Guard passing concepts
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- čas přidán 13. 07. 2017
- Here's a snippet from a training session a ran last week! People are always asking me how I structure a training session without drilling! Well here is a good example.
After running through a quick warmup using more gymnastics than bjj related exercise (to develop body awareness and control) instead of doing 10,000 hip escapes.
I go over a certain topic. For example in the video I talk about guard passing. I use concepts as guidelines and teach the "why" which is much more important than the "how". After this they go and practice for 10 minutes. Then we come back in and we have a little Q&A. Some people may have problems that they share and we work on them together as a group. Then we go back again. And come back in for another Q&A. Then we go into specific training. Which usually involves the area we are working on but in a loose format. But always live. There is no better teacher than our own experiences. After this we come back in again for another Q&A and then finish off with some rounds of sparring followed by a final Q&A.
As you may notice my classes are more like Workshops than teaching lessons. I really try and get my students to engage in active thinking rather than just doing what I tell them! Like Bruce Lee said, "I can't teach you martial arts. All I can do is help you discover yourself" and as teachers this is the best advice I can give any coach. Don't try and push your methods onto a student. But instead guide him onto his own path of self actualisation!
For more videos check out my website Www.kitdaletraining.com - Komedie
0:05 Look at this dude running up the stairs like a beast dam
Love the way you think, concepts over techniques works for me..
I have heard you talk about how you run a class and it was hard for me to imagine how you could teach a concept and have students practice it while still allowing students to execute it in their own way. This video showed me just that. Remarkable! Now, the hard part is convincing all our teachers there is a better way 👍
What I Like about Kit is that he makes the instruction interactive asking questions and checking your thought process on the situation that is presented.
Incredible!.... I have watched a few of your videos and the concepts are great!!
Got yourself a fan here mate!!👊🏼ossss
This just clicks so much better than any repetition! Love it!
great info, can't wait to try it. I love the simplicity.
Awesome info!! I love sitting on the hook and this will take me straight there, often wondered the best way to go from there, thanks!!!
Loved the questions he asked... Got me to think 🤔!
I like on how you teaching the concept..awesome !
This is a great idea. Never heard of this before. But you're gonna have to make sure you're opponent doesn't close his legs around you when you go in to close the distance. So I would say first step would be to trap a leg between you and your opponent and then go in for his upper body.
Yeah this looks like an awesome way to get stuck in half guard.
@@jamesyoo67 he says "i do enough with the legs so they're not a problem" or something like that, so i assume theres a bit more to this than simply "ignore the legs"
I thought about this too. What if they close guard you? I’m assuming something is being left out
being in half guard is not an issue with an underhook, you are also approaching from an angle with your left leg stepping super wider and your body in between their legs, which stop you from getting put in closed guard.
I tried that but I always end up in my opponent's closed guard.
This seems so simple but this is some of the best advice you can receive. It almost makes me irritated because in some of the BJJ gyms I have attended instructors do not really teach the small details that make BJJ effective. They may teach a technique like a arm bar but they do not teach the strategic placement required to execute the techniques in the most efficient manner possible.
I needed this concept thank you
Best coach ever!!!
Brilliant stuff
Thanks kit.. Bit of theory to the madness for this white belt!
This was really helpful!
Brilliant, concepts are great, I'm a white belt and this really helped thank you
Great detail!
amazing explanation i wish i could go to your school
Wow, he's awesome!
This is so helpful
Great concept. Oss
I wish I could go to your school.
Man.. i wish my instructor as detail as you
Chapeau!
What is your lineage. love the concepts just curious.? its a lot like my instructors.
5:08 when you lock your hands it reinforces the pulling side
Merci beaucoup
what about with a gi ?? you still try to block their biceps, and if he gets some sort of grip on upperbody, you just break it and maintain distance ??
Would your posture be and issue as you pass because you are kind of stretched out?
Does this concept work for half guard and particularly full guard? Where the opponent is trying to break your posture for a submission? I'm having a hard time visualizing how, if I am in full guard grabbing the opponents body and staying close will allow me to pass?
Eric Collins For half guard this is actually the traditional way to do It. For full guard its impossible that It works. This concept is for open guard.
These videos are fucking great
but you have to open his guard and at least partially control or pass a leg to get that far up?
Poetry in motion
riddle me this riddle me that ,, I just past the guard and took the back
If I am in closed guard, the first order of business would be to get out of closed guard before you consolidate, correct?
What if he closes guard before you can pass guard. Bc I tried this last night at practice and he closed guard before I could pass
This is pretty similar to the popular body lock passing that is happening nowadays
Do you do the 123 clap stuff? lol. Why is that a thing?
teamwork!
Why is it a thing to ask “does anyone know what the next thing I’m about to teach you is?” Questions room “wrong. Wrong.wrong. Ok, now that I’ve wasted some time asking you all if you know the thing I’m about to tell you, I’m going to tell you that thing and hope you feel shock and awe”...Danaher does this a lot too. Pretty sure it’s associated with having too much ego, but what do I know lol.
The guy above is correct, doing things as a team before you break is in every sport. He finds it corny because his ego wants him to be separate from the group. He holds himself above the people he’s teaching. Just a guess though 😊
@@stevena3333 check out Priit Mihkelson... the reason for not clapping is there no science behind it. You dont not become better at bjj by clapping.
@@usbsol of course it doesn't make you better and is not mandatory for every instructor. It's only a problem when you decide not to do it and youve decided other instructors shouldn't either. I believe it maintains and reminds everyone that we are all a team and on the same page. Marcelo Garcia and Andre Galvao after every instruction say, "any questions?... Ok 123 clap*". I won't argue with either of them lol.
Grab his ears 🤣
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