people react to it. But one of the most puzzling and frustrating scenarios for anyone in a ‘combat situation’ is the Bystander Effect.

My definition of the Bystander Effect is: A third party who begins to yell or interfere in some fashion when a professional (law enforcement officer, security professional, or bouncer) is trying to execute a physical restraint in the course of their duty.
Now, the Bystander Effect occurs because:

They are not fully informed:


Having only seen a part of the conflict, the bystander doesn’t know how and why the violence is occurring. They assume that the ‘professional’ is acting excessively against someone who doesn’t deserve it.
They are unfamiliar with violence:

Perhaps the only violence the bystander has seen has been in the movies. They do not know that real world violence is quick, nasty, and uncoordinated at times.

 The violence shocks their system and they automatically pick on the authority figure that is “winning” and “restraining” the combative person.

They place themselves in the shoes of the person:


 People will often place themselves in someone else’s shoes who they can relate to. Bystanders cannot relate to LEO or Security Professionals because they have no formal experience of the job. Therefore, they assume the role (mentally) of the combative person.

They don’t understand resistance:

They have no idea how hard it is to restrain someone who doesn’t want to be restrained. They think that the professional should be able to hold the combative person down with little to no force. They may not realize that the combative person may be much stronger than the professional so harder techniques will have to be employed.

They are misinformed about body dynamics and combative training:

 In order to fully restrain someone, a certain amount of force and pressure has to be applied to the body. This pressure is being applied to STOP the combative person from fighting. Once that has occurred, just enough pressure is applied to hold or take the person into custody. The bystander may think a bouncer or martial artist have special bullet proof moves to keep people in place.

They do not know what the force continuum is:
Again, they have no idea what type of physical response would be used with a combative person. Actively aggressive persons cannot be controlled with light escort or pain compliance techniques.
They think authority figures are bullies: Many bystanders who interfere have problems themselves with authority figures and make the sweeping judgment that all are bullies, toughs, and ego driven monsters. They may have an axe to grind or a past negative experience with one of these professionals.
How do you change the mind of a bystander?

Let me first say that I have 25 years of martial and combative experience behind my belt. I’ve also been involved in over 400 physical confrontations during my 16 years bouncing (from fights to brawls to arrests of aggressive patrons). I am what the average person would call “skilled”.

 However, trying to control or restrain someone who doesn’t want to be is no walk in the park. The fluid nature of combat, including movement, objects, weapons, and other potential hazards on the street, makes easy restraint quite difficult.

Don’t believe me? Just ask a friend to try and not let you hold on to their wrist. They will pull, turn, jab, kick and trip you in order to get their wrist free. They win because they don’t have to play by the same rules as you. You are just trying to hold on while they can do what they please to avoid it. The analogy is touch vs. tackle football. You play touch and they get to play tackle.

Therefore, the type of professionals I mentioned above realize that simple restraints against a non compliant combative person is NOT going to work. They have to change their game to “play tackle” in order to gain control of the subject. This doesn’t mean they hammer on them, only that they have to up the level of force against a non compliant person to gain control over them.

The bystander has to realize that these professions deal with violence on a common and frequent basis. The average citizen gets to walk blindly through their everyday tasks while cops and bouncers are rolling around in alley ways with junkies and criminals. These professionals protect the bystander from the ugly consequence of violence.

If you are a bystander, next time you see a conflict occur between these two groups, take a deep breath and realize that it is more than likely that the person the professional is trying to restrain just committed a crime (commonly assault of another poor bystander). The professionals’ job is often thankless and the bystander effect is like the rubbing salt in the wound of what they do.

I help people. I hate victimization. And I would surely hope some of you would help me if I was in trouble one day because, for the past ten years, my only reward for helping strangers has been that they get to return home safely to their love ones.
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Jiu Jitsu Instruction – Time To Teach

I was recently asked by one of my Face Book friends on any tips I could give him on teaching. It seems he will be tackling his first class as a teacher at the end of the week. It got me thinking of my experiences over the years. I can still remember my first classes and how nervous I was.

What I want to provide is a general outline that new teacher can use to teach their first martial art classes. There are of course a ton of variables involved in presentation and that is what some people are ‘gifted’ and others are ‘average’.

 In my experience, teaching can be a learned skill, refined through time. I have also observed that some people are natural leaders and orators. This goes FAR in the realm of martial arts.
When first taking the journey down the teaching road, you will be nervous. This is natural. Don’t think you are the only one who has felt this way. This is what you can do to prepare for this job.
Jiu Jitsu Instruction
1) Prepare an outline: Take note how long your class is and write down the techniques you PLAN on teaching in your class. Always have more than you could possibly teach in a given period of time. This will allow you to fall back if you happen to get through a lot of what you wanted to cover.

2) Keep it simple. While you may love the rubber guard, x guard or some really cool move or combo, keep you lesson plan brutally simple in the beginning. It will keep your students from asking too many questions which you yourself may not know.

3) Don’t teach something you “kinda know” or “saw one time on you tube”. You’ll get crushed right in the middle of the technique and realize you really don’t know it. Your students will suffer for it.

4) Chain you techniques so they make LOGICAL sense to the person learning. Showing a guard break and then flying arm bar right after it will show there is no theme.

 A Theme is important when you are a “white belt” in teaching. As you get more experienced, you can mix and match and make anything make sense. But this takes time!

5) Speak slowly and clearly. Know where your audience is and make sure they can SEE what you are doing. Don’t take for granted that they will get it. Use your verbal skills to further explain what you are doing. Don’t rush. Breathe. When I let my blue belts teach a move for the first time, their voices quiver and they speak too fast.

6) Ask your students “do you have any questions?” It will help you refine your skill.
7) Don’t be afraid to say ” I do not know.” This is alien to many people because they don’t want to appear weak in front of their audience. Let me tell you something: Not all teachers know everything. However, the GOOD/GREAT ones can trouble shoot right away and figure it out. That takes time…lots of time. It won’t come over night.

 Don’t be a robot. Nobody likes listening to a drone with no inflection in his/her voice. Humor and animation goes a long way but this is something you can’t fake.

That is why some people are naturals and others are not. I have seen world champs who couldn’t teach.

9) Be warm and engaging. After you show your techniques, go around and help your students. Make sure you know their names and make your interaction personal. Students will appreciate this.

10) Call them back and show the technique again (and again) if there are problems. When I observe my classes, there are often the same mistakes being done by multiple students. Instead of going around to each one,call them back and show the technique again. It may require you to teach the technique in a DIFFERENT manner. Remember that each person learns differently.

Some visual, some audible, some kinetic. I will often tell my students to totally ignore everything I am showing but one part. I will say “everyone just watch my left leg and what it is doing in this movement.” That way, they focus on a subtle detail and aren’t overwhelmed with a bunch of moving limbs.

11) Advanced: As you get better and spend more time teaching people, you will become flexible. I no longer use a written syllabus when teaching. I go in and just do it. And I love every minute of it. Each class is different. Different students, different dynamics.

 If all my blue belts showed up, I may get crazy and start doing some advanced stuff. My mother always said ” know your audience”! True and dynamic teachers are FUN to learn from. That makes retention better. That also makes students want to come back and learn. It is a wonderful cycle that you will benefit from!

I knew at 10 I wanted to teach. I thought I was going to be a high school teacher but my fortunes pushed me to combine my love of martial arts and teaching together. Having spent thousands of hours teaching students and also in front of a video camera, I have had the chance to observe myself over and over. Every TIME I teach, I review in my head after how I can make it better.

 There is no limit to how far you can advance.
You should also take cues from those teachers you admire or like. We all have aspects of our teacher in our own teaching ability. We then add our own personalities to the mix
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Chicago: Is MMA tougher than the NFL?

Recently, I got into this ridiculous argument with a friend who I constantly get into pointless, farcical arguments with.  Our arguments usually fall into the football vs.

 some evil force (I usually defend the evil force). The latest one has been perpetuating for far too long. The argument is over the question: Which sport is tougher, NFL football or Mixed Martial Arts? He is a devout Chicago Bears fan and I think that he might get up every morning and bow to his Chicago Bears shrine, decorated with the glory days of Bears past.

 He proclaims to the Bears Gods, “I shall defend football against all of thy enemies. I shall shout football’s glory from the highest mountains for all to hear. I shall claim football’s supremacy to all that shall listen. Those that choose to disagree are worthless humans that deserve to die in a car fire.”


Well I could be blowing it a little out of proportion but he does constantly claim that NFL athletes are the greatest athletes in the world and that the game they play is the toughest. I disagreed about a month ago and told him that, in my opinion, MMA – particularly the elite fighters employed in the Ultimate Fighting Championship, compete in the toughest sport in the world. From there—the arguing commenced. I have constantly asked myself what the hell I am doing arguing a question of value over something as insignificant as this? Well, I have nothing better to do that’s why. Plus I enjoy getting all riled up over stuff like this—I clearly have a problem.
Hersh 234x300 Chicago: Is MMA tougher than the NFL?I don’t know everything but let me tell you one thing that I do know—it’s much tougher to fight in the UFC than play in the NFL. That’s right, I said it Chicago. Don’t take my word for it; a few former NFL players, who’ve trained or competed in MMA,

 have also reiterated my sentiment. “This is probably the hardest thing I’ve ever done; this was a very tough sport for me. Every muscle in your body is sore.” Herschel Walker stated after his professional MMA debut fight this past January. Marcus Jones,

a former NFL first round draft pick and currently famous for his stint on the tenth season of the MMA reality television series, The Ultimate Fighter, stated in an interview: “Fighting in the Octagon is more demanding on your body. The pain that you go through over a short period of time, all the training that you have to do for just 15 minutes of fighting, to me, that’s just incredibly difficult.”

It was even more entertaining to observe other former NFL players, along with Marcus Jones, who competed on the MMA reality show; Wes Shivers, Matt Mitrione, and Brendan Schaub dropping like flies during the first few workouts.

 They had their hands down at their sides, fighting the urge to quit, sucking for breath that couldn’t come in fast enough. All stated immediately that it was much more grueling than anything that they have ever done. And that includes playing in the NFL! Things got even more entertaining when the former ‘NFLers’ now mixed-martial artists got into the octagon to fight. Most were winded after the first 5 minute round. So if MMA is so inferior to NFL football, shouldn’t they be experienced enough to get conditioned adequately to make it through one lousy round?

What about Jared Allen?  Bears fans have seen him dominate the NFC Central for the past few seasons donning the Vikings purple and gold. jared 259x300 Chicago: Is MMA tougher than the NFL?
A brief history lesson on Mr. Allen: During an offseason with the Kansas City Chiefs he ran into Jay Glazer, a MMA and NFL reporter.

 Jay convinced him to train MMA with him in Arizona, where they both reside. After training Jiu-Jitsu, kickboxing, and wrestling at Glazer’s camp he lost 25 pounds of, as Allen refers to it, “bad weight.” He also went on to lead the NFL in sacks and then signed, at the time, the biggest deal ever for a defensive end with the Vikings.

The fact of the matter is that MMA fighters are world class athletes that are well versed in a multitude of martial arts along with wrestling, and boxing. There are no teammates to help you.  There are 5 minute stretches of massive exertion paired with a minute of rest.

 Proportionally that doesn’t compare to the 5 seconds of play with 40 seconds of rest in between that NFL players have the ‘luxury’ of. Also, you have some guy that isn’t trying to knock you down and take some ball away—he’s trying to knock your ass out, slam you down, pound your head into the mat with his fists, break your arm/leg, or choke you out. Any of these scenarios could happen at any moment and you need to be prepared for it all. Skill, not just God-given physique or speed, is required to be on top. Sounds kind of like playing offense and defense – do you have to do that in the NFL?
hers 300x299 Chicago: Is MMA tougher than the NFL? That’s just the night of the competition.  However, that’s assuming the MMA fighter will survive the training camp to get to the fight.  An MMA fighter will train for 6-8 hours per day on their cardio, ground attacks & defense, and standup fighting coupled with weight training and sparring.

 Now while you are doing these strenuous daily workouts you need to make sure that you will be at the right weight.  Usually you have to weigh exactly the weight limit the day before the fight and this usually requires a fighter to cut up to 20-25 pounds the day before the fight and put it on after the weigh-ins before the fight. This drastic cut in weight causes some fighters to collapse from exhaustion and dehydration trying to walk to the scale. This gives them about 24 hours to prepare to fight.
penn 245x300 Chicago: Is MMA tougher than the NFL?
A helmet would really come in handy right about now
To compare I will walk you through a typical week for an NFL Player. On Monday you show up, maybe have to lift some weights or see the trainer. On Tuesday, it’s a mandatory day off. Wednesday, you are in meetings all morning,

a walk-though wearing shorts, and then you study film of the walkthrough. Practice ensues afterwards with pads and light hitting. Hit the weight room once more and ice down, for the day is complete. Thursday is the same. Friday, practice ends early leaving more than enough time to prepare to tear up the clubs later that night. Saturday, you have a walkthrough of all the plays in sweatpants. Damn, I guess he’s right that does sounds so much tougher than training for 3 months solid for a MMA fight. No wonder J. Allen cut 25 pounds of “bad weight” training in MMA. nate 297x300 Chicago: Is MMA tougher than the NFL?
In conclusion, I am not trying to say that playing NFL football is a breeze by any stretch of the imagination. There are some beasts in the NFL and without a doubt, they hit like trucks. But to say that playing in the

NFL is tougher than MMA or to go even further to claim that they are not even close is insanity. If you think that MMA is a breeze, give it a shot. You may end up like NFL QB Matt Leinart, puking after 10 minutes of cage training according to Jay Glazer. Or ask Herschel Walker what he thinks now that he is a professional fighter. “I would rather go through NFL training camp because it’s a little easier.”  Hey I am not going to

argue with a Heisman Trophy winner and an NFL great like Mr. Walker, are you? So pay attention Chicago, as un-American as it sounds, it’s time that we all start to realize that Mixed Martial Arts is tougher than NFL football.
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Learn from short film on Bráulio *MMA*



You read all about ADCC superchamp Bráulio Estima’s MMA debut right here on
Now check out some of what went on behind the scenes in the lead-up to the battle, when the Gracie Barra professor mounted and tapped out Chris Holland with a vise-like arm-and-neck choke at their August 24 encounter at Titan Fighting Championship 24.

The athlete’s training, preparations and day-to-day life was documented by Ryan Loco, who assembled the footage to make the video below.

Check it out, and let us know what your favorite part is.

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Copa Pódio launches first-ever Couples Jiu-Jitsu Showdown


While penciling in the ten competitors to compete in the December Heavyweight Grand Prix, he promoters of the Copa Pódio Jiu-Jitsu tournament are drumming up some parallel match-ups.

The latest news, announced yesterday over the event’s Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/azouzsara is a double match-up pitting Jiu-Jitsu-fighter couples against each other.

The Couples Showdown involves two matches, each lasting six minutes. The first will be between men, and the second will be between women, and the women’s match picks up with the score carried over from the men’s match.

Should the men’s match end in a submission, the women will square off for a draw, should the girlfriend of the athlete who tapped out get comeuppance on her female counterpart.

One of the couples has already been picked. Lightweight world runner-up of 2011 Augusto Tanquinho and brown belt world champion Mackenzie Dern were invited to take part in the contest. The Copa Pódio organization will be announcing the second couple for this unprecedented match-up in the coming days.
Now GRACIEMAG.com readers can held out, by weighing in with their picks in the comments field below. Who do you feel should toe the line against Tanquinho and Mackenzie?

“These ideas add a more expansive dynamic to tournaments,” remarked Jeferson Maycá, the founder of Copa Pódio. “The Battle of the Cities, between fighters from different regions, and this Double Match-up between couples lets there be fighters from other weight groups,

not just the heavyweights in the GP. It’s worth keeping in mind that Guto Campos will be defending his Superchallenge title, and there will also be the superfight showdown between Leandro Lo and Felipe Preguiça. These are matched fights that guarantee excitement during the breaks between phases in the GP (the group, semifinal and final phase), holding us over till we find out who’s the big winner of the night among heavyweights.”
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Beginner BJJ & Grappling Tips

most people can throw some sort of punch which enables them to jump into stand up sparring and at least do something offensive in the beginning. When it comes to groundwork training things are quite different; most people don’t have a clue as to what to do. If the matted area that you grapple on was an ocean, a well trained BJJ student would be a shark and you, being new, can’t even swim yet. Now that’s Scary!
The good news is that there are a few things that you can incorporate into your rolling and overall training mindset that will bring things into the proper perspective, take some pressure off of you, make you a little harder to tap out and cause your training to be way more fun.
Here they are…

1. Guard Your Arms!
Extending your arms to push a rolling opponent away from you at the wrong time is one of the quickest ways to get yourself submitted. There are times when you should push with fully extended arms but in the beginning you unfortunately won’t know when it’s a safe time to do so. Therefore, It’s a good idea to try to keep both of your arms close to your body at all times, rarely extending them past a 90 degree angle. If you do get arm locked –you probably still will from time to time– try to recognize how your opponent caught you and the next time your find yourself in that same position, work even harder to protect your arms!

2. Guard your Neck!
It’s pretty much guaranteed that you will be choked into submission often when your first start rolling (sparring) with live opponents. Keep this from happening way too much by guarding your neck in several different ways; first don’t let them grab inside your collars with their hands if you’re training with a gi on; secondly avoid putting your head and neck underneath one of their armpits and you’ll avoid the dreaded guillotine choke; and third, when their arms are moving aggressively towards your neck area fight hard with both of your hands to stop them from locking in any sort of choke otherwise it’ll quickly be game over.
If you find yourself caught in a tight choke, remember it won’t hurt very much but it will render you unconscious in only a few seconds. Tap out and you can train again right away; don’t tap and when you awaken from unconsciousness, you’ll feel surprised that you’re lying on the mats in the gym instead of home in your bedroom.  Not a good feeling but don’t worry though it has happened to us all.

3. Use your Hips
Try your best not to just lie there while your opponent works you into some sort of choke, arm lock of leg lock. Your two legs can create an incredibly strong bridging motion when you plant them solidly on the floor and lift your hips up high. This bridging motion can destabilize your opponent forcing them to release certain holds in order to maintain their positioning and balance. A explosively strong bridge can also get you out of bad positions sometimes allowing you to move from the bottom position to the top. Keep your hips and entire body moving at all times and you’ll instantly make yourself much more difficult to control and submit.

4. Learn Your Escapes and Defenses
In terms of technique drilling, positional escapes can sometimes seem less exciting to practice than a flashy submission hold or a big takedown but they are exactly what you need to get good at when you first begin training on the ground. Pay attention to detail when learning escapes and spend a lot of time practicing them because it will pay off greatly by allowing you to survive a little longer with the tougher rolling partners.
If you have the money to invest in some private lessons with your instructor do it and use those lessons to hone your escape and submission defense skills. It’ll be well worth it.

5. Leave your Ego at the Door
This is the most important tip of all in my opinion. If you let getting tapped out, flipped, twisted, and squished by students –sometimes ones smaller and weaker than you—depress you and make you feel down, get ready because you’re going to be depressed for quite a while. These things are all part of the learning process and all who have achieved the upper belts in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (or a high level of proficiency in another ground fighting style) were once in your shoes. Instead of looking at training like a competition, try to enjoy your workouts, the fact that you are able to get out there and do it and when you get tapped out simply jump back in there and get back at it. Train hard and you’ll soon feel more like the hammer instead of the nail. Being the hammer is so fun!

6. Drill, Drill and Drill some more…
Underestimate the importance of practicing a certain technique many times and you will pay the price; your movement will never be executed smooth enough or fast enough or with the necessary details needed for it to work against a strong resisting opponent.

When you learn a technical movement, be sure to practice it often within the next month or so. It’s better to repeat one technique hundreds of times within a month then to learn a new technique every day and practice each of them very little. With focused practice you will be great with a few techniques instead of knowing many techniques that you pretty much suck at. This will arm you with a strong technical foundation that you will be able to build upon in the future so be sure to drill, drill, and drill some more…

7. Spend Some Time Stretching!
When you are new to mixed martial arts you will definitely experience some soreness after rigorous training sessions. A lot of punching will tighten the arms, kicking with work the hamstrings and other leg muscles, and groundwork (BJJ or some other grappling art) will take a pretty good chunk of time for your body to get used to.

Most often an instructor will put you through a complete warm-up to prep you for the remainder of class but you will find a lot of benefit in supplementing your training with some additional stretching. Yoga classes are a great option or you could simply repeat, on your own time, the many warm-ups and flexibility improving exercises that you learn in your martial arts classes.

Improved flexibility will help prevent personal injury and will also allow you to perform certain manoeuvres that those with limited flexibility cannot. I can tell you from personal experience that facing a very flexible opponent on the ground is a pain in the butt; their guards are often difficult to pass, they are tough to tap out and often have a great ability to escape trouble.  Stretching early in the morning will also make your feel great and set a positive tone for the rest of your day so be sure to try it out.

8. Show up for Classes

As an instructor the most common question that I am asked is “How do I get good fast?” My answer is simple. I tell them to just keep showing up for class.
Over the years, my best students have been those people that rarely miss a training session, the type of student that trains so often that when they don’t show up, you assume something bad has happened. That’s the type of dedication it takes to really excel in any martial art and it’s extra important for MMA training because there is so much stuff to learn.

If there was a magic pill that could make people champions I’d sell it and become very, very rich but for now all I know is that you must put in the time to become a diamond on the mats. So remember, no excuses! Train anytime you get the chance, participate in seminars, book private lessons and immerse yourself in mixed martial arts training to the fullest and I guarantee that good things will follow.
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10 MMA Grappling Tips

Anybody who is interested in MMA, whether it be fighting or watching it, could use 10 MMA grappling tips to know how to take someone down, maybe to use while they are playing grab all. These tips will ensure that you kick off your MMA career with as much of an advantage as possible. They are also designed to keep you safe from harm that may be caused by an inadequate technique.

  1. When grappling in MMA, make sure you pace yourself so you don’t lose all of your energy. This is probably one of the most important things you can learn about MMA grappling. If you tire yourself out too quickly, you will be bound to make careless mistakes.
  2. As you learn moves for MMA grappling, make sure to learn the counter for the move. This will help you in two different ways. The first one being that you will become a “master” at this specific move by knowing both the offensive and defensive aspects of the move. It will also help you because you can know what to look out for when you try to use the move!
  3. Be sure to keep calm while grappling in any form. One of the quickest ways to make mistakes and forget everything you’ve learned is to freak out when someone gets you in a headlock. The best way to keep calm is to take yourself out of the situation and ask yourself: A) what move is being used on you and B) how to counter it.
  4. While MMA grappling, make sure that you learn how to control and maintain a constant breath. One of the first natural reactions to a stressful situation is to hold ones breath; it’s just how humans work. But if you focus on maintaining a constant breath, and more importantly, on avoiding holding your breath, you will be a much more efficient fighter.
  5. When grappling in any form, if you have exhausted all of your options, don’t be afraid to tap out. This may sound like a wimp move, but there are many athletes who wouldn’t tap even if they turned blue. But  whether you can trust your opponent to let you go without a tap so you don’t go unconscious is a gamble that you should not be willing to take
  6. Do some strength training on the benches for grappling momentum!
  7.  Being a gargantuan isn’t necessary, but make sure you are powerful enough that you can control yourself when pulling off your moves! Look into different strength training for different muscles in order to have the power to control your MMA grappling.
  8. When doing any kind of strength training to increase MMA grappling ability, do a few reps with heavy weights. It is common knowledge among weightlifters that doing 5-8 reps of a heavy weight is your best bet at getting strong. Doing anymore reps than that means you should go up in weight because if you don’t, you’ll just get ripped and not strong.
  9. Focus during everything you do. 
  10. This is an important tip because there are many people who will focus while they are fighting but not while training, or vice versa. This is a bad habi. You should always focus on what you are doing. Not practicing focus at all times could mess up and make it harder for you to catch your mistakes.
  11. Use your size to your advantage when grappling. If you are small, get around your opponent and dodge and be nimble. On the other hand, if you are bigger, be aggressive and manhandle your opponent!
  12. Don’t be afraid to train with people more advanced than you. They will teach you stuff by showing it to you in the ring, and this is also a great way to build up endurance when grappling!
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20 Tips on Improving Your Grappling Game

Goal oriented training

Have a specific technique or area of focus for each rolling session. For example, I will come into training thinking "Today I am going to work on passing the butterfly guard". You may even want to let your training partners know this and start in those positions.

Consistent Training

Make BJJ a priority in your life, training 3-5 times a week EVERY week. It’s no coincidence that the best guys in class also have the best attendance.
Set a schedule for yourself and don't let anything that isn't really major interrupt it. Some guys get good really quick, but the best guys have all put in countless hours to get there. You will never see your game improve as fast as it should if you are missing classes or weeks of training.



Take advantage of your training partners

Make a mental note of who has the best guard, takedowns, passing, pins, or escapes. Then work with them, allowing them to use their strengths. This will highlight your mistakes and help you monitor your progress. Once you can consistently overcome their strong points then you know you are seriously improving. I never pull guard against someone if I know they have a slick bottom game, I want to be on top.

Study everyone else's game - When you aren't sparring study your teammate’s games and try to pick up their effective moves. Go over it in your head as they spar. Think about when you would be able to use that move, or how you would counter it. Ask them what little adjustments they make so that the technique works better.

Ask your instructor questions

All too often I see brown and black belts teach class and ask, "Any questions or things you guys want to work on?" and everyone is SILENT. Always have a question in mind, unless you are an absolute phenom there will always be a position where you don't feel 100% confident.

Try new things

I always use white belts for this. I will take a move or setup that I haven't tried yet and try to pull it off on the beginners. This works well because if you are still unsure about parts of it, you most likely will not be able to pull it off at all on the more advanced guys. For example, I'm trying to learn the twister right now, so whenever I roll with white belts or new blues that is what I go for. It also helps because it makes rolling with those much less skilled than yourself challenging.

Work on a new area until you feel it is one of your strengths, then move on to another. Work on keeping your guard, for example, until it is almost impossible for any others close to your level to pass, and really difficult for someone advanced to get by. Then add your sweeps. Once you are sweeping blues easily and higher belts on occasion, move to subs from the guard, etc...

Individual attention

Privates with your instructor work wonders. Roll with them or have them watch you roll with someone who usually get the better of you, then have them point out areas you need to improve upon or blatant mistakes you are making.

Train at different gyms

I realized that having new perspectives helped me greatly. Also, the experience of rolling with guys you don't know anything about will make your moves much sharper. This is especially true if you are the most technical one in your academy, don't fall into the "big fish in a small pond syndrome".

Compete as often as possible

Under the stress of competition the true nature of your skills come out. Also it helps to let you know where you stand in the larger scheme of things by giving you a realistic look at where you stand against other guys with the same belt level.

Teach new guys

If you can get a pure beginner to do a move 100% accurately then you know that you have it down. It is good practice to make sure you are aware of each little detail that makes a technique work.

Roll until you are exhausted at every training session

I see many guys pack their bags and go home when they have barely worked up a sweat. I always try to train until my instructors tell me they have to lock up and go home. Even if I'm so tired that I'm getting my ass kicked by someone of lower rank, the experience of training when you have no strength left will vastly improve your game both mentally and physically.

Your cardio is a technique. You may know a lot, but you won’t be able to express it well if you are worried that you are going to run out of air. You can really open up your game and keep pressure on your opponent if your lungs can handle the constant movement and explosiveness.

Train in inferior positions

Allow your training partners to get your back, pass your guard, or mount you. Don't let them know that you are allowing them to have the position (I say this because if they think they got it legitimately they tend to get excited and really work for the finish, which is good for you). Stay in the inferior position and work on simply avoiding the submissions, then work your escapes. This will help you feel comfortable in even the worst situations, which in my opinion is a major difference between an inexperienced grappler and a experienced one.

Have a good balance between top and bottom

If I tap someone from my guard, then I will make it my goal to pass and tap them from side control during the next roll. If I tap someone from the top, I will pull guard the next time. When I was a new blue belt I had a decent guard and I would tend to neglect my top game while rolling because I could tap most people from the bottom, it was an ego thing I had to get over and it held me back some. Now when I roll I always alternate between top and bottom, not allowing myself to neglect either area.

Find someone who can manhandle you

Never back down from sparring the toughest guys in class. Each sparring session, put your ego aside and roll with the best guy you can find, also spar with heavy guys, quick guys, and guys with unlimited endurance. As a beginner or intermediate grappler, you are under no pressure to be brilliant, so use that time to open up your game and test the positions you know against guy who know what they are doing.

Drill things to death

Take about ten minutes before or after you roll to just work on the techniques you've been shown over the past few days of class. Also try to take one day a week and make it your drilling day. That day spend at least a half hour - 45 minutes just repeating techniques and sequences over, and over and over. It’s boring and I hate doing it, but it helps a great deal.

Although it is boring, many of the best guys I know devote a portion of every training session to drilling a basic movement with a partner.

Specialize

Find positions that fit your game and work them in sparring until you can rely on them against just about anyone. For example, there was a time when my all-around game was weak, but I knew that I had one sweep from my half-guard that I could catch just about anyone with. Didn't matter what level they were, I knew I would sweep them if I got the underhook in the half-guard. You need a technique like that from every position to go to against tougher guys. You’ll start to learn set-up for those specialized techniques and areas and then it will keep branching off from there which will then lead to you developing a game/style for yourself.

Share your tricks

Share your tricks with anyone who asks. As they get better, they will be more competition for you. When you have tough competition, you will inevitably get tougher to beat yourself.



Use training sessions as a time to learn not win

Think of a move you want to pull off and the situation that would require it. When training, the sparring sessions should be more about pulling off that move/moves than winning the match. To me, it's more important if you pull off a move you've been wanting to implement in your game then tapping your teammate in class. It's a great feeling finally getting a move you've been wanting for a long time, even if the end result is you getting tapped. Tourneys are about playing your best game and playing to win; class is all about experimenting.

Visualization

Training isn't just on the mat. It is also in the mind. When you learn a technique that you feel works for your game or you've been having trouble pulling off a certain move. Think about how you can make your technique better and practice in your head. Visualize your movements and try to feel and react in your mind what it is you can and will do to beat your opponent. I also recommend a book called “The Mind Gym” to aid in your mental training.



Be Technical

Just like stated before practice isn't the time to go full force and try to maul your partners. It is a time to learn and improve. True there are times in class where you do want to play to win. I would say maybe 1 out of every 5 classes, but for the most part you want to improve and become as technical as possible. It is important to focus on good technique first and then add your attributes. It will make things much easier in the long run. If you feel your self muscling out of position or using your speed instead take a moment to stop and thing what the proper technique it is you can use to accomplish your goal. If your not sure you can always “ASK QUESTIONS”. Remember this the more technique you use the less energy you waste.

Don't Ever Forget The Basics

A lot of people get wrapped up in the newest techniques that are coming out. While some are very good and some are not. It is also extremely important that you don't forget about the basics. If you watch any major tournament you will see that most matches are won by using mostly the basics. If you are not proficient at the basics you will never be able to properly expand upon your skills and add any new techniques and make them work easily for you.

Train Takedowns

I know BJJ is a ground fighting art but too many schools neglect the importance of the stand-up game. Most altercations start from the feet and ALL tournaments start on the feet. Especially when you start to move up the ranks and as time goes on you will see that more and more people are getting comfortable with there takedown abilities.




When you are the one that dictates where the fight is going to be and when and how it will go to the ground that is a big confidence booster. If you are the one to take your opponent down chances are you not only physically gave yourself an advantage but you did mentally to, because you felt confident on your feet and you startled your opponent because you just dictated the fight from the beginning. It is always nice to be able to stand in front of your opponent and not be afraid of getting taken down and resorting to pulling guard.
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Learn a sweep from one of the aces on Bitetti Combat 12 card


The Bitetti Combat promotion will be returning to the Rocinha Sports Complex this coming September 8 to showcase some up-and-coming Brazilian domestic talent

For the 12th installment of the event, Amaury Bitetti has drummed up two GPs—one under-61 k and the other under-66 kg—, as well as a number of superfights and a title fight, for a total ten fights on the card.
In the GPs: Rodolfo Marques of Nova União, Pedro Nobre of BTT, William Viana of TFT and Sheymon Moraes of Team Nogueira will be doing battle for the under-61 kg GP title.

At featherweight, under-66 kg, Marcos Vinicius of NineNine-PE will take on Toninho Furia of BTT, while at the other end of the bracket, Bruno Caveira of Team Nogueira will square off with Cylderlan Louco of PRVT.

“I trained a lot. I’ll be going in there to strike, but if it goes to the ground, I’m a black belt Jiu-Jitsu and will put my skills to practice,” said Marcos.

In the following video, Marcos Vinicius teaches a sweep exclusively for grapplator.blogspot.com readers. In it, he warns of the importance of breaking the opponent’s posture and keeping him from forcing his way past guard.







In the evening’s main event, welterweight GP champion André Chatuba will defend his belt against Cassiano Tytshyo, and the winner will likely appear on the next season of TUF Brazil or the October UFC Rio 3.

“Those are rumors that surfaced on Sherdog.com. I can’t confirm anything yet, but where there’s smoke there’s fire,” said Osiris Maia, one of the organizers of the event.

Now Luis Carlos Niquimba of Jacaré team and Fabio Campos of Xgym, two fighters from needy communities, will face off in the beginners bout.

Another attraction is the all female fight between boxer and MMA newcomer Duda Yancovich and Luana Teixeira.

Stay tuned to GRACIEMAG.com for more breaking news regarding Bitetti Combat 12.

Bitetti Combat 12
Rocinha, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
September 8, 2012

André Santos  “Chatuba”  (Relma Combat/Team Nogueira) vs Cassiano Tytschyo (Chute Boxe)
Duda Yancovich (Team Nogueira ) vs Luana Teixeira (Paraná)
Luis Carlos “Niquimba”(Jacaré) vs Fabio Campos (XGYM)
GP 66kg

Marcos Vinicius (NineNine) vs Gleristone Santos “Toninho Fúria“(BTT)
Bruno Machado “Caveira” (Team Nogueira) vs Cylderlan Silva” Porco Louco” (PRVT)
Preliminary 66kg

Guido Cannetti (GOA Argentina) vs Rafael Dias (BTT)
GP 61kg

Willian Viana (Tatá) vs Pedro Nobre (BTT)
Rodolfo Marques (NU) vs Sheymon Moraes (Team Nogueira)
Preliminary 61kg

Sandro China (Careca) vs Pedro Henrique “Kezem” (GFT)
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Bráulio Estima on Jones v Belfort: The first to slip up will pay dearly

Vitor Belfort, between ex-UFC champion Rashad Evans and Jiu-Jitsu champ Brazilian Estima, during training at Blackzilians camp in Florida / Photo by Ryan Loco


Bráulio Estima had a sterling maiden outing in MMA last month, and following some well-deserved off time surfing, his mind is already back on training—and his eyes on UFC 152.

“It’s hugely satisfying to train with Vitor. I’m a fan of his from way back, so I’m somewhat partial,” said Carcará, another elite athlete helping Belfort prepare for his attempt to take the light heavyweight title from the fearsome Jon Jones, during a chat with GRACIEMAG.com. “Vitor’s a born professional.

 He’s dedicated and has a wealth of knowledge. Having started so early, he’s got some crazy octagon experience. I’ve learned a lot from him. Training here at Blackzilians is really professional, with lots of tactics, specific training on attacks and blocking takedowns and attacks,” added the Jiu-Jitsu professor from Gracie Barra Birmingham.

As for training, the black belt feels the help of one of Jones’s former friends will prove essential.

Vitor has been practicing a bit of everything. Rashad Evans is backing Vitor up big time. There’s no one better than him to teach Vitor what he needs to know. Predicting the outcome of a fight like this one is difficult, but there is one thing I can say: Vitor’s doing awesome in striking, ground and pound and Jiu-Jitsu. A fight’s a fight, and nobody’s invincible. The way I see it, the first one to slip up will pay dearly,” he said in closing. What do you think, savvy reader, will Vitor Belfort hold his own against Jon Jones on the coming 22nd? Will Belfort’s Jiu-Jitsu make the difference? Share your take with us.
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tips grappling


People take notes for many different reasons.

 You take notes in school so you can study, you jot down notes when you need to remember what to pick up at the store, and you may take notes when you have an idea that you want to try out or check on. I know I do in these situations, so I have some questions for you.

 * Do you bring a notebook into class with you when you train? If so, what do you do with it in class?

 * Do you have a notebook that you write in at home after training? If so, what kind of notes do you write down when you get home? * Do you have a specific way you take notes? Is there a system?

* Do you review your notes that you take? Does it help you remember techniques or make you better?

 Do you even do anything with them?

 For the first 2 years of my training I wrote down every single technique that I learned. I would go home and then type out every single detail that I could remember.

 I would categorize the movements, date them, and I even made a color key so I knew right away what type of category each technique fell under. Around the 2 year mark I compiled about 400 Brazilian Jiu Jitsu techniques that I learned in class. I was a true collector of techniques. I wanted to make sure I didn’t miss anything.

 Now am I saying you should do what I did? Definitely not! Why? Because I took all of that time to write down all of these techniques and I must have only reviewed them only 10 times max. I realized that just because I wrote down everything I learned didn’t mean that I was going to remember everything. Another thing I realized was that the task was very monotonous and didn’t have any real significance in regards to what I needed to get better at in my grappling. It turned into the equivalence of collecting baseball cards but instead I was just collecting techniques.

 Once I realized that this approach wasn’t really benefiting me, I didn’t stop taking notes but I decided to change my approach so that if I was going to take notes it was going to be in a way that would actually help me get better. Here is what I did:

* I stopped writing down every technique that I learned * I only focused on things I was having trouble with. If you focus on actual problems you are facing then it will be more likely that you’ll remember what you learned and it will help you improve your actual game right away.

* Everything I wrote down in training was in the form of a question or I would have a question at least related to everything I wrote down. Why? Because if I wrote it down in question form, then I would be well prepared to ask that question to someone who may know the answer and it will help them relay the information easier back to me.

 * I realized that the one important aspect of my training that I wasn’t taking notes on was my rolling. So after each training session I would go home and I would write down questions that related to that nights rolling. The reason I started doing this was because during rolling you experience issues that you really are having trouble with. These are areas that affect what you are actually trying to do, so these are the things you should focus on more then anything. Examples of the types of things I would write down after rolling would be.

* How can I stop my opponent from turning their hip down on me in half guard? * What can I do to open my opponent’s closed guard if I’m having trouble? * When I’m in the guard I keep getting caught in a triangle choke. How can I prevent this? * How can I stop my partner from getting the guard back when I have them in side control position? * I went for a hug choke but for some reason I couldn’t get it. What was I doing wrong?

 * How can I stop from getting mounted? * After I would write down the question, I would reflect on what happened in regards to that question I asked. The reason I would do this is for a couple of reasons actually. It will help me try to figure out what I might have been doing wrong myself and it will also help me tell my instructor what I felt happening during the situation so he can better assist me in fixing the problem. For example if I had the question “What can I do to open my opponent’s closed guard?” I would write down what I remembered happening such as: * He kept pulling down on my head. * I couldn’t open my training partners guard by using my elbows. * When I tried to put my knee under my partner’s butt I would lose my balance.

 Additional Tips To make this even better you should take advantage of your breaks between rolling. When you are done rolling each time go straight to your notebook and jot down one issue you want to address that happened during that rolling session. Whether it was a problem you had that your opponent was causing or a problem you had that you couldn’t quite figure out to do yourself. If you roll four times during one training session then you should have four different issues to address.

 Or you can mark off a particular issue if it happens again in a different rolling session with an asterisk, which is noting that particular issue as a primary focus that you need to address. You don’t have to think of a question to write during this time. Just write down something to help you remember the issue. Then when you go home take each issue that you wrote down and create a question for each one. You now should have four questions related to your training in regards to what happened during your live rolling sessions.

 These questions will be more important then any technique that you decide to write down because they are issues that you really had trouble with. They happened while you were going against a resisting opponent. The goal is to improve upon your current game as much as possible. Expand it and make it better. As you train more and more you should have a list of questions in your notebook related to your current issues.

 Some questions may come up frequently and those particular questions you should mark down as “very important”. Those should be the areas you address more then others because you want to prevent yourself from experiencing the same problems over and over again. Remember also to note your experiences in regards to the situation you created the question about so you have some information to feed to your instructor when you approach him.

 If you have readily prepared questions and experiences corresponding to that question you will help your instructor a lot in regards to them being able to help you even more. Now that you are building a list of questions in regards to your game, what can you do with those questions? *


This question is very important because it’s a real problem you had. Usually one or two questions max (mostly one) is good because other students may have questions also.



 * Use these question so you can be prepared if you decide to take a private lesson with someone. To have a set list of questions when you attend a private lesson is a great courtesy to both you and your instructor you’re meeting with. It will make the lesson much more productive, it will run smoother, and you’ll get a lot more out of it.

 * You can even use these questions to ask fellow grapplers on the internet and see what they can come up with or what experiences they have in relation to your issue.

 The main point is to have actual questions that related to real problems you’re having in your training. Don’t waste your rolling time.

 That is the time where you should actually be taking notes. After each training session you should have a minimum of two questions created related to what happened when you were rolling with your partners. You may not get a chance to address each question right away and your list of questions my build up faster then they are checked off as “addressed” but at least you know exactly what it is that you need to work on and what it is you should ask for help on.
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Fernando Vieira Instructional PART 1 Passing the shin-on-shin guard Jits Magazine


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RELSON gracie Arm Lock tips


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TheTake out the garbage Sweep


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Marcelo Garcia at Chelsea Piers

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20 tips to enhance your play

 20 tips to enhance your play

If you only read and keep the teachings presented here, you’re not going anywhere with your ground techniques. The following advices – useful in tournaments with gi, grappling, MMA and for the athletes personal evolution – ought to be studied between trainings. On this case, our little script here can change everything you had been doing wrong – or simply didn’t know existed. Aiming at bringing you a large and carefully wrought guide (whether you are or not a beginner), we have asked the main masters of the sport: what would you like to have found out earlier? What’s behind the gold medals and amazing titles? What are the shortcuts? What are the secrets? Each Jiu-Jitsu exponent brought their own delicacy to this feast. Enjoy, therefore, this manual if you wish to evolve. In Jiu-Jitsu, life – everything.
1)Exercise your ears
The first rule to perfect your Jiu-Jitsu is to never be deaf to other people’s knowledge,” says Renzo Gracie. “It’s common to see guys who deem themselves professors decline a new teaching, ignoring a pupil who shows something new. To grow better you must understand how people think and how they got to that position. Even if it’s not perfect, it’s up to you to enhance it.” A clear example was a coup with which Gracie surprised Canadian fighter Carlos Newton in the Pride Bushido 1: “I nearly submitted him on the foot lock, in a position a white-belt had taught me. Starting from the tip I perfected and developed the leg attack, from the knee lock to the foot lock.” To Renzo, it doesn’t matter whether the student is a blue-, white-belt, or someone who’s never fought: the moment they show you something, shut your mouth and pay attention. “Even if the move is not efficient, the concept might help your play. When you don’t allow yourself to accept any other form of knowledge, you become a limited professor,” he teaches.

2)Always believe in the move

If you follow Rodrigo Minotauro’s MMA bouts, you can probably figure out his tip to make your Jiu-Jitsu better. A combative athlete, always with a surprising coup at hand, he shoots: “Fight to get a grip on your opponent.” How do you do that? Well, the Brazilian Top Team star suggests that every fighter ignores the clock and the points during the combats. This measure may result in defeats in the beginning, but on the long run it’ll leave the fighter “light and loose” (Nogueira’s definition). “There is nothing better than fighting naturally and pressure-free,” he says. “The secret is to believe He’s got to believe,” adds Wallid Ismail. Carlson Gracie’s black-belt’s advice is based on three elements: stamina, attitude and will to win. “At the time of the position or the fight, the main thing is to believe. To make the move work, you’ve got to believe it will work. And it doesn’t matter who’s on the other side, because there lies the difference between winner and loser. The winner is never intimidated. He may even fear, but he must have something greater inside – the attitude.”

Practice an outdoor sport

Soccer, jogging, outdoor work out – there’s always a healthy activity waiting for the athlete who takes off the gi after hours of grappling in the academy. One can then dive into a commonplace sport (surf, for instance, is practised by nine in every ten fighters) or even invent their own distraction. This strategy keeps the body in shape without making the fighter stressed from the training routine. “Every physical activity, not only Jiu-Jitsu, is useful for working out heart and mind, leading the guy to thinking that, instead of smoking a joint or using drugs, he can dedicate his time to exercise,” says Royler Gracie, who has since 1999 been climbing the Rock of Gavea, at Rio de Janeiro: “It’s a workout similar to the Macacos Hill trail at Teresopolis, which I would cross with Rickson when he was preparing for MMA fights,” he recollects.

4. Repeat the moves over and over

Leaders of victorious academies in Jiu-Jitsu and MMA, Andre Pederneiras (Nova Uniao) and Sylvio Behring (Winner-Behring) don’t fear being repetitive when they assure that the motto is to persist and persist and then persist some more when it comes to position-training. “Definitely the key is the positions. In judo, the athlete makes 1,000 takedowns on every session. It’s sad to see that in the Jiu-Jitsu milieu people think it’s a waste of time. We repeat the basic positions in the warm up about 5 times before every practice”, says Pederneiras. Master Sylvio corroborates: “Every title we conquered in the last years with Mario Reis and Fabricio Werdum were due to this philosophy: repeating the basics and go through a training fight under supervision, which is the sparring game. One of the athletes executes every type of attack, arm, triangle, and the other tries to defend from the blitz”, says Marcelo Behring’s brother, who demands 90 seconds or a series of 100 repetitions after training. “Thus the athlete reaches exhaustion and lets the movement flow naturally.” After all, as professor Jean Jacques Machado puts it, it’s better to repeat a position a thousand times, working on it for a month, than learning one a day.
The phenomenon Nino “Elvis” Schembri also agrees on the tip: “More and more I convince myself that one should pay attention to the positions, from the white all the way to the black belt. The main thing in Jiu-Jitsu, a sport in which, I believe, the most technical player gets the advantage, is to repeat the positions. Everybody does that in boxing, judo, but in Jiu-Jitsu the guys are a little lazy. Including me.” To Nino, it’s reasonable to reserve the beginning of the practice to repeating 50 positions for each side, thrice a week. “And don’t even think of giving up”, he smiles.

5. Set goals

In the nineties, when he was among the best competitors in Jiu-Jitsu, Ze Mario Sperry had a notebook where he would right the goals to be reached in training, in a given period. The black-belt used to rip the leaves and leave them on all corners of his house. “I’d go to the bathroom to shave and would find a note glued to the mirror: ‘If you want to be a champion, you’ve got one week to do this or train that’,” he recalls. Sperry explains that setting goals helps in the evaluation and control of what is being produced in the training. “The ideal is that the fighter define what he wants. Afterwards, find ways to get there, reckoning the time necessary to reach it.” For an example, the black-belt recollects the time he set the goal of getting a perfect physical condition. To achieve it, he designed a series that focused on several exercises, such as squatting, weight lifting and running-sprints. “By keeping my heart-beat accelerated with this workout, I made progress until I conditioned my body to the rhythm of the combats.” This “note pursuit” enabled the BTT master to keep focus on his career’s objectives, being sure what he had to improve in a near future.
Black-belt Vitor Shaolin warns his students about this up to this day: “You must set up your training in such a way that you define what are the two most important competitions for you to be in that year. No matter how much you try it, you can never be 100% in all tournaments,” he guarantees. “Then you must establish the rules: ‘I want to be well in the Brazilian and World championships.’ And prepare to place well only in these tournaments, not minding whatever you win or lose in the rest of the competitions. The body is not a machine and cannot remain on a level 8 or 9 all the time, be it in Jiu-Jitsu or MMA, which is the Triathlon of fighting,” the Shooto champion concludes.

6. Be dynamic

To Amaury Bitetti, Jiu-Jitsu is like chess: you only move a piece thinking of the next move. The two-time world open champion in ’96-’97 says an attacking position during the fight must always be connected to other future positions whose objective is the submission or – just to follow the comparison – the check-mate. In order to achieve that, Amaury advises that the attack-trainings should be made in a logical progression. For instance: a takedown leads to a guard-pass, which in its turn leads us to a mount, which leads to a choke. The combinations are infinite; what matters is that your game be not static. Just as in the whiskey advertisement: keep walking. Turn your Jiu-Jitsu into a motor gear.

7. You are an athlete, not a weight-lifter

Two-time world open champion 02-03, Marcio Pe de Pano strives to convince the athletes of the fact that they don’t need to look for a superathlete’s body at any cost. To the black-belt, the secret lies, above all, in training to ally technique and good conditioning. “If you train Jiu-Jitsu, you ought to work out, but not make a monstrous physical preparation,” he comments. “If you fight MMA or wrestling, you might need such a body. In Jiu-Jitsu, physical preparation is not all: one must work to become a technical and conditional athlete.” Therefore, don’t go try anything silly.

8.) Strengthen your grip

The first attitude necessary to follow this hint by Vitor Shaolin is: tighten that rope well! After all, the principle behind this task is to use a thick rope tied to the academy’s ceiling in order to strengthen the fighter’s grip on the opponent’s gi. An important detail is that this exercise is good to another very important muscle for the athlete: the abdomen.
As Shaolin demonstrates, there are three ways of climbing, each of which improves a specific group of moves. In the first exercise (picture A), the athlete uses short grips to get to the top, which helps in the chokes executed with the hands near and the arms bent. As he shows, the climb can be made with the hand reversed (picture B). In the following task (picture C) he goes upwards with wider grips, ideal to strengthen a pull from the ground with a hip escape (bottom picture) or any position that demands a strong grip with the arms stretched. The detail is to keep the legs always elevated, which toughens the abs. “You go up, stop for a few seconds with the legs stretched, and then descend in the same fashion,” explains the Nova Uniao professor. “The wider grip is the hardest, so I do it only once a day, five times a week. The other one, easier, I repeat ten times a week, twice on one day, thrice on the next, then twice… Always after training, when the arms are more tired.”

abc

9. Strive to be complete

What good is it to get an A+ in guard-passing but flunk attack-from-the-back? To stand out in Jiu-Jitsu, the fighter can’t excel at one or two moves. He must play in the eleven, as we say in football. Black-belt Saulo Ribeiro teaches a simple way of reaching versatility: “Many people despises the warm-up before practising. Well, dedicate the first 15 minutes in the academy to doing the basic: escape from the back, from the mount, and side-mount. In the next 15, practise submission from the back, the mount and the side-mount. Do this every day in your Jiu-Jitsu career. It may be boring, but it’ll make you complete. No matter what belt. I am a black-belt and still discipline myself into doing it till today. Oh, I nearly missed it. Practise judo at least twice a week. Knowing how to fight standing is also fundamental. That it my formula for becoming complete.”

10. Posture is everything

By training Jiu-Jitsu frequently, three or four times a week, our physical preparation specialist Martin Rooney’s attention was caught by a simple, though essential, tip. “It was something that changed the way I looked at workout itself: whether on the mat or with the dumb-bells, always pay attention to your posture. That is the most important, both if you are trying pass a guard or lifting tremendous weight. Without the adequate posture you don’t spare moves, you worsen the strike’s execution and augment the health hazards – or loss hazards.” In case the reader suspects on Martin for the fact that he isn’t a great BJJ star, remember that is one of the aspects Rickson Gracie stresses the most while training. So, straight neck, lined-up shoulders, firm back and off you go.
posture

11. Learn from defeat

Many fighters absorb but negativity from losses. They get depressed, blame God and the world for the result and, sometimes, deem their careers finished. Leonardo Vieira does the exact opposite. He uses the defeats (preferably in practices, of course) to reflect on what he can do better. “I’m convinced that everybody who submits all of their opponents in the trainings is actually learning nothing,” says Leo. Like the child, who only learns how to walk by stumbling, it’s by tapping that the Jiu-Jitsu practitioner improves their art. Therefore, the Brasa black-belt advises that the masters mix athletes of different graduations in the trainings. Thus the fights aren’t too even, leaving room for adversities. Martin Rooney agrees: “The athlete who reacts with bad feelings to the defeats isn’t learning the incredible lessons that have been taught him, and that would make his chances of losing again much smaller. There’s no such thing as winning and losing, but only winning and learning,” says Renzo’s and Ricardo Cachorrao’s trainer. “Only you can your reaction and spirits to grow as an athlete. I believe the person that has been submitted the most is the toughest to beat. That’s what a tough guy is made of. That’s of a black-belt is made of,” he summarizes. Leo Vieira calls the attention to the fact that the losses out of the mats are just as fundamental to form a champion, above all in what concerns character. “When there was a dissidence at the first formation of the Alliance team and I was alone in Sao Paulo, I went through one of the most difficult moments of my life. However, I became a much stronger person and learned a lot about life. I wouldn’t be here today if I hadn’t gone through that,” he evaluates.

12.Look for the best version of the move for you

Master Osvaldo Alves says that up until the nineteen-seventies one only gave and armbar-in-guard by uncrossing and wide-opening the legs. “I realized this coup was vulnerable, for it enabled the opponent to flee and pass the guard easily. So I invented the climbing-armbar,” recalls the red-and-black-belt. As you can see on the image, this armlock version makes it a lot harder for the adversary to escape. “The thing is to not lock the opponent’s arm, but his/her shoulder,” clears up the master, who uses his own calf against the sparring’s shoulder, stopping him from getting up. Summarizing: if you don’t get along with a certain move, try to perfect it, adapt it to your physical and technical traits, always searching new versions for it. That’s what makes Jiu-Jitsu evolve continuously.
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13. The best strategyis the attack

“I always try to attack. While I’m on the offensive, my opponent can think of nothing but defending, that is, I’m protected,” Marcelo Garcia teaches. As an example, the Alliance black-belt recalls the time when he didn’t know to keep an open guard. He would cross the legs on the opponent’s back and pray for the time to elapse. “I was afraid of attacking,” he evaluates. After noticing the deficiency Marcelo started uncrossing the feet and practising sweeps. He realised that, if he went right onto the adversary, he’d run a much smaller risk of being submitted than if he played defending, applying but rare counter-strikes. Garcia also realised that, by being the first to attack, he would make his opponents abandon their former plan. If he prolonged the blitz, Marcelo also prolonged this “untouchable” state. But there are those who say that repeated attacks tend to tire the athlete. “What really tires is to hold the fight back the whole time,” Marcelo argues. Notwithstanding, the black-belt gives some advice on physical preparation for those who agree that the best defense is the attack: “Climbing stairs and ramps is the best option for an amazing guard,” he reveals.

14. Don’t forget toenhance your defense

Despite liking the attacking strategy suggested by Marcelo Garcia, Rillion Gracie stresses the importance of training submission-escapes (remembering that the other guy may attack first). “Look at Roger Gracie’s performances in the last World Championship. He suffered fulminating attacks right in the beginning of the battles but was able to defend like a master to then counter-attack,” Rillion recalls. The Gracie Leblon Master says that, while practising defense, the competitor learns exactly what the opponent feels like in situations of adversity. “Learning defense improves the attack. I f the lion knows how the prey can escape, it’ll capture it in a much more precise way,” he ponders. To practise defense in Jiu-Jitsu, Rillion advises the reader into forgetting s/he is strong. “Exercise your patience. Use the weight and the force of the levers,” he explains. “Start practising defense as soon as possible, to awake just as soon the survival instinct in your fighter’s soul.”

15. Stretch!

Ever since he was a kid, Antonio Schembri has been used to stretching daily. And he never complained, unlike his opponents, whom, in time and practice, he began to submit in the most varied ways. “I’m very flexible, so I always take a strong session before and after training. Some people are stiffer, they don’t like it, but stretching is essential, especially the bottom half, legs, spine and lumbar,” says the Chute Boxe athlete. According to “Elvis,” stretching is vital even for improving the guard. “What I realize in competitions, even black-belts’, is that everybody gets along well on top, but not everyone can keep a good guard. So besides stretching, which improves the de-passing, the athlete must set up a schedule and program himself and persist in training every single variation, butterfly guard, closed guard, with inside hooks… You can’t let the guy cross the knee line, or else you’ll have to pull something out of your ass to stop the guy from passing,” Schembri teaches.

16. Develop self-knowledge

According to Fabio Gurgel, competition-Jiu-Jitsu is so leveled nowadays that the small details can make the difference in the fight’s result. Considering that you, fearless reader, have already looked after the technique and physical preparation, the Alliance general calls the attention to a “detail” that can turn you into a giant of the mats: self-knowledge. “I advise my students to talk to themselves. Self-evaluation makes the athlete know himself better, finding out his true virtues and weaknesses. He starts being conscious of his own instincts, develops self-confidence and doesn’t chiken out. Thus the athlete can design an ideal fighting plan,” Gurgel analyses, and then describes the state of mind with which one should enter the ring: “The fighter’s self-knowledge must turn the battler into something pleasant. The Jiu-Jitsu practitioner must have fun in the championships. That way, it all becomes easy.”

17. Simulate hindrances and escapes

“Back at Carlson’s academy, I always trained with partners who would attack me full-on That’s what’s bad about training in an academy where everybody wants to fight for real: you don’t get used to the opponent that hinders the fighting in the competitions,” Ricardo de la Riva points out, stressing the hard time he had developing his game against Japanese fighter Yuki Nakai in September 2004.His hint, accordingly, is to simulate fights where the opponent neither tries to pass nor to submit; to fight against a technical sparring – or one who runs away. Marcelo Garcia also has a hint for those hard situations: stretching and breathing. “The fighter has got to know how to stretch and move all of his members, besides breathing properly, for the time when he is on the bottom, being smashed and smothered by the adversary,” says the middle-weight world champion. In order to learn how to get out of the tough situations, Garcia indicates: the good thing is to practise guard with heavier mates.

18. Try!

Jean Jacques Machado likes to awake his students’ creativity. The master organizes “lab sessions” during the trainings in the academy where he teaches in Los Angeles. On these moments he shows the classroom a move, asks the students to study it and to present a defense a week later. “There are many ways to get to a goal. I like my pupils to use their creativity and find out new ways to get there,” he evaluates. In other words, Jean doesn’t make his apprentices “move repeaters.” By disseminating experimentalism in his lessons, the black-bellt gives birth to classrooms full of creative and innovating athletes. Leo Vieira likes Jacques’ methodology, but presents another way of making the students open minded: “Look at the kids fighting. Notice how they’re always laughing and jumping around. That’s how I like to fight. Children invent, use unexpected moves that, if adapted to adult Jiu-Jitsu, can be fruitful. Teaching kids is a great source of knowledge to me.”

19. Regularity, always

Also to 1999 ADCC champion Jean Machado, there’s nothing more important than regularity. Not vanishing from the academy is, therefore, essential for the athlete’s evolution – s/he must avoid substituting wasted weeks with overtraining periods. Nearly every one of the gi-superstars knows that by heart, as Pe de Pano Illustrates: “The secret is regularity: training over and over and over. Twice a day if possible. As I began late, I would make it up by going to the academy in the afternoon and at night.” According to him, training regularly leads to evolving and injury-avoiding. “For the fact that you keep training, the body gets used to the effort you make. It was after I began resuming and quitting that I began to have injuries often,” he completes. A partisan to that idea, Vitor Shaolin exemplifies: “Besides training often, you must divide the trainings, understand that there is a little something called resting. So if in the afternoon the practice is slower, take the chance to rest. If your body doesn’t react all that well in the morning but you know that in the morning the training is profitable, wake up earlier to get your body prepared. Practise more heavily at night, but don’t let it go on till too late, for you might go to bed tense, thinking of training – and end up not resting at all.”

20. Respect and reflect

Respect and dedication are utterly necessary to Ricardo de la Riva. “The idea is to arrive with an open mind and to practise with pleasure, and not to simply want to win in the training. You must respect, above all, not only the dojo and the professor, but also your practice-mate, after all you need him/her,” says the master. According to Martin Rooney, the salutation can afford great benefits that sometimes can go by unnoticed. “In all sports, athletes create rituals that push the negative energy away. However, I realise that many Jiu-Jitsu beginners ignore that fact, maybe for seeing martial arts as just a way of defending, a game of win or lose,” he says. Martin refers to the simple and traditional act of bowing. Associated for centuries to martial arts, the act should not be seen as only a demonstration of respect or a sign that the fight has begun. As the American trainer explains, the time to bow is a great opportunity to concentrate. The bow is the moment when the practice begins, so any negative thought or attitude must be left aside – or out of the academy. “A salutation at the end of the practice enables the athlete to go back to his normal life,” he says. “Develop, therefore, a strong mental connection so that your mind is activated by the bow in the beginning. Just as in any sport, if your head is not ready to practise, it’s impossible to learn anything,” Rooney concludes.
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