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Jacare training at Beverly Hills Jiu Jitsu Club

Posted by Mike Calimbas on April 25, 2010

Ronaldo “Jacaré” de Souza is a 5-time World Jiu-Jitsu Champion and ADCC Champion. Known for his incredible blend of judo and jiu-jitsu technique, Jacaré (Portugese for alligator) is widely considered to be one of the greatest grappling competitors of all time.

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The way to train: Jiu Jitsu Idealism

Posted by Mike Calimbas on February 24, 2009

Written by: Tal Williams, DNC Worldwide

I was put to task to write something about jiu jitsu. I’m not going to teach you any bad ass moves that will ensure metaphoric death to your foes because I don’t know them, and plus it doesn’t go with the title. I thought Id write about some of the key aspects of training the ideal way and some of the challenges that come with it. These are some of the things that have stymied my progress and are the three key things I’d like to get closer to the ideal.


“Surviving the path to Black Belt” – Photo of Jordan Rivas by Julian

Consistency

You have to train more than twice a week every week to make real progress. Sure, you will get better going 1 or 2 days a week but your progress will be similar to the evolution of man. You will be the homo habilis of jiu jitsu. The people who are there 7 days a week will be the ubermensch.

Lately I haven’t been as consistent as I used to be. We all have reasons why we aren’t training with the frequency jiu jitsu idealism demands. Sometimes the rigors of employment, traffic, and life in general leave me with a deep yearning for couches, televisions and McDonalds and jiu jitsu becomes another task or destination. I almost always find that when I am able to fight through this feeling and go to the gym I feel better about life and I’m glad that I got another training session in. Sometimes, shit happens and missing class is unavoidable. We can’t do anything about that. My goal is to try be more consistent and fight through excuses to avoid training.

Ego

Anyone who trains has heard the phrase “leave your ego at the door” at some point. The ego check is extremely important. Many times it’s mentioned in the context of “don’t be a douche bag,” meaning don’t hurt someone else or yourself because of your fear of losing face. Everyone has an ego flare up from time to time, if you had no ego you would just lay there like a Buddhist on fire, and get beat up. The key is to find the balance between the desire to win and the desire to improve.

When you are training don’t think about winning and losing all of the time. Sometimes it’s good to roll like it’s a competition but if you’re always trying to win it only serves a short-term goal of “winning” that next roll. It’s a much greater tool to put yourself in positions where you will likely lose. This is the most difficult thing to do and why most people don’t do it.

Try different things. If you are always using your A-Game your A-Game will start to suck. People will figure it out and you won’t have anything else for them. Don’t always pull guard or play from the top. Don’t always go for your bread and butter moves, mix it up.

The positions or submissions that you don’t call bread and butter should be drilled until you can classify them as such. This leads into the next key part of jiu jitsu idealism.

Drilling/Repetition

Most people don’t enjoy drilling. If you let everyone vote at your next class on whether the whole time should be spent rolling or drilling one move. It would probably be a landslide victory for rolling. That is an unfortunate fact. Drilling is what will make you better than everyone who doesn’t do it. This is one of the things I’ve been meaning to incorporate into my training for the longest time.

Learning a new technique in class and drilling it 10 times doesn’t count. What I’m talking about requires “independent study.” Find someone or a group of people who are interested in really drilling stuff and do it as often as possible

There are many different ways to drill, gross motor movements to give you a foundation can be done fast and without much regard for technique. Then focus on the details, do a bunch of reps as slow as it takes to do it right and then gradually increase the pace and/or resistance and add variations.

Drilling shouldn’t always be about that new bad ass upside down guard to triangle you saw on YouTube. It doesn’t even have to be focused on submissions. One of the coolest (I’m using the word loosely) drills I’ve seen was someone practicing all of the different control points from side control.

Check out these blog posts on Aesopian.com, it’s probably the best jiu jitsu site on the internet.

Drilling isn’t a four letter word

Bridging the Gap

So there it is, the secret to success in jiu jitsu. It’s harder than it looks.

dncworldwide-logo

Posted in Theory, Training | 3 Comments »

The Importance of Stretching

Posted by Kris on January 19, 2009

It’s common for practitioners of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu to experience many injuries due to training.  Some are accidental and are impossible to avoid but many others, mine included are due to improper warm-up and a lack of preparation by the body. 

Stretching is important in several ways.  The first being it can prevent those minor ‘nagging’ injuries that we all have grown to despise.  These injuries can prevent us from training, prevent us from performing up to to level and may form into a serious injury.  For me, stretching was an option when I first began and it soon lead up to lower back pain and tingly nerves.  After this I soon stretched vigorously pre-workout but every now and then my lower back pain would insist which leads me to my current state of more back pain and ice.

I am now going to try and stretch on a daily basis, possibly mixing in yoga or gymnastica to the array.  Stretching not only helps prevent injuries but will also pay big dividends to your overall jiu jitsu game.  Personally, as I’ve gotten more flexible I’ve been able to hit better submissions from the bottom, better lateral hip movement and better guard retention. 

These video(s) I found on youtube.com and it shows a good stretching routine if you don’t have one.  Leave a comment with your routine or suggestions, thanks!

Posted in Stretching, Training, Videos | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

Beginner’s Guide – Positions and Submissions

Posted by Kris on November 25, 2008

Monday, 22 August 2005

Beginner’s Guide – Positions and Submissions

This is a brief overview of BJJ, from theory to practice, from sport to self-defense.  This basically covers  two dimensions to BJJ: Positions and Submissions.

There are two dimensions to BJJ: Positions and Submissions

BJJ Positions

Positions involves controlling the opponent and bettering your chance for submissions, strikes, or to get away.  Realize that if you cannot control a position, you will have less time to attack while your opponent gets out.  For sport, this means giving your opponent points when he gets a better position.  For the street, this means the opponent gets one or two of your punches before he turns the tables and starts pounding on you.

I emphasize to every beginner to start mastering positions first.  Submissions come eventually and this gives them confidence to try more submissions without fear of losing position.  Once I gained confidence in positioning, I would try harder submissions and fail, only to more easily get back to the same position and try again.

Some tips with positioning:

-Positions require patience and timing.  Learn to hold a position and wait.  Let your partner waste his energy trying to escape.  If in a bad position, find a safe stalemate and wait for the right time to escape.  When the opportunity comes (he shifts weight, tries a submission, etc.) explode with a burst of power at the right time to easily escape.

-Positions are divided into holding positions and changing positions.  Learn to hold before changing.  Drills that involve holding a mount position are great for working your skills at holding a position.  Meanwhile, the person on the bottom gets to practice changing his position.  If you have problems holding a position, ask a more senior student for help.

For more specific information on positions and techniques, go to www.bjj.org

BJJ Submissions

Submissions involve any move that causes the person to submit or tap.  Every beginner wants to learn as many submissions as soon as possible.  From here you have the power to end a fight (or match) with either an unconscious opponent or a disabled opponent. 

Then they get frustrated when they try the submission and get sweeped in the process, not realizing that BJJ is like a chess game of trial and error, feints and strategy.  Think of it like war: if you cannot hold a hill and the enemy advances to get the higher ground/better position, you will likely lose the battle.  Positioning is like holding that hill, advancing to a better hill, or being able to retake the hill after the enemy took it. 

Things to be wary about with submissions involve:

-Submissions take a lot of practice and trial and error.  This means you have to be willing to lose a better position to attempt the submission.  Many guys hold a closed guard as if their life depended on it.  It makes the position safe, but narrows the number of submissions that can be attempted.

-Submissions require sensitivity.  Ever tried an armbar on one guy and found it to magically work fast.  Ever tried it where it just won’t work.  The more and more you try submissions, the better your sensitivity is to gauge each varying opponent and each varying position.  This results in attaining a “sweet spot” where the submission works quickly and effectively. 

-Submissions require mechanics, not just strength.  Don’t try to plough through with strength, since it will leave you winded and possibly injure your partner.  Focus on technique and your jiu-jitsu will work better will less strength, which is all the better when you apply full strength in a real fight. 

Self-Defense

If you are capable of being a position expert, you will benefit from the essential seconds it takes to manuever in a fight.  I find it amazing when play fighting with friends as to how quickly I attain a mount position.  Also, being on top allows me to jump up and away to avoid the fight, which is not an option on the bottom.  This is essentially ideal if there is more than one attacker and you need to clear yourself to engage the other person.

Sport

Positioning wins, period.  If you can score any points and then hold the position for 5 minutes, you win.  In my first competition fight, I won 8-0 for getting the back and then the mount (4+4).  I didn’t do submissions that well back then and could not submit him, but I still won due to my positioning abilities.   After each failed submission attempt I was able to secure another position to gain more points or prevent him from scoring.  I was also in very little danger of being submitted due to the dominant positions I retained for most of the fight.

Written by Gavin Holt, Blue Belt

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Choke Train!

Posted by Kris on November 24, 2008

Training, training and more training.  While battling through injuries and fatigue, often times we forget to incorporate a little fun in mat time.  While doing my routine search for new and exciting moves I ran across this video.  Enjoy!

The Choke Train

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