A simple tip for making standing figure-4 shoulder locks more functional. To view the complete download, please visit: combatprofessor.uscreen.io/pr...
I train Judo the old way and Tomiki Aikido. A lot of people claim joint locks aren't possible but we work them into randori all the time. I really appreciate this. You are ridiculous good.
I've noticed how important shapes are with accordance to combat. This vid was wicked. Resistant against an opposing force in a strait line is pretty easy. But the demonstration of how to break resistance with half circle was golden piece of knowledge. Question, figure 4 locks can be reversed/ or escaped from right?.
daniel sinclair thanks for watching. Yes anything can be resisted well or reversed. In this case, resisting with pure linear force is the least effective way. Staying engaging in your core but light on your feat and flowing and yielding with your arm is best-like a good dance partner. Most people try to stand their ground and lock up but it’s far better to compress distance and willingly engage in a clinch to counter the lock.
Thx for this vid M. secours. As your name suggest, you're often helpful 😄 More seriously, I think that the answer to this issue of lock resistance can be found traditionnal kung fu. What we call Qin na can be sumed up as the art of locks but also of how to combine them. My point is that Qin na's strength is that it uses the opponent's resistance to one lock set up the next one : it works like chain wrestling
I need to point out something about the "old school jiu jujitsu". Medieval Japan had a set of pugilistic arts where hand strikes imitated sword strikes. Since people fought with swords anyway it was easier to translate sword movements into firsts than create a new systems purely for empty hands. Today no one will punch like that. In Tokyo 300 years ago, most people would.
This isn’t supposed to be a punch catch. It’s just a mechanical drill to explain macro joint control over micro. It would only occur off of an escort position in security It would only occur off of a Russian 2-on-1. I don’t believe people ever punched like that, not even 400 years ago. I believe they were just classical teaching drills that became grossly misunderstood. As a gateway to mechanical understanding they’re great. As a trap, they would be suicide.
What happens if you do it fast and jump into the air and take him down when you drop on the ground? I tried it and it worked plus you have to punch him some or kick him and make him dizzy then you do it
Jumping assumes an ideal surface. No ice , gravel, loose footing.. Also realize this is a mechanical drill. In application you’ll be locked in a clinch pushing and pulling and hitting. The first principle always is kuzishi-to break their balance-so hitting, shifting mass, or any other form of off balancing is always needed. Jumping could be among those tactics. For my money a quick dropping of your center will achieve the result with less risk or in the case of exhaustion a full sacrifice drop like your describing.
This is a demonstration. Naturally he might strike , gouge or grab with his free limbs and as force escalates you as an interventionist are justified to do the same. I worked security a long time. You cannot simply approach escorting and extraction like an mma fight or feral self defense encounter . Security and law enforcement often have to initiate contact by a limb and if things escalate from there there are options available via the limb. Limb control is not a first choice but it is viable.
This is very, very insightful. I learned something new.
I do old school Jujitsu when I saw that technique I thought: this guy knows what he's talking about 👊😎👍
We have the same roots. There are fewer and fewer of us around these days. All the best in your training.
I train Judo the old way and Tomiki Aikido. A lot of people claim joint locks aren't possible but we work them into randori all the time. I really appreciate this. You are ridiculous good.
Thank you for watching . I appreciate it.
thank you for this - very insightful
Thanks for watching.
Absolutely beautiful
Thanks for watching. I appreciate it.
I'm Love Your Video. Kevin Secours. 👍
Thanks for watching
I've noticed how important shapes are with accordance to combat. This vid was wicked. Resistant against an opposing force in a strait line is pretty easy. But the demonstration of how to break resistance with half circle was golden piece of knowledge. Question, figure 4 locks can be reversed/ or escaped from right?.
daniel sinclair thanks for watching. Yes anything can be resisted well or reversed. In this case, resisting with pure linear force is the least effective way. Staying engaging in your core but light on your feat and flowing and yielding with your arm is best-like a good dance partner. Most people try to stand their ground and lock up but it’s far better to compress distance and willingly engage in a clinch to counter the lock.
@@systemacanada nice one something to chew on...
Great!!
Amazing mechanics, Kevin
Thank you and thanks for watching
Thx for this vid M. secours. As your name suggest, you're often helpful 😄
More seriously, I think that the answer to this issue of lock resistance can be found traditionnal kung fu. What we call Qin na can be sumed up as the art of locks but also of how to combine them. My point is that Qin na's strength is that it uses the opponent's resistance to one lock set up the next one : it works like chain wrestling
It’s the same concept in jujitsu. I used to teach king fu many years ago. Lots of overlap.
@@systemacanada Good to know 😄 jj and kf must share common ancestry (with mongolian wrestling maybe)
@@pierrewilliam7119 kung fu is the ancestor
guy knows his stuff
Thanks for watching.
I need to point out something about the "old school jiu jujitsu".
Medieval Japan had a set of pugilistic arts where hand strikes imitated sword strikes. Since people fought with swords anyway it was easier to translate sword movements into firsts than create a new systems purely for empty hands.
Today no one will punch like that. In Tokyo 300 years ago, most people would.
This isn’t supposed to be a punch catch. It’s just a mechanical drill to explain macro joint control over micro. It would only occur off of an escort position in security It would only occur off of a Russian 2-on-1. I don’t believe people ever punched like that, not even 400 years ago. I believe they were just classical teaching drills that became grossly misunderstood. As a gateway to mechanical understanding they’re great. As a trap, they would be suicide.
Excellent teaching
Thanks for watching.
What happens if you do it fast and jump into the air and take him down when you drop on the ground? I tried it and it worked plus you have to punch him some or kick him and make him dizzy then you do it
Jumping assumes an ideal surface. No ice , gravel, loose footing.. Also realize this is a mechanical drill. In application you’ll be locked in a clinch pushing and pulling and hitting. The first principle always is kuzishi-to break their balance-so hitting, shifting mass, or any other form of off balancing is always needed. Jumping could be among those tactics. For my money a quick dropping of your center will achieve the result with less risk or in the case of exhaustion a full sacrifice drop like your describing.
Can You Do A Hip Throw Defense.
RaeQuon Tunstall I will look to see what I have in the archives
Police bjj techniques p40 stick with weapon
Which I got my 23 year old brother in a arm bar and I'm only 15? They do work and he wasnt even letting me do it btw I just overpowered him
Everyone has a ideas until they got punch in a face
Yep or their wrist broken
never seen anyone doing this. Allways outer elbow.
This is classical jujitsu counter
eh, too complicated. imma just suplex him
Yep. You’ve obvious worked security for years. How are you enjoying incarceration?
Thank god he doesn’t have any other limbs available to defend himself with or this technique would be utter useless
This is a demonstration. Naturally he might strike , gouge or grab with his free limbs and as force escalates you as an interventionist are justified to do the same. I worked security a long time. You cannot simply approach escorting and extraction like an mma fight or feral self defense encounter . Security and law enforcement often have to initiate contact by a limb and if things escalate from there there are options available via the limb. Limb control is not a first choice but it is viable.
It's almost as if you had an actual insight of your own to share.