Sometimes, (among all the ahem.. opinionated B/S) on Sherdog's grappling forum, there are some excellent and thought-inspiring posts.
This one is from Gerbiljitsu:
There are many different tools used to increase performance. Goal
setting, visualization, repetition, competition, and a variety of other
things can be very helpful in skill gains. As you progress through your
Jiu-Jitsu career, you will find that your understanding of grappling
evolves and changes. You will view things differently as a black belt
than you did as a white belt. This change in your views is very hard to
explain, and often times can only be understood by someone who has made
the journey. Even though I acknowledge this task to be very difficult, I
will do my absolute best to explain to you my views of BJJ.
Let
me start off by saying this; Technical fighters are the lowest level of
trained fighter. To be technical means that you can regurgitate
techniques upon request or when presented with a specific situation.
This can be as simple as using the Toreando Pass (Bull Fighter Pass)
when your opponent places his/her feet on your hips or something as
complex as Cartwheel Pass when your opponent is in a seated position.
The complexity of the move is not really important, but the mere act of
viewing it as a move can lead to problems down the road.
I am
NOT saying that being technical is a bad thing, I'm saying it should be a
given. Think of each technique as a tool in your toolbox. As you
acquire more tools you will be able to build nicer things. There will be
some very important tools that every grappler needs (shrimping,
bridging, ect) and some tools that make jobs easier (flying triangles).
Not every tool is needed to build an awesome house, but some tools make
it easier than others. I will however say this, if you are not
practicing techniques and you find yourself in a situation that you need
to use them (in a competition or a self defense situation) you will be
the equivalent of a master carpenter who owns no tools. I dont care how
talented of a carpenter you are, you're not going to build my house with
your bare hands.
At this point you may be asking yourself “what
is the next level of understanding” and the answer to that is
conceptualization. Being a conceptual fighter/grappler means that you
have progressed passed the “what” stage and moved onto the “why” stage.
By understanding “why” you stack your opponent in an armbar you can help
defend your arm in many different ways while avoiding a lot of the
“tricky” things your opponent might try and distract you with.
This simple way of looking at things explains why many of the older BJJ
black belts never named positions, submissions or transitions. Too many
of our grappling forefather's side control consisted of 6 or 7 different
positions (what I call Kesa Gatame, Scarf Hold, Belly Down Side
Control, Reverse Sit and all the variations). Some of those old timers
still shake their head at our younger generation's need to name
everything.
By understanding why you are doing things it allows
you to explore movements and defenses that fit your personal style. If
your arms are longer than the average grappler than you may find through
experience that you are more susceptible to some submissions than you
are to others. This information is very important because it will allow
you to assign value to each individual technique and how they apply to
YOUR game (as opposed to how a particular technique fits into the
general grappling community).
Conceptual understanding of
techniques will also allow you to move onto the last level of
understanding. Because understanding what your opponent is doing does
not let you understand their next move, however understanding why your
opponent is doing something often leads to being able to plan a
response. The ability to plan a specific response to your opponents
actions is paramount to strategy, and strategy is the last level of
understanding. To formulate a proper strategy you must understand both
the “what” (techniques) and the “why” (concepts). Understanding why your
opponent is doing/performing a particular movement will lead you to
predict techniques and formulate intelligent counters.
Technical
grappling puts the focus on the individual performing the techniques
(thus the person acting is usually the person winning). Conceptual
understanding puts the focus on the technique itself, building a deeper
understanding of ones own body and how it moves in space against other
peoples bodies (think prioperception). Strategy allows you step beyond
the bounds of your own body and focus on the movements, intention and
objective of your opponents actions. When you understand your opponents
goals you can account for them in your strategy.
For many of
you, grappling with a game plan is very difficult. You enter a match
with the best intentions. You plan on doing “X” but all of a sudden
you're doing “Y” and your strategy falls apart. This can be due to a
number of reasons, but the three most common are 1. Your opponent had a
better strategy than you 2. Your opponent IS better than you or 3. You
do not have a mastery of the two lower levels of understanding. In order
for there to be mastery of Techniques and Concepts there will be very
few times that you ask yourself “why” or “what” while grappling.
For example, if you just got swept and you say to yourself “what sweep
was that” or “how did he do that” you have not progressed beyond the
conceptual understanding stage (with a few exceptions). The only thing
you should be thinking about is how to defend from that next position
and continue to progress your strategy. The is no room in your brain for
analysis of technique while grappling at the highest level...analysis
of strategy yes, analysis of techniques no.
The biggest
challenge in this journey of understanding is being real with yourself.
You need to asses where you are in your learning cycle and set your
goals based on your current understanding of our art. If you are a
beginner than you need to focus on being a technical fighter. Memorize
your moves, do countless repetitions and do your best to perform them
while live grappling against resisting opponents.
If you are an
intermediate then you need to look at the bigger picture. Instead of
looking at individual techniques you need to look at the concepts that
tie them all together. Suddenly guard passing is about getting around
the legs and not applying any one specific technique. Most of your
techniques will be condensed down to simple concepts. For a lack of a
better explanation, sometimes a guard pass is just a guard pass (yes I
stole that from Bruce Lee and his “a kick is a kick and a punch is a
punch”).
If you are at the strategy stage of your understanding
and your training has hit a wall, you might be TOO technical. If you are
trying to pigeon hole every technique and make it work, even when it
does not apply, this can lead to a lot of frustration and problems. And
let's face it, if your opponent knows the same techniques as
you, performing them can be VERY difficult, if not impossible. Think of
trying to make someone laugh by telling them a joke that they have heard
countless times before. Then the success/failure of the joke/technique
is solely based on your delivery. This can become increasingly difficult
as you continue training with the same people.
I'm not
saying this is a bad thing, because in all honesty, it is what makes our
sport so awesome. You can learn defenses to moves and progress through
the sparring session with a back and forth manner. It also allows you to
streamline your movements and to increase your economy of motion,
making every movement use the least amount of energy while still
obtaining the highest level of effectiveness.
Our sport has so
much depth to it that you'll often find yourself switching between the
levels of understanding. You will constantly be reassessing your
techniques, your understanding of the movements surrounding them and
your strategies based off of those assessments. Our sport is continually
evolving and I suggest you just open your mind and allow yourself to
move between the levels while continuing to train. By having the ability
to move between the levels of understanding, it will ensure you
constantly add to your game with new techniques, concepts and
strategies. By adding to your “toolbox” you will insure your game always
stay relevant to the current trends in competition and self defense,
which at the end of the day, is our main goal.
Link to original post
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
general update
I didn't go to the Vics. But I will enter the GTA comp in May.
There are a couple of seminars coming up which I have booked in for. In early June, John Will is coming to our school. I'm also going to a Carlos Machado seminar in Geelong in May. I'm looking forward to both of those.
I just received Roy Dean's Brown Belt Requirements. I have only managed to watch the first half of the first DVD so far. Awesome. Notwithstanding the fact that I'm a long way from brown belt (hey, I think I'm a long way from purple!), it is incredibly interesting. As expected, he speaks more of concepts than techniques, and emphasis is on stringing attacks together. The points about creating and maintaining pressure alone are worth having.
I finally finished reading Fighter's Mind by Sam Sheridan. Lots of interesting stories and bits from interviews with all sorts of people from the BJJ and MMA scene. In the end, one of the take-home messages for me was that dedicated training is real and bears results. Talent doesn't. That ties right in with what Josh Waitzkin talks about in his book, and what the book "Talent is overrated" is all about. Interesting stuff.
Winter is coming to the great land down under. The other night, I had cold feet when starting a class, and it occurred to me that I'll soon be wearing my fancy scramble spats to no-gi sessions again :-) So in good time, I received my parcel from BJJHQ. They had the Scramble Be like Water Rashies on sale recently, and I grabbed one (seeing it has long sleeves). That was the first time I had ordered from the company. The parcel only took a few days to get here.
It is Anzac Day in Austalia today, and being a public holiday, it means we have no BJJ classes. But it also means a day off work. I hope the weather will improve, so I can indulge in my second passion, which is horse riding :-)
There are a couple of seminars coming up which I have booked in for. In early June, John Will is coming to our school. I'm also going to a Carlos Machado seminar in Geelong in May. I'm looking forward to both of those.
I just received Roy Dean's Brown Belt Requirements. I have only managed to watch the first half of the first DVD so far. Awesome. Notwithstanding the fact that I'm a long way from brown belt (hey, I think I'm a long way from purple!), it is incredibly interesting. As expected, he speaks more of concepts than techniques, and emphasis is on stringing attacks together. The points about creating and maintaining pressure alone are worth having.
I finally finished reading Fighter's Mind by Sam Sheridan. Lots of interesting stories and bits from interviews with all sorts of people from the BJJ and MMA scene. In the end, one of the take-home messages for me was that dedicated training is real and bears results. Talent doesn't. That ties right in with what Josh Waitzkin talks about in his book, and what the book "Talent is overrated" is all about. Interesting stuff.
Winter is coming to the great land down under. The other night, I had cold feet when starting a class, and it occurred to me that I'll soon be wearing my fancy scramble spats to no-gi sessions again :-) So in good time, I received my parcel from BJJHQ. They had the Scramble Be like Water Rashies on sale recently, and I grabbed one (seeing it has long sleeves). That was the first time I had ordered from the company. The parcel only took a few days to get here.
It is Anzac Day in Austalia today, and being a public holiday, it means we have no BJJ classes. But it also means a day off work. I hope the weather will improve, so I can indulge in my second passion, which is horse riding :-)
Labels:
BJJHQ,
books,
Carlos Machado,
comps,
John Will,
Roy Dean,
Sam Sheridan,
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