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This website is about Brazilian jiu jitsu (BJJ). I'm a black belt who started in 2006, teaching and training at Artemis BJJ in Bristol, UK. All content ©Can Sönmez

30 December 2017

30/12/2017 - Saturday Open Mat

Class #939
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 30/12/2017

Good turnout for the final training of 2017, plenty of sparring but also great to see some concentrated drilling. Eugeniu was working hard on getting that jumping pass from side to side, as he's been keen to add some mobility to his pressure game. Full video below (original on the Artemis BJJ Facebook page):



Looking back through my draft posts for slideyfoot.com, some of which have been sitting there for years, I noticed a reminder to myself to do the below drill. So I'll post it here, as my German need for order demands I clean up that draft. ;)

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28 December 2017

28/12/2017 - Thursday Open Mat

Class #938
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 28/12/2017

I drilled passing today, continuing with both the leg sit pass (looking into the importance of angling the hips for weight distribution) and the over-under pass. If somebody locks up half guard with long legs, it's trickier, but Matt's tip on walking your arm up higher on their body from their belt seemed to do the job. Still, I need to work on this plenty more to get my body alignment right and leg positioning accurate to prevent somebody easily locking half guard in the first place, as well as maximising pressure to further make that difficult.

Video below, though I was drilling off camera, so I think it's just some sparring of other people who were there. :)



27 December 2017

27/12/2017 - Wednesday Open Mat

Class #937
Artemis BJJ (Xercise4Less Fishponds), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 27/12/2017

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MYGYM is closed in the evenings over the Winterval period between xmas and New Year, but fortunately there is an alternative for small groups over in Fishponds. I take personal training sessions from the excellent Strength Lab over at the Xercise4Less in Fishponds, a large gym which has a cage. It can't fit more than a handful of people, but it's good enough for four of us to drill and roll in there. We did some BJJ after my kettlebells finished at 18:30, getting in a few rolls with Lisa along with some leglock escape drilling. I'm fairly confident now that I know what to do on a basic straight footlock, but I need to practice being put in kneebars and toeholds more often, so I can escape those too. Fortunately for me, Rich is a big fan of leglocks, so I should be able to get lots of practice in, as long as I make sure I'm at Sunday open mats when he's teaching his nogi classes. :)

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22 December 2017

22/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Over-Under Pass

Teaching #741
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 22/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Step over their leg
  • Dive in for the over under grip
  • Grab their belt and clamp your head to their hip on the under side
  • Walk towards the over side, then back again to the under side
  • Backstep your leg clear, bring your knee under, then move up for the pass

Full Version: Grab their leg in a baseball bat grip, then step over and dive in for the over under grip. Your arm by that leg goes over, keeping the elbow tight. Your other arm goes under the other leg, grabbing their belt. Lock your head to that hip. Walk around to the non-head clamp side to straighten out their leg. Walk back the other way, then backstep to clear their leg. Bring your knee tight underneath and move into the pass.

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This is the simplest version, but there are plenty of variations. Typically you will firmly grab the trouser leg and stuff it backwards, but that is quite hard on the fingers. Nevertheless, it's a more secure option. Bernardo Faria is particularly good on this pass: we'll look at other version in the future. Be careful to keep your head and elbows tight, to prevent them managing to wedge an arm between and shrug off your control.

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Teaching Notes: Combines well with underhook passes, I should show that too. The main thing that people have trouble with is clearing the leg, also there is a risk of getting caught in a kimura or shoulder clamp if you don't keep the elbow tight. The Xande option is a good alternative, which I showed a few people: I think I will teach that one next time. He switches from an underhook pass into the over under, transferring his grip to inside the knee, palm out, then just steps over. So, the 'over' part isn't quite there in the same way, but still fits with this pass. On BJJ Library, so I'll check that again before I teach it next time.

Some drilling footage from class, with extra xmas flavour:



Xmas game went well too. I added in some new rules, which seemed to solve some of the hiccups I've found with this game the previous times I've done it. Now, each team has a sock on one foot, so left foot and right foot teams. To steal a member, you have to transfer that sock over. Another new thing this year was two mascots, so a yeti as well as a reindeer. Plus a rule that you couldn't take your bum more than a cm off the ground. Hooray for Defend Your Reindeer! ;p

21 December 2017

21/12/2017 - Thursday Open Mat

Class #936
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 21/12/2017

Matt H had some handy details on both footlock escapes and passing today. For escaping, tuck your other leg underneath and stand, then push their heel off to escape single x. Good to have a simple straight ankle lock escape when you can't grab the collar.

For the over under, Matt recommends a baseball bat grip on their leg. Dive into the over under, head clamped to their hip, elbows tight to avoid underhooks and kimura. Move to non head side, step over leg. Keep moving that way until their leg is straight. Then move back the other way, until you can easily kick your leg free, backstep (Saulo vid shows that, though he doesn't do all the careful sideways movement). Knee tight under that leg you've just cleared, progressing into side control.

On the kneebar Kev showed, stay extra tight. Swivel and spin from standing: I found it felt more secure with my leg right under. Don't be too high, stay close to their hips. Like an armbar, you don't want to be too far from the shoulder.

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20 December 2017

20/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Knee Slide (AJ Sousa variation)

Teaching #740
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 20/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Grab their trouser leg, by the knee
  • Grab low on their gi with the other hand, bracing their leg with your elbow
  • Move across, cutting your opposite leg over the leg you initially gripped
  • Switch your grip to their arm and pull up, also establishing an underhook with the other arm
  • Push their leg back with your knee, knee through

Full Version: With the knee slide pass, the basic idea is to step between their legs in open guard, with one leg on the outside. Of course, most people aren't going to just let you cut across their leg, so you'll need to get into a solid position to do it. A while back, Dónal showed me a good option for this, which he in turn learned from his instructor.

First off, you want to get a good grip on their legs, to limit their mobility: grabbing the material by their knees tends to be a good option. Next, you want a grip on their collar. If you simply reach for it, you're asking to get triangled. So, being careful to keep your elbows inside their legs, drive your leg forwards into theirs. Keep driving forward until you can safely grip high on their same side collar (keep your elbow by your knee), pulling them back towards you as much as possible. You want to curl their body, so their shoulders are off the ground. This makes it much harder for them to sweep you.

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Drop into a relatively low crouch, legs apart for base. They will probably have a foot on your hip at this point: if they do, your grip will be on the trouser material by their shin. Turn your leg inwards slightly, pressing into their foot. With the grip you have on their trousers, shove their leg down, swinging your own leg backwards, then stepping over their leg. The grip you have on their trousers is important here: you're going to roll your knuckles down so that they are pressing into the shin, straightening your arm. This provides a firm control.

Next, you're going to cut across their thigh (still on the leg you just stuffed with your grip), using your opposite knee. As you do, also be sure to yank them towards that side with your collar grip, again to prevent sweeps. Drop in low, trying to secure an underhook, also keeping your head in tight. To get the underhook, put your elbow on their side, then circle your arm around, rather than diving straight for the underhook. You can also just maintain your grip on their collar, keeping your elbow low.

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Either way, it is essential that you have your elbow inside. You don't want them to either be able to bring their arm inside for an underhook, or insert their knee in front of you. If they can manage the knee or the underhook, the pass isn't impossible, but it makes it a lot more difficult to finish. Imagine you have a short steel bar attaching your wrist to your driving knee, which you'll only detach as you switch into the underhook or collar grip.

When you've pinned their leg with your shin, you can switch your grip from their leg to their arm (or even better, just below their elbow) and pull up. To further establish control, you could try shoving your head next to theirs, like in the picture I've included of Xande demonstrating a similar technique. To finish, you'll slide through over their thigh. To secure your position, walk your hips back before you settle (there is a good Mendes brothers video on this), getting your hips underneath them to shove their legs out of the way. That's when you can then solidify your side control.

If you are having trouble cutting across their knee, you can turn that slide into a more horizontal motion, sliding your knee right out. Make sure you have some upper body control when you do that: otherwise you could be presenting them with an easy route to your back. Ideally you'll have an underhook, but if not a firm grip on their same side collar is good too, keeping your elbow right down towards their hip. You don't want them to be able to establish their own underhook and start spinning to your back.

A slightly simpler version from AJ Sousa, begins by grabbing the leg you're looking to slide across, with your same side hand. Your other hand grips low on their gi, acting as an anchor point to brace their leg with your elbow. Move across to the side, then complete the pass as usual.


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Teaching Notes: I'd still like to teach a pass with no grips at all, like Chelsea taught a while ago, though what she taught isn't quite a knee cut, more of a bullfighter variation, or maybe x pass? Either way, it was the first seminar she taught. On this AJ Sousa knee cut, I think it is probably a better one to teach beginners than what I normally show, as there are less moving parts to it.

19 December 2017

19/12/2017 - Tuesday Open Mat

Class #935
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 19/12/2017

Forgot my trousers didn't have a drawstring in them, so borrowed Laura's old ones that she left to the club. Rather capri like, but still fit my tiny pixie man body. ;)

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18 December 2017

18/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Loop Choke

Teaching #739
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 18/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Grab their opposite collar, pushing your fist into their collar bone
  • Pull that collar across, stuffing their head into your armpit
  • Bring your other arm on the back of their head, elbow down to block their head popping out
  • Shoot your head hand under your collar grabbing elbow, tilting your body towards your head hand side
  • Swing your collar grab arm side foot out and put on their shoulder, using that push to finish off the submission

Full Version: From sitting guard, pull down with your collar grip. Break their posture by pulling that collar towards you, while also pushing their head down and to the side with your other hand. You're tucking their head towards your armpit. Raise your collar gripping elbow, creating a window to insert your other hand. Slide your other hand across the back of their head and under your collar gripping elbow. You're looking to hook your elbow with the back of your pushing hand, pointing your fingers up in order to lock it in place. To finish, lift the elbow of the collar gripping hand while dropping the elbow of the other hand.

It also helps if you can get your collar-gripping side leg into the bicep of their same side arm, or even better over the top, putting you into a sort of half-closed guard around their back. Oli mentioned when he taught it in a class a few years back that this choke is sufficiently versatile to function from various positions. For example, butterfly guard, half guard and also when they're trying to establish double underhooks on your legs in order to pass. Even if you don't get the choke, you're likely to still manage a sweep, as in order to avoid getting submitted they'll probably have to roll out. You can simply follow them and end up in mount.

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I like the version Takamasa Watanabe shows on BJJ Library. He makes a few additions, such as pointing out the important of blocking their head popping out with your other elbow. A great leverage booster is swinging out your foot and putting it on their shoulder, that makes this choke much more powerful.
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Teaching Notes: Make sure they drop the elbow to block the head escaping, as well as really lift the elbow on the other side. Hand needs to go all the way under the elbow and through the gap there. Bringing the foot out and putting it on the shoulder shouldn't be a big flexibility thing, plenty of room. If it is ending up more of a windpipe choke, grip lower on the collar. Be careful of the neck too. Also, rewatch the video before teaching again as a reminder, very handy. Keeping in mind there are other versions, like the full roll where you end up facing the ceiling, or the one Jason Scully does where he backs out to put them in turtle for the finish.

15 December 2017

15/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Shin-On-Shin (Roll Under Sweep)

Teaching #738
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 15/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Wrap your arm behind their leg, same side leg by theirs
  • Keep your knee relatively high, shin on their shin
  • Reach for their far shin
  • Roll underneath their legs, using momentum for a full roll
  • Come up on top, ready to pass

Full Version: For the last bit of sitting guard, I went for something slightly more complicated. From sitting guard, scoot in towards them, this time getting your same side shin in front of their leg, wrapping your same side arm behind, keeping your head tight. Ideally you also want to grab their sleeve with your other hand, then pass that to your first hand behind their leg. If that isn't available, you can grab their gi lapel or belt instead. It's possible to do the sweep without any grip, but it's more difficult.

Shoot your free leg through, reaching underneath their upper leg with your free arm as you swivel to your back. Lift up with your shin-on-shin leg, continuing to rotate. You're aiming to come up on top in their guard. If they are able to post (i.e., you haven't got control of their sleeve), you might find it easier to go for the back instead.

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Teaching Notes: Small class, so I ran through a bunch of options today, drawing on BJJ Library as well as past classes. The 'helicopter' sweep from Xande was tricky to get to work, so I won't add that back in until I'm more confident with it. For the standard one, I added the tweaks Dylan Hewitt showed me, which help. Spider guard thing from DLR could go somewhere, but needs more practice. Not much to change for the Dylan one, so feels sorted, stick with that next time. :)

14 December 2017

14/12/2017- Thursday Open Mat

Class #934
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 14/12/2017

Shin and shin roll under practice with Mike today, along with some other bits and pieces I saw on BJJ Library. Getting back to the squats too.

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13 December 2017

13/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Single Leg Sweep

Teaching #737
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 13/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Wrap an arm behind their leg, just above the knee
  • Distribute your weight on your other hand and opposite foot
  • Your same side leg is wrapped behind their leg, low
  • Do a mini-technical stand up, just lifting your hips, so you can bring your wrapped leg backwards
  • Drive with your shoulders (staying very tight to the leg) to knock them down, ready for your pass

Full Version: No doubt there are other names for this position, but koala guard is suitably evocative, that's where you end up. It is therefore possible to go straight to koala guard, but if you're starting from sitting guard, this can be a useful option if they have broken your grip on their collar. Immediately scoot in, hooking the leg you have on the ground around the back of their leg. Your collar-gripping arm goes around the back of their leg. Jam your head in tight against their leg, on the inside (or you're at risk of guillotines).

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From here, you can do a mini technical stand-up, basing off your free hand and other foot. Lift your bum slightly off the ground, then scoop their leg with the leg you have behind theirs. Your head position also helps drive them to the mat, pushing their knee outwards. Maintain a tight grip, then move into side control. For even more control, it's useful to grip their sleeve with the arm you have behind their leg. Failing that, you can also grab their belt or their gi lapel. If none of that is available, you can just grab your own gi.

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Be aware of their knee positioning. You want to try and stay on the side of that knee. If they are able to drive their knee into your chest, that gives them a chance to set up a pass, crushing your back down onto the mat.
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Teaching Notes: People still get confused with the leg switch occasionally off shin-on-shin, attempting to use the shin on shin leg which is much harder. Showing this from de la Riva makes that easier, or koala guard, so depends what position I'm doing next time I teach this. Having the wrapped leg too high is another potential pitfall (you want it low on the lever for maximum leverage, while still maintaining control). Also, staying tight to the leg all the way through, your shoulder jammed against their leg.

It's also worth mentioning that if you can't knock them over you can probably switch it into a single leg. Therefore next time, a few very basic single leg takedown drills would be useful, if I can safely fit that into the warm up without confusing people. Technical stand up drill is important too, make sure you continue always including that when it comes to this lesson.

12 December 2017

12/12/2017- Tuesday Open Mat

Class #933
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 12/12/2017

Poo, I thought I managed to get some Facebook Live for today. Ah well. Writing this up on Xmas Day, so can't remember anything, but I probably drilled some shin on shin guard as that's what I taught for a lot of December. Club is currently closed due to the gym being shut over Xmas, but we are back for open mat on the 28th and 30th December (check the timetable). Ok, back to the rest of the posts (need to catch up until the 22nd Dec Xmas class). :)

Actually no, I did record it: just updating this after writing up Thursday, looks like I did two lots of videos on the same day to catch up. So, for Tuesday I actually continued playing with Priit's grilled chicken guard today. I'll get it eventually, and I think I am starting to elevate less, so that's good. Plenty of drilling time left. I may even go to the next Priit mini-camp in March, but I'll see if there are standby tickets at that point (and if I fancy that intense a weekend of BJJ again ;D).

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11 December 2017

11/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Shin-On-Shin (Roll Over Sweep)

Teaching #736
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 11/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Bring your same-side shin tight to theirs, knee angled out
  • Wrap your same side arm tight around their leg, head on the inside
  • Grab their sleeve with your other arm, feed it to your wrapping arm
  • Grip their shoulder/head with your free hand, pulling down
  • Lift with your shin to roll them over, come up in knee-on-belly

Full Version:

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The shin-to-shin guard provides an additional pressure to your sweeps, giving you the very useful ability to lift compared to koala guard or de la Riva (or at least, I find it's much easier to lift with shin on shin than de la Riva). I first started playing with this after my instructor showed me some options at a private in 2015, then in more depth at Ana's seminar. Kev also went through the sequence again at the grading seminar recently. Put your shin in front of their same side leg, wrapping behind that leg with your same side arm. Your other leg pushes on their knee. That will normally make them post their arm, or at least put the arm in range.

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Make sure that the knee on your shin leg is at forty five degrees. If it is too high, they can push your knee out of the way and pass, so keep it low enough to prevent an easy push. Grab their sleeve, with the intention to pass their arm under their leg to your other hand, which is waiting there behind their leg. Ideally, pull it all the way behind their knee, as far over in that direction as you can. With your passing hand, grab high on the arm you just controlled, up near their shoulder. Pull down on that arm as you lift with your shin. It's much the same motion as the basic de la Riva sweep I was taught at GB Brum.

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There is also a kneeling version:

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Teaching Notes: It's important to stay tight on the knee, getting the shin in position too. When you grab the arm, you need to make sure you pull it in far enough (use the Kev option, pulling it right behind their knee). There's also the question of how far around the leg do you move your bum: should you be on the side of them, slight angle? Something to test out. I'm also not 100% certain on the knee angle. I normally say 45 degrees, but that Dylan Hewitt technique with his roll uder is a lot closer to their knee.

08 December 2017

08/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Unstoppable Sweep

Teaching #735
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 08/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Grab their same side collar, also their sleeve on that side
  • Bring your same side leg in front of their shin
  • Move onto your side, putting your other leg slightly above the back of their knee
  • Cross your feet if possible, then pull them towards you by raising your elbows
  • Pull your shin-leg in and push with the knee-leg, rolling through to a knee cut pass position

Full Version: Tonight I covered what's commonly known as the 'unstoppable sweep'. I first heard about it over on Seymour's blog, where he described his visit to a Mike Fowler seminar (the guy known for this technique). I've found it can crop up in sitting guard, if your partner tries to drive in close to stop you getting one of the other sweeps, or potentially if you're looking for the tripod sweep. Whatever the situation that sets it up, get on your side in open guard, bringing your lower leg in front of the bottom of their shin. Your other leg goes slightly above the back of their knee, when you also lock your feet together. Grab their same side sleeve with your lower arm and their same side collar with your upper arm.

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You can then tweak their leg outwards by pulling with your lower leg on their shin, pushing with your other leg behind their knee. Maintain your grips and knee position, as this should hopefully put you directly into a knee cut with a deep collar grip, meaning you could also switch right into a choke. Make sure you pull them forwards onto you, as if their weight is based back, it will be tough to land the technique. I've found this sweep works particularly well if you're in sitting guard and your opponent steps in really close to try and pass. From there, it isn't too much of an adjustment to move into a sort of reverse de la Riva, then hit the sweep: you already have the collar grip, so you just need to secure the same side sleeve. That collar grip also gives you another point of control where you can push, combined with your legs.

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Teaching Notes: Mention going on your side. Grips make more sense from sitting guard, as then you have collar grip. Like the sickle sweep, turning to the side important. Positioning of feet on knee cut, a lot of people didn't have that outside foot up, how important? I think it is important for balance, stop you getting knocked, but meh.

07 December 2017

07/12/2017 - Thursday Open Mat

Class #932
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 07/12/2017

We talked about passing butterfly guard today, as Heidi was asking. I mostly use that shin trap one, plus it's fun to drill the flip pass (though flipping is low percentage). Matt H had a bunch of other options, such as standing up and using that to help with the pass. I need to pick Matt's brain more on passing generally, especially as I'd like to teach the over-under this month. I tend to be quite limited on open guard passing, so that would help, plus Matt is really good on the over under. Neil Owen also showed it at one of the seminars he taught us a while back, so I'll need to re-check the footage on that too.

06 December 2017

06/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Sickle Sweep

Teaching #734
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 06/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Turn your hips right out, putting you on your side
  • Put your 'top' foot to their opposite hip
  • Other leg behind their other leg, ready to chop
  • Grab their trouser leg with your same side hand, on the hip-push side
  • Knock them over, drawing your hip foot back to help come up, ready to pass

Full Version: The tripod sweep I always teach in a previous lesson combines well with the similar sickle sweep: as usual in BJJ, that almost certainly has other names (the most common alternative is 'hook sweep'), but I'm using the term from Theory & Technique (page 226). A good time to try this is if when you attempt the tripod sweep, they kick their leg free from your hooking hand. You could attempt to readjust to recover your position, but it is probably easier to pull yourself towards their other leg with your hooking foot, grabbing the heel on that side. Turn your body toward that newly grabbed leg, swinging your pushing foot over to that hip. With what used to be your hooking foot, chop back low on their other leg to knock them over.

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Of course, the sickle works on its own too. Indeed, Rener teaches this before the tripod on Gracie University. The entry he shows is to hook their leg, pulling yourself in to grab their ankle, then switching into the sickle position: opposite foot on the ankle-grabbed side hip, then chopping low on their other leg with your remaining leg, using your calf or possibly your heel.

In order to get the angle, you'll have to turn towards them, or hook their leg to pull yourself in. If you're going from the tripod, you'll already have their leg hooked. Note that when you follow them up after knocking them to their back, compared to the tripod sweep, your other knee will be raised. That means you'll need to make sure to shove their leg down and step over, enabling you to complete your knee slide.

While grabbing the heel is a perfectly viable grip, it is probably better suited to the tripod, as then you can use Kev's trick of jamming the heel against your hip. With the sickle your body is turned, so that's not easy to do. I'd therefore recommend grabbing the trouser leg for the sickle. That's because it means that once you've knocked them over, you can pin their leg to the mat while also pushing it away. That stops them from closing their guard. This is important, because the sickle sweep will generally put you in a position with one leg in between theirs. Wait as long as possible to let go of the trouser grip: ideally, you want to wait until you've slid your leg out.

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For finishing the sweep, I think with the sickle sweep, technical stand up works especially well. Base on the hand that's grabbing their trouser leg, also basing with your opposite foot. Use that to then bring your same side leg back and stand up. As you stand, thrust their leg into the air with your hand (you can bolster that by grabbing with your other hand too) and move around. It's really hard for them to do much if their leg is way up in the air like that, so passing should be fairly easy.

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Teaching Notes: Main thing is foot placement, bringing that leg back to avoid getting tangled. Is the switch confusing people? Only makes sense when they've already done the tripod already. Breakfalls are important, as ever coming up is an issue. I tried just popping up this time round, so next time I'll try the whole technical stand up thing again and see how that goes. Remember to check the notes from that lesson I taught about Aesopian's points on standing up from closed guard, that might be a lesson worth teaching again too.

05 December 2017

05/12/2017 - Tuesday Open Mat

Class #931
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 05/12/2017

Again, can't remember a lot from Tuesday. I think I went through side control escapes, some basics on that? Meh. Sorry, these open mat write-ups often aren't very useful, particularly as I still can't get the damn Facebook Live thing to work properly. Although I have been getting into the habit of simply filming, so I can pick stuff to upload to Instagram later, if there was anything I can pick out from the footage. Not as easy as lazily having Facebook Live streaming away, though. :)

04 December 2017

04/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Tripod Sweep

Teaching #733
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 04/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Grab their foot, putting your same side foot on their hip
  • Hook behind their other leg with your remaining foot
  • Ideally, grab their hip-side sleeve with your opposite hand
  • Push and pull with your legs to knock them over
  • Come up immediately as they start to fall back

Full Version: You can set up the tripod sweep in lots of ways. I usually teach this from the simple option of hooking behind both their knees, using that to pull yourself in towards them and grab their other leg with your other hand. When you grab for the ankle, you can control it in two main ways. Simply grabbing their heel is the quickest, but that means there is a chance they can kick their foot forwards and dislodge your grip. If you grab the trouser cuff instead, that escape becomes much harder for them, but it does give them more opportunity to turn their foot (i.e., for a knee cut pass).

With the heel grab, a good tip from my instructor Kev Capel is to pull that ankle onto your hip, clamping it there. This should also help with off-balancing them. You can also simply sit on it. Either way, remember to keep your other hook behind their knee tense, as you don't want them to free that leg and step around, because that will enable them to regain their balance. You can also put it lower on the leg, or even right behind their foot, but be careful, as just like the heel grip, that can increase the risk that they'll step out and avoid your control.

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Once you knock them down, because you have that grip on their sleeve, you can pull yourself up as they go back, moving through into side control. It also stops them basing with that hand, as you're sweeping in that direction (which is why you use a cross grip, rather than same side). Should you lose your sleeve grip, the sweep is still there, but it will be harder to sit up and move through to side control.

If you're having trouble knocking them down, angle the direction of your push a little, in the direction you want them to fall. It is important that you react decisively after you've knocked them down. Otherwise, they'll simply get up first, returning to your guard. That would mean you were back where you started.

As ever, there are a couple of options. My preference is to come up and slide your inside knee over their leg, leaning your body towards them: you may find it useful to keep hold of their foot (which means you are both basing on your hand and maintaining control of their leg) to stop them moving, but you can still pass without doing so. Your other foot will step over their other leg, like a typical knee slide pass. From there, you can grab their sleeve, underhook their far armpit, then slide through into modified scarf hold. If for some reason you get your knee stuck in their gi, which has happened to me in the past, change your grip to their elbow, drop your bodyweight and move into side control. Here's Kev demonstrating the full sweep:



You'll notice the finish is different in that video: instead of the tight knee slide, you can do a sort of technical stand-up which ends up with a looser pass. For the stand-up, after you've knocked them down, put your hooking foot on the floor, bringing your other leg behind you. So, the hand that was grabbing the heel now pushes into their leg, pinning it to the floor and becoming your basing hand. Your other leg becomes your second base point, then you stand up from there. You remaining hand may or may not be gripping their sleeve, but this works either way.

From there, stand up, still holding on to their trouser leg (you could also keep hold of the sleeve, which will enable you to pull on both limbs for the pass, but it makes it harder to stand up), pulling up. That will make it difficult for them to recover, as you move around to a dominant position like side control or knee on belly. Standing up when someone has your foot in the air is hard.
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Teaching Notes: Must include breakfalls in the warm-up. Question of how to get up, what's a good drill? Simply getting up from the floor would be worth drilling, there is also the classic diagonal slide. Other options too, like technical stand-up, but people tend to get confused on that. Grip is opposite sleeve not the same side. Come in close with your hips to their foot, you can use trouser grab. Also the Kev method, push a bit while clamping their foot to the hip. So as ever, warm up drills are the thing to think about before next time.

03 December 2017

03/12/2017 - Sunday Open Mat

Class #930
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 03/12/2017

I only dropped in briefly today before having a bunch of stuff to do at home, as I wanted to make sure one of the white belts was ok before their competition. They were impressively organised, as I can't remember any other student bringing in the competition paperwork to run through. Cool to see that kind of careful prep on the student's part!

01 December 2017

01/12/2017 - Teaching | Open Guard | Maintaining Open Guard

Teaching #732
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 01/12/2017

Short Version:
  • Use your legs ('spears') as your first line of defence, pressing into hips, chest, knees etc
  • Next line of defence are your shins and knees, your 'shield'
  • Then you can draw out your 'sword', blocking with your arm
  • Avoid them getting to the space from your chest to your knees
  • An option to block that is putting your knee and elbow close together

Full Version: Using your legs is key in closed guard, and perhaps even more so with open guard. To help develop that ability to use the legs, I wanted to start with the great drilling sequence I learned from Kev Capel up at RGA Bucks. The idea is to improve your guard recovery. It begins on your back, while they pass your legs, but only to the level of your knees. Bring your outside foot over and hook inside their nearest leg.

Use that to pull yourself back into position, bringing your other leg through to re-establish a square-on open guard. For the next stage of the drill, they pass to your hip rather than your knee. That requires you to frame your hands against their leg and shrimp out, before recovering guard as before.

For teaching, I decided to use an extended metaphor, as if jiu jitsu was an ancient battlefield where you are facing a cavalry charge. The best way to defeat a cavalry charge is with polearms, like a spear. Stab that at their hips, knees, shoulders, stomach, arms, whatever makes for a good point of purchase. Or perhaps you have a different polearm, like a billhook, so you can also pull your attacker off their horse (i.e., pull against the back of their knees to affect their balance).

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If they get fed up of trying to pass your spears, they might dismount and engage lower down. Now is the time to bring your shield to bear, which in this context is your knee and shin. Push that against their stomach, shoulders, arms etc to prevent them driving forward. That should give you enough space to draw your sword. You might have a straight stabbing sword, stiff-arming into their hips, shoulders and collar. Perhaps you also have a curved sword, slicing and swinging (in our BJJ context, that's grabbing the collar and pulling). But that curved sword/bent arm is no good for stabbing: if you're going to use a straight sword/stiff arm, if needs to stay straight to be effective.

Also keep in mind that they have swords too. Therefore use your swords and spears to parry, preventing their attack. Put your shield in place, which is your knee and shin pressed against their shoulder and/or chest, then use a stiff arm into their shoulder and or wrist: that takes their arm out of commission. You can also parry their sword with your spears, pushing your foot into their bicep. Remember, you can always keep resetting to the previous level. Having held them off with your sword and shield, bring your spear back in (so, blocking them with your stiff arms and knees may give you the scope to put a foot on their knee or hip, push back and return to a long range guard).

Finally, to keep the metaphor going, you have a 'command camp' that needs to be defended. Your general is stationed there, by your head and chest. You therefore need to keep this camp safe. The entrance is by your armpits, so keep the gates locked (i.e., elbows tight to your sides). That there is a major weak spot in your armour: the section from above your knees to your chest. You therefore need to defend this area, keeping it safe from attack. Conversely. if you are attacking, that's the place to aim for and control.

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Or to put it another way without metaphors, in open guard, your feet can be used both for creating distance and for maintaining control. In terms of pushing, the main areas are on the knees, the hips and in the biceps (as you would with spider guard). You can also hook behind the knee with your feet, which is part of many open guard sweeps. Make sure that you always have both your feet on them, rather than the floor. There are also little tricks you can use here, like sitting on their foot.

If they're standing, then grabbing behind their foot is the main grip you'll look for with your hand. I've heard conflicting reports from black belts on whether it is better to grip the bottom of the trouser leg or the heel, so I'd suggest experimenting with both (unless you don't have a gi, in which case you're stuck with grabbing the heel). Generally speaking, you always want to be grabbing something with at least one of your hands: as with your feet, keep them engaged on your opponent, rather than on the floor.

Kev has a great tweak on grabbing with the heel, where you pull that heel into your hip. That makes it harder for them to do the classic escape of kicking their foot out in a circle to break your hold. Even better, try to pull the foot off the floor slightly as you clamp it to your hip. That will unbalance them, setting you up perfectly for the tripod/sickle sweep combination.

If they're on their knees, then your own knees come more into play. You can use those for control in a similar way to your feet, again putting them into their biceps and hips, along with areas like their chest and shoulder, depending on their positioning.

While your legs are key and your first line of defence, the arms can act as a handy second or even third line of defence should they beat your legs. 'Stiff arming' into their legs, shoulders, arms etc can give you the space you need to recover back to an earlier line of defence. An alternative is to sit up into what is, appropriately, known as 'sitting guard', stiff arming from there. That can open up several sweeps and attacks.

It is also worth keeping in a point from Christian Graugart (which I first saw him teach at the 2016 BJJ Globetrotter Camp in Leuven, but he often mentions it). His opening lesson was titled 'jiu jitsu explained in 30 seconds', on which he delivered. In short, his argument was that jiu jitsu is all controlling the area from the knees up to the chest. On top, you're trying to get something into that space - your arm, your leg, your torso - while on the bottom, you're attempting to defend that space, keeping your knees to your chest.

Graugart isn't the only person to teach this approach to open guard. Quite a few instructors have a version of that guard, such as Ryan Hall's 'shell guard', Tom Barlow's 'egg guard' and most in depth of all, Priit Mihkelson's 'grilled chicken guard'. My Texan friend John Palmer has something similar too, back when he talked about 'ball theory', IIRC, several years ago. The basic idea is keeping your knees wide and close to your chest, your arms on the outside. This forms a solid barrier to protect that knee to chest area, as long as you can keep that 'shell' or 'egg' intact.

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I finished with those sparring drills again, learned from Kev: they're really useful for maintaining open guard. As before, the idea is to build up leg movement. To do that, the first round is sparring open guard, but only using your legs: both of your hands are tucked into your belt (or behind your back if you don't have a belt), whether you're on top or on the bottom (make sure to pull them back out if you're about to fall on your face!). That's followed by sparring with legs and one hand, then finally normal open guard sparring, with the proviso that you aren't allowed to close your guard. There's a bit of video up on the Artemis BJJ Instagram page.

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Teaching Notes: Not much to change as usual, given this lesson is mainly about drilling. I added in a bit more sitting guard this time, along with the stuff about defending your ribs (Priit style). His approach is quite different, as he talks about extending the legs as dangerous in terms of opening up your defences, but I think I'll stick with the Ryan Hall approach for this lesson. Leg dexterity makes a difference as you get more experienced, though I personally continue to have trouble with open guard. Definitely my worst position still. :)