A Friday Night Judo Battle in South Philly

Yesterday was another long night of battling it out on the mats at Osagame. Here’s a video with some highlights:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHr-ej52_2Y

I think the whole thing lasted about two and a half hours. We did:

  • Regular tachi waza randori (takedowns)
  • Newaza randori (groundwork)
  • Mock shiai (timed judo competition matches)

There was lots of good judo, different styles, different bodies. Drexel Judo brought out a good number of higher ranks including the Hawaiian thunder bear (aka Keola).

Some folks were nursing injuries (including myself) but you wouldn’t know it. Seriously, Joe (Spicy) had a match with Keola where he was limping the whole time. It was like watching the dramatic finale of a Mel Gibson film. Perhaps not the smartest thing. But us judo guys aren’t known for our brilliance in such matters.

I was fighting very hesitant the whole night because of my neck. It made me realize that I made the correct decision about not fighting in Grapplers Quest last weekend. But overall I had a few excellent matches which allowed me to impose my game on the feet and on the ground.

Guard Passing Intervention

There are times in your jiu jitsu development that you need an intervention, either from yourself or your coach or both. First step is admitting that you suck. I did that, and was depressed for a week about it. Step two is to analyze the biggest problems and what needs to be done to fix them. Jared did exactly that, better than most coaches I’ve ever trained with. He taught  four passes, which set me on a long road of improvement in this aspect of the top game.

I now have a clear system of passing. It feels awkward, since it’s new, but it’s clear that the potential is there. Already, I’ve been plowing through guards that gave me trouble before. X-pass, in particular, has been very effective, especially since it’s there more often than the others.

Below are some of the passes I’ve been drilling. The first four are the four that Jared taught me. Two of them I already knew, but there’s nothing like a coach drilling into your brain the importance and effectiveness of a pass. Linked are some youtube videos showing the pass.

I got a chance to drill and work on these in several training sessions at BJJ United. Every hour I spend on those mats, I walk away with a better jiu jitsu game.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3zeEe7Sd2as

Adding a Straight Foot Lock to the Butterfly, X Guard Mix

The butterfly guard, to me, is the best “learning” guard. By that I mean, for my experience with jiu jitsu, it’s the guard that most prevents stalling-type tactics in training and allows me to explore different positions, off-balancing techniques, grips, sweeps, back takes, etc.

From the butterfly guard, I look for the one-legged x-guard, regular x-guard, reverse de la riva, etc. I haven’t, however, looked for the obvious leg locks from the x-guard position. There’s a knee bar, and there’s also the basic straight footlock. In the following video, Marcus ”Buchecha” Almeida shows this basic footlock. To me, these type of videos are what YouTube is good for: high-level competitors showing jiu jitsu fundamentals:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qnWWqZ0uk4A

I’m still focused on controlling and dominating the butterfly / x-guard positions, so submissions are still secondary for me, but it’s good to start thinking about these things, so that I can start to notice openings when they pop up.

Diamond State Games

US Grappling hosted a tournament today in Downingtown, PA. I weighed in last night (Friday) at 170 lbs, which put me in the 162-175 middleweight division.

My division was scheduled to start at 3pm. I took the train to Thorndale, rody my bike from there. I rolled in at 2:30pm and my division was already finished! I won’t say any more on this.

There was still the absolute division. I won my first match via choke from mount. My second match was against an excellent jiu jitsu player whose guard I failed to pass and so the match ended with the score tied at zero-zero. I lost the ref’s decision.

I’m very disappointed in myself. His de la riva guard and sweep attempts were excellent, but this is my game. I’m supposed to be a top player. I’m supposed to plow through these guards. Instead I took it easy. Jared was giving good advice from the sidelines that I just wasn’t pulling off…

I almost passed several times, but I was going at the level of effort I usually go at when I’m training technical stuff, definitely not 100%. I was trying to relax, control position, establish good base, etc. I did all those things, but I never did the part where I improve position by going HARD in the transitions.

In the coming months, I will put myself in the open guard situation more, and when I’m there against good players I will pass hard, with pressure, power, and persistence.

Grapplers Quest is next…

Jiu Jitsu Calendar

I came across a jiu jitsu calendar that’s pretty much what I’ve been looking for for quite some time. There are many calendars out there, but this is the only one that gives semantic value to the location of the tournament. That is, you can look for upcoming tournaments within 50, 100, etc miles of where you live.

I keep my own list of upcoming judo and jiu jitsu tournaments but it’s mostly for me and a couple people I train with. It’s nice to see someone put together a quality site aimed at the whole jiu jitsu community in the United States. It still lacks a few key features I’d love to see, as well as basic elements of good design. Plus, the ads are a bit too in your face.

iCompete.org is another good site I look to. But I feel like there is still no central standard place for jiu jitsu events. Part of the reason is probably due to the fact that there is still not international BJJ governing body (like IJF for judo). Of course, IJF only cares about major Olympic-level events, and doesn’t care about most local, regional, and even national tournaments, so I’m not sure an international BJJ organization would help organize (or at least sanction) local tournaments.

The Jiu Jitsu Academy Brings Together an Interesting Bunch

CustomProgrammingGood training at BJJ United as always today. Much like Ivan Drago (the Russian in Rocky IV), I had big plans for tonight. I brought two gi’s, because I was going to do the 6pm class, the 7:30 class, and the 8:30 one. However, much like the aforementioned Russian I failed in my plans. There are several reasons for this, but they boil down to the same thing… I need to grow a pair. I’ll have to fix this problem in the coming days.

Anyway, a guy in the locker room mentioned that he was impressed that I was staying for the next class given how hard the first one was. He mistakenly thought I was Rocky and not Ivan Drago… That led to a conversation about what we do outside of jiu jitsu. And it turns out that he is one of the original developers of Qt, which is a brilliant software system that I use in my daily programming work. This guy is the real deal. Program by day, kick ass by night. Now that’s the jiu jitsu lifestyle…

It’s amazing how many interesting, talented, and unique people the jiu jitsu academy brings together. And more than that, I noticed that people don’t really bring their work and off-the-mat life with them onto the mat. In a way, a jiu jitsu class is the great equalizer. I mean Al Bundy is a jiu jitsu black belt for f’s sake.

Now back to business… Jared showed the sprawl to the all-important back take. Good stuff. In the beginning he made everyone run backwards without looking back. I think that’s part of his twisted sense of humor, given that the room was packed. I thought it was pretty funny.

Jared always pushes the pace. That’s part of what makes BJJ United a great place to prepare for competition. But it was cool to see him stop the class and emphasize that we should not sacrifice technique for speed in drilling. Especially for stand-up (wrestling or judo) I find that people too often rush the technique or tense-up which breaks the crisp flow of the drilling.

Alright this post is already too long. If you read this far, you are probably my mom, in which case, I’m sorry about not calling more often.

The Dangers of Seoi Nage in BJJ Competition

nomura-seoi-nage-bjj-competitionI’m both a judo and bjj competitor, so naturally the subject of utilizing the techniques of one sport as part of the other has been of great interest to me.

First, I should say that in my mind neither sport can (or should) really lay claim to any of the techniques I’m talking about in this post (despite hundreds of forum posts to the contrary). Judo and jiu jitsu are very similar martial arts, but their respective sports have evolved in such a way that the rules of the sport make the two martial arts appear quite different. Judo emphasizes big throws, while BJJ emphasizes “dominant” position.

My favorite judo technique is standing ippon seoi nage. Here’s a video of Travis Stevens, a top level U.S. judo player whose gripping and technique I draw a lot of inspiration from in my own judo:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1syAolnJHQ

Not all seoi nage variations are created equal. Here are some characteristics which define distinct versions of seoi nage which are important in the context of BJJ. I’ll explain why below:

  • Lower body
    • Standing
    • Drop on one knee
    • Drop on both knees
    • Koga’s (and my favorite): step back through the opponent’s legs
  • Grips
    • Ippon
      • Lapel
      • Armpit
      • Sleeve
    • Morote
      • Sleeve + Lapel
      • One handed (Koga liked this version also)

I do many of these variations, both on the right and left side, which is very important given the unpredictable nature of the gripping game.

What’s important in the context of BJJ is that these throws will end up in different positions, both if they succeed or fail. The danger, in general, is that I turn my back to my opponent, allowing him to potentially take my back and score 4 points, both if the throw succeeds and fails. This doesn’t matter for judo, but it does matter for BJJ. A two-handed morote seoi nage version, for example, keeps space between you and the opponent, and thus the resulting throw is much less likely to wrap your opponent tightly onto your back. The drop version of morote seoi nage, in fact, is the most common seoi nage variation thrown at high level gi jiu jitsu competition (from my observation).

The most common unpleasant circumstance for me is that I do successfully throw my opponent but he chases my back and ends up on top of me in the turtle position. No hooks, so no points scored, but still, I just did a huge throw and the result is that I’m the one on the run. It shouldn’t be that way.

This post is already way too long, so I’ll leave all the things I want to say for later.

Bottom line is that, as Ray suggested after our judo training session at Osagame today, I’ll make a good bjj throw the project for the summer. My goal is to work on variations of seoi nage that land me in side control and also to work on other forward throws that may work well in BJJ competition. More on that later…

Olympic Weightlifting: The Purest Physical Sport

pyrros2I used to put a lot of focus on lifting big weight: training power, strength, explosiveness, etc. These days, in terms of sports, my interest has shifted to brazilian jiu jitsu and judo. I find that this is where I’m able not only to challenge myself physically, mentally, but also intellectually. I have to engage my mind, visualize, learn technique sequences much in the same way that I learned to play intermediate-level chess earlier in life.

However, to me, there is still no sport that embodies the purest form of a physical challenge better than Olympic weightlifting. At the highest levels, it is my favorite sport as a spectator and a fan of the Olympics. These are athletes that achieve the seemingly impossible feat of lifting twice their bodyweight in one movement over their head. Moreover, what makes the sport exciting to watch is that it usually boils down to the athlete having just one attempt to lift a weight that is his personal record or even more than he has ever lifted before.

I have the deepest respect for the mental strength that can seize on the pressure to perform in a split second the hardest thing you’ve ever done in your life, and the thing that you’ve trained for your whole life.

Here’s a video of one of the sport’s greatest failing to win a fourth consecutive gold medal. There is something so real in this dramatic moment. A mix of sadness and awe… The struggle is so human, and is just the reason I love sports.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zc5q5OAK6Ns

Solid Jiu Jitsu Fundamentals

lex-fridman-jared-weiner-training-at-bjj-united

Fundamentals class (6-7pm) at BJJ United precedes kettlebells, no-gi, and then an advanced bjj class. It’s always packed with good training partners, and a lot of them.

I like this class because in it Jared Weiner usually shows the basics, and I’m all about the basics. All I want to do in jiu jitsu, in the end, is to excel at the fundamentals.

I got a chance to train with Jared and Rafa (one of my favorite training partners). Rafa kept going to inverted guard which is great to see because it makes me feel like I’m not being ridiculous for working on this guard also. He has a very technical game that’s fun to figure out and find answers to.

The roll with Jared was excellent. He has exactly the kind of top game I hope to developlex-fridman-rafa-rolling-at-bjj-united one day. Lots of pressure, strong powerful passing, knee on belly, chokes, backtakes, etc. I went for a basic x-guard entry that works on most people, and he just didn’t even pay attention to it. He broke the butterfly guard, and passed real heavy. I had no space to move, none. Awesome jiu jitsu!

I also did the Kettlebells class with Sharon. I especially liked the pass-under lunges. She had a better name for them, but I forget it now. Here’s a video of this exercise. It’s definitely a good mix of balance, coordination, strength, and there’s a kind of nice flow to it.

PS: Thanks to Greg (a BJJ United student) for the excellent photography. It’s always great to see someone be very good at their hobby (or job).

A Good Idea for Finishing the Single Leg

Ever since I was paired up with Wilson Reis a few weeks ago and we were doing a single leg takedown drill, I realized that I was lacking in knowledge and skill (to put it mildly) in the area of finishing the single leg.

I finished a few single legs in tournaments but it’s been an annoying scramble every time, and I’m always thinking “damn it, Lex, why didn’t you just switch to a double when you had the chance”. The single leg just never made sense to me. It feels like I’m trying to control a lion by its tail. The analogy probably makes no sense to you, but it works in my mind at this late caffeinated hour.

So, given all that, it was great to see Jared Weiner put up a technique of the week video (see below) with an awesome idea for finishing the single leg. Why is it awesome? Several reasons, but the main one is that it uses the same kind of idea that I like to use in passing the butterfly guard (in gi). The gripping and the body mechanics are very similar, so I can’t wait to try it if I ever find myself with just one of my opponent’s legs in my hands.