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MMA Training Techniques and Fighting Tips: Leglocks and a Pinch in Time
Stephan Kesting This week, Stephan is on the finishing touches of his latest video collection for all you grapplers. Having witnessed some of the video takes this new video will be an instant classic for you aspiring grapplers out their. If you haven't a chance to purchase some his videos you can get them here. His video collection includes: The Dynamic Half Guard Volume 2 of Dynamic Guard Sweeps, My Mixed Martial Arts by Denis Kang, 83 drills for BJJ and Submission Grappling, Dynamic Guard Sweeps Vol. 1: The Butterfly and X Guard, Dynamic Kneebars the Definitive Video, Omo Plata and the Dynamic Guard, and Introducing Yoga for Martial Arts. Become a better a fighter today with one of the best grappling instructional videos out there. ------------------------------------------------ Grapplers UpdateThese days I'm using every bit of spare time to finish up my next video project, "High Percentage Leglocks". Recently editing this video has eaten up most of my training time, which is bad for me but excellent for you, the future audience. I'm putting my entire leglock game onto this video, and I'm told that it looks really, really good. I need another few days to finish the editing, then about a week to get it authored, and then about 2 to 3 weeks to get the DVDs replicated, so it should be available in about one month if everything goes smoothly. I'll be leaking some sneak previews of it onto the internet soon... ----------------------------------------------- A Pinch in TimeGrappling uses muscles that don't normally get a lot of attention in the gym. As evidence of this I'll point to the muscle soreness in unexpected places that otherwise fit people experience when they grapple hard for the first time. Today I want to talk about the importance and role of your thigh adductors, the muscle groups that bring your knees towards each other when your legs are apart. The adductors (spelled with a double "dd") are not to be confused with the abductors (with a "bd") because they do opposite things; I always used to get the two confused until someone pointed out that adductors (with a "dd") ADD your legs together. A friend of mine recently had the pleasure of grappling Kron Gracie, son of the famous Rickson Gracie. My friend (who is a very good grappler himself) was very impressed by the level of control that Kron was able to maintain in the mount position. Whenever my friend tried to escape or move, Kron would really, really squeeze his knees together; as soon as my friend relaxed, Kron would relax his own legs as well. This squeezing action, using the leg adductors, made the bottom person's movements to setup escapes like the elbow-knee escape much more difficult and energy-draining. This fundamental counter to the elbow-knee mount escape makes sense if you think about it. How would you stay on a galloping horse if you couldn't use your hands: you'd squeeze your knees of course (if you don't know what an elbow-knee escape is you can see it here:
A good thigh squeeze can also help maintain other positions, including many half guard variations (both on the top and on the bottom). In addition to maintaining position, adductor squeezing can also really amplify the effectiveness of your submissions. Try this experiment with the kneebar: place your partner in a kneebar, cross your ankles or triangle your legs but leave your lower body relaxed. Apply the lock and observe how much energy you have to exert to get your partner to tap. Also look at how far you have to hyper- extend his leg before he becomes uncomfortable. Now revert to your starting position and change only one thing: squeeze your thighs together as hard as you possibly can. Now see how much less energy you need to apply the lock and how much earlier he taps. I originally made this point in my video and articles about the kneebar several years ago: in Kneebar Mastery I wrote "pinching the legs together as hard as you can is very important: this limits his movement and makes the lock come on faster." It was true then and it's still true now. The article can be found here: Using your adductors to pinch your legs and knees together is also important for finishing the armbar, the triangle choke, ankle locks, heel hooks and many other submissions. Does this mean that you have to run out and buy an industrial strength thigh master? Not neccesarily. You can work the adductors specifically if you have the time: most bigger gyms have several different machines for adductor and abductor strengthening, and if you don't have access to that you could always try something I heard about from Oleg Taktarov: doing two legged jumps across the gym while keeping a medicine ball between your knees, held there only by the squeeze of your knees. The most important thing is to train the thigh squeeze in its natural environment, on the mat doing grappling techniques. Try to be aware of maintaining leg adduction for appropriate techniques both while practicing them and using them in sparring, and your opponents will be sure to start noticing how much harder they have to work to escape. Stephan Kesting |
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2009-01-17 10:00:00 GMT+00:00
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