User Panel
Originally Posted By navvet89:
Filthy Guard Puller™ View Quote It's a legit tactic when your opponent can't slam or spike but our gym is MMA focused and jumping guard isn't practiced because it'll get you hurt badly in MMA. No complaints though... he just played the game better than I did and beat me at it. Next time I won't try to enter the clinch I'll just shoot hard for a single or double. |
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Originally Posted By NM_desert_rat:
Do 30 minutes of practicing single and double leg shots (and sprawls) and I don't care who you are, the tops of your toes are gonna be burned at some point. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Anybody else get antsy as fuck when its been a few days of not training? I notice my anxiety levels increase on days I'm not training. I think rolling might be the best therapy for me.
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Originally Posted By Remman:
Anybody else get antsy as fuck when its been a few days of not training? I notice my anxiety levels increase on days I'm not training. I think rolling might be the best therapy for me. View Quote |
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Originally Posted By Remman:
Anybody else get antsy as fuck when its been a few days of not training? I notice my anxiety levels increase on days I'm not training. I think rolling might be the best therapy for me. View Quote |
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Hit the gym, hit the range, hit the bag, and embrace the hate.
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Originally Posted By denverdan:
Yeah Leandro Lo the Miyao bros Unity would be awesome too. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By denverdan:
Originally Posted By navvet89:
I'll be sure to report here. I saw those schools but Im going to try Unity Jiu Jitsu first which is in the same area. It's about six blocks from where my hotel normally is and I've checked the website and swapped some emails with them, I'm liking the vibe of the place so far. The shop is a dirty little hole in the wall joint that has a shit load of people training, most of which are really technical, with quite a few legit champions in the mix. Very unpretentious and no-fucks-given attitude, come in and train for whatever reason suits you was the vibe I got. The instructor was spot on, I found myself without a partner when it came time to drill (not unexpected being the new guy) and he noticed, immediately paired me with a purple belt that was in my age group. The basic drills class was an hour long and had about 30 people in it for the hour, another 20 or so arrived for the 1.5 hour class that followed. Everyone that was sr white belt and higher seemed to be extremely technical, there were two pairs of small females training close to me that I really think could have taken me. I'm so rusty I would have been embarrassed if I gave a shit and hadn't been off the mats for about 2 years, as it is it will be a regular spot for me to train at while I'm in town. I was averaging about 5-7 miles walked on the fitbit everyday and training was a good time. I washed my gear in the hotel bathtub and hung it to dry in for two days so I'm going to get a cheaper ultra-light gi for traveling that I can pack easier than my heavy GB training gi. In short, if you are in the are its really worth checking out, a day pass is $40 |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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On a side, whats the opinion on a good, cheaper travel/ultra light gi?
Mine is about 350g pearl weave I think, I saw some down around 275g single weave with ripstop pants that would be easier to pack and wash on the road. I'm 5' 10", 220lbs, wearing a 46 regular in a coat. |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Originally Posted By navvet89:
On a side, whats the opinion on a good, cheaper travel/ultra light gi? Mine is about 350g pearl weave I think, I saw some down around 275g single weave with ripstop pants that would be easier to pack and wash on the road. I'm 5' 10", 220lbs, wearing a 46 regular in a coat. View Quote What I have for travel/light weight gi's that are awesome are made by Origin Gi's. Their Warrior Brand is their lightweight/travel series. They are very fair priced at $145. On top of everything else, their fit and finish are second to none. They are cut better than any other gi's that I have. Another option are the gi's by The Jiu-jitsu Brotherhood. Also, lightweight, and well put together. Finally... BJJ Globetrotter's make an exceptional travel gi. It is specifically made for people that have to travel. Their entire online presence is built upon traveling the BJJ globe. I've been training BJJ since 1996, and have been through a LOT of gi's. The Origin, and Origin Warrior Brand are among the best I've ever owned. |
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Originally Posted By chokeu2:
I am an unabashed gi junkie. I have between 45 and 50 gi's. It's a sickness... What I have for travel/light weight gi's that are awesome are made by Origin Gi's. Their Warrior Brand is their lightweight/travel series. They are very fair priced at $145. On top of everything else, their fit and finish are second to none. They are cut better than any other gi's that I have. Another option are the gi's by The Jiu-jitsu Brotherhood. Also, lightweight, and well put together. Finally... BJJ Globetrotter's make an exceptional travel gi. It is specifically made for people that have to travel. Their entire online presence is built upon traveling the BJJ globe. I've been training BJJ since 1996, and have been through a LOT of gi's. The Origin, and Origin Warrior Brand are among the best I've ever owned. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By chokeu2:
Originally Posted By navvet89:
On a side, whats the opinion on a good, cheaper travel/ultra light gi? Mine is about 350g pearl weave I think, I saw some down around 275g single weave with ripstop pants that would be easier to pack and wash on the road. I'm 5' 10", 220lbs, wearing a 46 regular in a coat. What I have for travel/light weight gi's that are awesome are made by Origin Gi's. Their Warrior Brand is their lightweight/travel series. They are very fair priced at $145. On top of everything else, their fit and finish are second to none. They are cut better than any other gi's that I have. Another option are the gi's by The Jiu-jitsu Brotherhood. Also, lightweight, and well put together. Finally... BJJ Globetrotter's make an exceptional travel gi. It is specifically made for people that have to travel. Their entire online presence is built upon traveling the BJJ globe. I've been training BJJ since 1996, and have been through a LOT of gi's. The Origin, and Origin Warrior Brand are among the best I've ever owned. My GB gi is super heavy and a pain to travel with, I washed my gear in the hotel bath tub and hung it dry for two days before packing it and heading home. A light gi would help with that. |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Tagging on the travel Gi post - what belt level is it okay to train when you travel?
I've been training for a year and a half, two stripe white belt. Appropriate to ask for drop ins when I travel? |
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Originally Posted By highspeedforlife:
Tagging on the travel Gi post - what belt level is it okay to train when you travel? I've been training for a year and a half, two stripe white belt. Appropriate to ask for drop ins when I travel? View Quote As far as a travel gi I just picked up a Tatami Comp srs I'm not sure the exact weight but it feels really light. |
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Originally Posted By denverdan:
I've been doing drop ins since early white belt you'll be fine doing it. Just call/email ahead of time and let whatever school know when you anticipate being there. Also find out any school specific rules. As far as a travel gi I just picked up a Tatami Comp srs I'm not sure the exact weight but it feels really light. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By denverdan:
Originally Posted By highspeedforlife:
Tagging on the travel Gi post - what belt level is it okay to train when you travel? I've been training for a year and a half, two stripe white belt. Appropriate to ask for drop ins when I travel? As far as a travel gi I just picked up a Tatami Comp srs I'm not sure the exact weight but it feels really light. |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Awesome! We have a couple guys at my gym who have traveled and trained extensively - I'll get some tips on where to train from them
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Very cool this thread is still active, I posted about 8 years ago, although my post has the pictures removed because photobucket wants you to pay now..........
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ahh the joys of being an old ass grappler.
Went to a local place for the first time, great class, three blue belts (I was one of those) about 20 white belts of various stripes. I was the oldest male by far at 48. My training partner was a 33 year old 3 stripe white belt, I was taking dudes lunch money on technique, he had me on cardio, too his credit he was trying to be careful and not break the old guy. A hot shower, two Motrin, an ice pack and 2 bourbons on the rocks and I think I can sleep ok tonight eta: Imma start training at Marcelo Garcia's Academy in NYC when I'm up there monthly, really nice vibe out of that place, checked it out last week. |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Originally Posted By navvet89:
ahh the joys of being an old ass grappler. Went to a local place for the first time, great class, three blue belts (I was one of those) about 20 white belts of various stripes. I was the oldest male by far at 48. My training partner was a 33 year old 3 stripe white belt, I was taking dudes lunch money on technique, he had me on cardio, too his credit he was trying to be careful and not break the old guy. A hot shower, two Motrin, an ice pack and 2 bourbons on the rocks and I think I can sleep ok tonight eta: Imma start training at Marcelo Garcia's Academy in NYC when I'm up there monthly, really nice vibe out of that place, checked it out last week. View Quote |
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Finally made it back in the gym after I injured my LCL at a labor day open mat. I was doing a sweep from half guard and felt 4-5 pops in my knee. Ended up laying off it for one roll and continued to go at it for an additional 40 min. Afterwards the knee swelled up pretty good thinking oh fuck I tore something. I had 3 opinions all said partial LCL tear and meniscus damage. After 2 months of waiting I finally got a MRI that said severe LCL sprain and early arthritis in the knee.
Fast forward to stepping back on the mat last week. Almost puked at least 4 times but loved every minute of it. It’s amazing how fast cardio can go. My knee is still a little unstable and sore, but very much able to train with a brace. |
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still at it, bumping it up here boss.
Just ordered a Flow Kimonos "Air" gi as well to take traveling with me, 350gsm single weave jacket, rip stop pants, $99 Amazon prime. I have high hopes for it so I'll let you know how that goes. eta: My cardio is crap but my experience (1 stripe blue and wrestling experience) and size are protecting me from the young buck junior belts so far. I'm slow, steady and forceful, grind them down, gas them out and take advantage when they get tired. |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Been at it for 14 months (4 stripe white belt; no wrestling experience), just now feeling like I am starting to understand what I don't understand. I started at 31 and wish I had started 15 years ago. I am having more more good rolls and actually beginning to see things. It has helped my ego that a few more white belts are showing up to open mat (for the past year I was typically the only first year white belt) because my class only has one other white belt and he was a successful wrestler and I am not particularly athletic.
Anyways I am enjoying the ride and have come to the conclusion that Jiu Jitsu is a mental toughness game, it is the toughest thing I have ever done. I have never continually failed at anything I have ever done until now, it took me 6 months to get over it. |
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Originally Posted By firewithfire:
Been at it for 14 months (4 stripe white belt; no wrestling experience), just now feeling like I am starting to understand what I don't understand. I started at 31 and wish I had started 15 years ago. I am having more more good rolls and actually beginning to see things. It has helped my ego that a few more white belts are showing up to open mat (for the past year I was typically the only first year white belt) because my class only has one other white belt and he was a successful wrestler and I am not particularly athletic. Anyways I am enjoying the ride and have come to the conclusion that Jiu Jitsu is a mental toughness game, it is the toughest thing I have ever done. I have never continually failed at anything I have ever done until now, it took me 6 months to get over it. View Quote |
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Most of that is centered on ego. Take ego out of the equation. With ego gone you stop worrying about whether or not you are submitting or being submitted. You start understanding what is happening with the flow and recognizing opportunities and where you slip up and put yourself in compromising positions.
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Originally Posted By HermanSnerd:
In reality, those two hot chicks that you just met that want you to come home with them for "a good time", are merely the bait for the huge guy hiding in the closet wearing a Batman suit. |
Originally Posted By dmnoid77:
Most of that is centered on ego. Take ego out of the equation. With ego gone you stop worrying about whether or not you are submitting or being submitted. You start understanding what is happening with the flow and recognizing opportunities and where you slip up and put yourself in compromising positions. View Quote |
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Dildos don't even make me raise an eyebrow anymore... you've got to have something a whole lot weirder than that in your rectum if you want to impress me. - TheGrayMan
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Originally Posted By joker581: Definitely. Unless you’re performing at the Roger Gracie/Buchecha level then you are going to find guys better than you nearly everywhere you go. If you view every submission as a personal failure, you’re going to have a bad time. View Quote |
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Originally Posted By HermanSnerd:
In reality, those two hot chicks that you just met that want you to come home with them for "a good time", are merely the bait for the huge guy hiding in the closet wearing a Batman suit. |
Honestly it wasn't a macho ego thing just disappointment In myself. Now that I have somewhat of an Idea of the potential depth of jiu jitsu In am totally happy with getting wrecked. It is like looking at a pond and saying you understanding the ocean. I make it in roughly 4 days a week. With 1 new white belt a new blue belt and then a bunch of damn savage upper blues, purples and browns. I wasn't providing myself much of a measuring stick on actual progress because they were getting better at the same or faster rate than me.
The vast difference of knowledge and skill between me and a say a purple belt drives me to learn. With that being said I am perfectly content staying a white belt for about 5 years or more. I don't care about getting a belts or competing I am having so much fun learning and working the rest of seems ancillary. |
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Remember white belts are supposed to suck.
At least that is what I tell myself. |
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Originally Posted By utb1528:
Remember white belts are supposed to suck. At least that is what I tell myself. View Quote |
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Originally Posted By HermanSnerd:
In reality, those two hot chicks that you just met that want you to come home with them for "a good time", are merely the bait for the huge guy hiding in the closet wearing a Batman suit. |
Wow I got my purple belt today. Totally did not expect that.
My reward was getting to roll with an absolute murderers row of black and brown belts. Damn I’m sore but it feels good. |
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Congrats!
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Originally Posted By HermanSnerd:
In reality, those two hot chicks that you just met that want you to come home with them for "a good time", are merely the bait for the huge guy hiding in the closet wearing a Batman suit. |
Originally Posted By navvet89:
Congrats! View Quote Originally Posted By Everythingisawesome:
Congratulations. View Quote Originally Posted By dmnoid77: View Quote |
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I started 2 months ago at a Gracie Barra school here. Lots of fun, and very sore after. Are there any online sites that would be useful for a beginner to learn all of the submissions, guards, etc?
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Originally Posted By Smurf10161:
I started 2 months ago at a Gracie Barra school here. Lots of fun, and very sore after. Are there any online sites that would be useful for a beginner to learn all of the submissions, guards, etc? View Quote As a beginner, put a handful of techniques in your tool bag and practice those until you can execute without thinking. Learn to feel what is going on in a roll and focus on understanding what positions and submissions are being applied to you and how those are being set up. Build a solid defense and the offense will come in time. At two months it's positional control, escapes, and basic submissions. |
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Originally Posted By HermanSnerd:
In reality, those two hot chicks that you just met that want you to come home with them for "a good time", are merely the bait for the huge guy hiding in the closet wearing a Batman suit. |
Originally Posted By dmnoid77:
My opinion is that it's not necessarily beneficial to seek out a bunch of techniques at this point. I did the same thing after my first couple months because I was jazzed about BJJ and wanted it all. What I found was that even if I was aware of various techniques I was rarely in a position to execute them and if I was I was not able to execute them effectively or properly because I lacked solid fundamentals. As a beginner, put a handful of techniques in your tool bag and practice those until you can execute without thinking. Learn to feel what is going on in a roll and focus on understanding what positions and submissions are being applied to you and how those are being set up. Build a solid defense and the offense will come in time. At two months it's positional control, escapes, and basic submissions. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By dmnoid77:
Originally Posted By Smurf10161:
I started 2 months ago at a Gracie Barra school here. Lots of fun, and very sore after. Are there any online sites that would be useful for a beginner to learn all of the submissions, guards, etc? As a beginner, put a handful of techniques in your tool bag and practice those until you can execute without thinking. Learn to feel what is going on in a roll and focus on understanding what positions and submissions are being applied to you and how those are being set up. Build a solid defense and the offense will come in time. At two months it's positional control, escapes, and basic submissions. Most people come out of the gate wanting to know about subs, the best thing to do is learn the basics very well. Learn to control your breathing and level of effort, how to keep your elbows and arms close to your body, how to protect yourself when in an inferior position. Attend class regularly and the rest will come. That being said, GB has the entire curriculum (white to black belt) on DVD/download, the "fundamentals" is where you need to start. All GB schools should follow the same schedule and curriculum and it tracks to the DVD lessons. I'm a mid level blue belt, I'm old and not very flexible, therefore I focus on a handful of "high percentage" submissions and how to perfect those and hit them from different situations. eta: which GB school in TX? |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Originally Posted By denverdan:
Wow I got my purple belt today. Totally did not expect that. My reward was getting to roll with an absolute murderers row of black and brown belts. Damn I’m sore but it feels good. View Quote The after belt beat down party seems to be the standard way people are congratulated :) |
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http://www.ar15.com/forums/f_2/716_JRH_Enterprises.html
Check out our new forum at AR15.com www.jrhenterprises.com |
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Originally Posted By navvet89:
QFT Most people come out of the gate wanting to know about subs, the best thing to do is learn the basics very well. Learn to control your breathing and level of effort, how to keep your elbows and arms close to your body, how to protect yourself when in an inferior position. Attend class regularly and the rest will come. That being said, GB has the entire curriculum (white to black belt) on DVD/download, the "fundamentals" is where you need to start. All GB schools should follow the same schedule and curriculum and it tracks to the DVD lessons. I'm a mid level blue belt, I'm old and not very flexible, therefore I focus on a handful of "high percentage" submissions and how to perfect those and hit them from different situations. eta: which GB school in TX? View Quote |
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Any suggestions on schools in San Antonio, TX? I'm heading to Ft Sam in a few months, and thinking about wondering about some weekend possibilities.
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Originally Posted By Smurf10161:
Webster tx, professor Draculino View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Smurf10161:
Originally Posted By navvet89:
QFT Most people come out of the gate wanting to know about subs, the best thing to do is learn the basics very well. Learn to control your breathing and level of effort, how to keep your elbows and arms close to your body, how to protect yourself when in an inferior position. Attend class regularly and the rest will come. That being said, GB has the entire curriculum (white to black belt) on DVD/download, the "fundamentals" is where you need to start. All GB schools should follow the same schedule and curriculum and it tracks to the DVD lessons. I'm a mid level blue belt, I'm old and not very flexible, therefore I focus on a handful of "high percentage" submissions and how to perfect those and hit them from different situations. eta: which GB school in TX? Draculino Reddit Interview |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Checking in! Just found this thread. I’ve been doing BJJ for 5 months, 2x a week. Hope to get my blue belt in late 2018. Train at Columbia Gracie in Maryland.
I just got the Jocko Willink DEF gi from Origin, it’s pretty sweet. |
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Btw, Helson Gracie is coming to my school in February for a seminar. Worth checking out?
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My coach came to me last week and told me that I have the required knowledge and skill set to test for my blue belt but to let him know when I hit 18 months currently at 15 months with 3+classes +open mats weekly. I think he lost his damn mind because when I roll with blue belts my size (5 10, 200 lbs 20 of which is absolute fat) i get fucking wrecked, hell many that are significantly smaller than me work me over.
I told him I had no desire to test or move up. That didn't go over well at all. |
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Originally Posted By firewithfire:
My coach came to me last week and told me that I have the required knowledge and skill set to test for my blue belt but to let him know when I hit 18 months currently at 15 months with 3+classes +open mats weekly. I think he lost his damn mind because when I roll with blue belts my size (5 10, 200 lbs 20 of which is absolute fat) i get fucking wrecked, hell many that are significantly smaller than me work me over. I told him I had no desire to test or move up. That didn't go over well at all. View Quote |
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So I've been thinking about my game as an older guy and it's significantly different than most of my training partners.
I've been rolling with a guy that's 15 years my junior and I have 20+ years on 90% of the class (and its a big class). I'm a big dude, nearly 50 years old, 5' 10", 225lbs, (18" neck, 34/35 sleeve, 46R in a suit coat) Thoughts from an old guy: 1) I've realized my technique is much more focused, I study and target high percentage submissions, sweeps, etc. and avoid wasting effort on low percentage techniques. 2) Timing is a critical focus for me, instead of trying to muscle a technique or throwing something in randomly to see if it works, I "hold the pattern" and make minor adjustments and try to lead my opponent into making a mistake and creating an opportunity for me to go to the next step. This is very subtle and may be as simple as making a little space in a certain direction to bait them into moving that way or creating an opening in my defense to get them to commit. The key here is that I know where I want them to go and what I will do when they get there. 3) More athletic/younger guys try to "scramble", throwing everything they have at a quick pace and moving on to the next thing if it doesn't work. I counter this with "grind them down" strategy. If I have superior position I'll try to contain and threaten them so they struggle and gas out. If I'm inferior but not seriously threatened (on bottom, in guard, etc.) I try to control their posture and movement to protect myself and either open up a sweep or sub from there. 4) Trips and "off balance" maneuvers are a thing, the less violent the better, I prefer small movements to large ones and the simplicity can be deceptive. 5) My favorite subs are: various arm bars, americana, kimura, various lapel chokes (cross collar, baseball, paper cutter, bow and arrow), ezekial from various positions, toe holds, knee bars, ankle locks and I study wrist locks extensively because old age and treachery will often overcome youth and skill In short, subtle and sneaky is my thing, the less effort involved and the quicker I can get it done the better. |
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"What do I take in my coffee? Caffeine and hate... and sometimes whiskey."
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Well two days ago I received my blue belt. I was one of the few that did get formally tested (think my 3 instructors have been testing me and keeping tabs during open mat) so I wasn't really expecting it. I guess the journey can actually begin now and try to survive. Don't know what to think still and I honestly don't feel that I was ready.
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Originally Posted By firewithfire:
Well two days ago I received my blue belt. I was one of the few that did get formally tested (think my 3 instructors have been testing me and keeping tabs during open mat) so I wasn't really expecting it. I guess the journey can actually begin now and try to survive. Don't know what to think still and I honestly don't feel that I was ready. View Quote |
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Originally Posted By navvet89:
So I've been thinking about my game as an older guy and it's significantly different than most of my training partners. I've been rolling with a guy that's 15 years my junior and I have 20+ years on 90% of the class (and its a big class). I'm a big dude, nearly 50 years old, 5' 10", 225lbs, (18" neck, 34/35 sleeve, 46R in a suit coat) Thoughts from an old guy: 1) I've realized my technique is much more focused, I study and target high percentage submissions, sweeps, etc. and avoid wasting effort on low percentage techniques. 2) Timing is a critical focus for me, instead of trying to muscle a technique or throwing something in randomly to see if it works, I "hold the pattern" and make minor adjustments and try to lead my opponent into making a mistake and creating an opportunity for me to go to the next step. This is very subtle and may be as simple as making a little space in a certain direction to bait them into moving that way or creating an opening in my defense to get them to commit. The key here is that I know where I want them to go and what I will do when they get there. 3) More athletic/younger guys try to "scramble", throwing everything they have at a quick pace and moving on to the next thing if it doesn't work. I counter this with "grind them down" strategy. If I have superior position I'll try to contain and threaten them so they struggle and gas out. If I'm inferior but not seriously threatened (on bottom, in guard, etc.) I try to control their posture and movement to protect myself and either open up a sweep or sub from there. 4) Trips and "off balance" maneuvers are a thing, the less violent the better, I prefer small movements to large ones and the simplicity can be deceptive. 5) My favorite subs are: various arm bars, americana, kimura, various lapel chokes (cross collar, baseball, paper cutter, bow and arrow), ezekial from various positions, toe holds, knee bars, ankle locks and I study wrist locks extensively because old age and treachery will often overcome youth and skill In short, subtle and sneaky is my thing, the less effort involved and the quicker I can get it done the better. View Quote |
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Originally Posted By firewithfire:
Well two days ago I received my blue belt. I was one of the few that did get formally tested (think my 3 instructors have been testing me and keeping tabs during open mat) so I wasn't really expecting it. I guess the journey can actually begin now and try to survive. Don't know what to think still and I honestly don't feel that I was ready. View Quote |
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