This Twitter message made my morning!
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I hate running late for BJJ Competitions! But it happened yesterday.
After a wreck slowed traffic to a halt and a needed bathroom stop.
I finally made it up to Indy for the competition.
And almost as soon as I walked in, I was told that one of our women, Brittany, would be up soon.
I rushed over to see her and give her and help get her ready.
When I found her she told me she had lost her 1st match but had another coming up.
I asked how she lost.
Her reply was that she was working really hard for the takedown and just couldn’t get anything going.
When she said this, I sort of scratched my head a bit. Knowing that her takedown game was not her A game.
I then asked her. . .
“What’s your best goto position in the gym?”
She grinned a bit knowing what I was pointing out and replied back, “Half guard.”
I grinned back and said, then lets play that. Don’t go for the takedown this time, it’s not YOUR game.
Play YOUR game. Play Half Guard. Don’t go for the takedown just because you feel like you need to.
Her next match soon started and she immediately got her grips and used the Half Guard pull I show in my Wrestling for BJJ series.
Her opponent gave her some trouble but Brittany was able to suck her up into a good Old School Half Guard position.
From there she swept, got dominant position and won 6-0.
Later on that day she took gold in no gi, using her Half Guard pull game and even scored her 1st ever competition sub.
A lot of times with BJJ competitions, people feel like they have to get the takedown in BJJ competitions.
And this simply isn’t true.
While having a good takedown game is a welcome addition to your game for BJJ competitions.
Even then, sometimes someone will be too big or better at takedowns, and you’re going to have to have a Plan B.
Some of the deadliest competitors are bottom oriented fighters who use aggressive guard pulls to fuel their attacks.
But even if you aren’t a takedown person, you ABSOLUTELY need to have options from standing.
And it’s why in my Wrestling for BJJ video series. I include a number of different aggressive guard pulls that go right into attacks and sweeps.
Hope you’re having an awesome day!
I’m headed back to hammock for some reading.
Talk soon!
-Chewy
P.S. The techniques in the W4BJJ Series are the same core techniques I teach my students to bring them up to speed for competitions. It’s the real deal!
Then you may have seen that I was promoted this past week by my coach.
And I received a lot of congratulatory messages. . .
Which I suppose were in order.
But at the same time. . .
I didn’t know what to say because I didn’t feel like congratulations was necessary.
Rank was never really important to me.
As I’ve grown older I’ve reached a still point in my training.
I know I’m going to have good days and bad days.
When I compete I know I’ll win some and lose some.
And promotions will come. . . as they always have.
But this really isn’t important. What’s important For Jiu-jitsu, is simply being on the mat.
It’s about who we forge ourself into along the way.
The medals won, promotions received. . .
They become less valuable when compared to who we became in order to achieve them.
Winning a medal is worthless if you didn’t become a person able to win the medal.
Having a belt is an empty thing if we don’t have the skill and knowledge to back it up.
Exterior goals motivate us. . . as they should.
But after years and years of chasing exterior goals you look back to the center. . .
Yourself. . .
At a young age grappling showed me self reliance.
It helped me to believe in what I could do even when I didn’t think I could
It taught me the value of grinding away after something, for no other reason other than . . .I wanted it.
It showed me that lying beneath the surface there was so much more to me than I ever thought.
So you can take away my medals, my belts and my stripes.
But you cannot take away who I’ve become.
And as you move through your own path in grappling and in life.
As you achieve your own goals and climb your own mountains.
Someday you’ll realize (if you haven’t already). . .
That none of it even comes close to the person you transform yourself into.
The thing you were seeking. . . it was inside of you all along.
Keep training my friends, -Chewy
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If you’d ever like to train with the team and I. Check out my gym Derby City MMA in Louisville,KY.
This morning I saw a video showing a guy at a Brazilian Jiu-jitsu tournament who simply REFUSED to use tapping out as an option. He continued even after being caught in several submissions. One leg lock attempt that left him visibly injured, to the point where he could no longer stand without a limp
Here’s the video if you haven’t seen it:
I’ve run into the “Not Tapping” thing several times in my 14+ years of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu training.
There was this time when I was a White Belt. These 3 MMA fighters stopped by our gym for a grappling class. During the class one of my good friends who was nearing his Blue Belt (but was still a White Belt) caught one of the MMA fighters in a Kimura. As he cranked the guys arm the MMA fighter began to grunt and make sounds of discomfort. My friend sensing the pain eased up and held the position of the Kimura but stopped cranking it any further.
Eventually our coach stepped in and broke it off. The MMA fighter then stood up screaming about how he hadn’t tapped and my coach calmly informed him that he was saving his shoulder so he could train tomorrow.
The man stormed out of the room.
As a coach I’ve run into this before as well. I once had a situation with a student who REFUSED to tap to things. In a lot of cases till it was too late.
In one particular instance. One of my other student’s placed a wrist lock onto another student who refused to tap. As the wrist lock slowly got tighter and tighter, the student applying the lock asked verbally, “Are you alright?”
To which the non-tapping student replied, “Yeah, I’m fine.”
There eventually came a POP and my non-tapping student stood up clutching his wrist while wincing in pain. I quickly rushed over to look at the person and see what exactly happened.
The student who applied the submission was visibly shaken by the fact that he hurt a fellow training partner. Contrary to the hard nature of training and potential of submissions. Most people don’t enjoy hurting their training partners.
I quickly, took the student over to the side and asked, “Hey man, did it hurt when the wrist lock was being applied?”
The student’s reply came as he was still holding the injured wrist in his other palm, “Yeah. . .”
My face at this point had to have been one of just complete anger because I was so irritated by that response. Then I asked the question that got to the root of the issue. “Why didn’t you tap????”
His reply sums up why some people still insist on waiting till the last possible moment or refuse to tap at all, “Because I didn’t want to lose.”
After hearing this. . . I lost it a bit and went on a long rant about training properly.
Even at my worst in regards to being overly competitive and going too hard. I still tapped all the time. Could you imagine all the injuries if I hadn’t tapped often. I wouldn’t be able to do BJJ today. Even today. I’ll tap very quickly than risk my long term ability to train and just be a human. No tournament or win during a roll is worth 3 – 12 months of time off the mat and away from my students as well as the possibly long term consequences.
Also, if you don’t tap. You’re not respecting the game of rolling. Rolling is 100% a game. There are players, with basic rules to govern the environment and finally there is a way to win and lose.
When you don’t tap to a submission. It’s like playing a game and not respecting the rules once you’ve lost. It’s as if you were playing a game of chess. And once your partner established a check mate against you. Instead of saying good game and rearranging your pieces. You begin to just start moving your pieces as if nothing happened.
The difference though is that where as in a chess game you can always just get your pieces back after the game. When you don’t tap to legitimate submissions. You don’t get those “pieces” you’ve lost back.
People use this saying that tapping isn’t losing, it’s learning. I don’t agree with that exactly.
Tapping is losing. You lost. . . plain and simple. You can doll it up however you want to in order to make yourself feel better, but it’s losing. We play a game and when you tap, you lose. When you get the tap, you win.
That said, tapping out is still learning. As is every loss and failure. And I feel like that’s one of the benefits to BJJ is becoming ok with losing.
Failures are like the scars that lay scattered around my eyebrows. Each one of them has a story of me doing something wrong. The only reason I have the scars are because I did something wrong. And you better believe that I learned from them and corrected the mistakes later on. And I wear the scars proudly.
There’s no shame in losing, and failure. Here’s the root issue that a lot of us have trouble with. Including myself at times. We act as if failure is so bad. But it’s not. It’s only bad if you perceive it to be so and give it that negative power. It’s the failures we experience that really push us forward and make us better. Nothing lights a fire under you or makes you get your shit together quite like screwing something up. And behind each failure is a story of you not doing something correctly. And you’ve got to be open to reviewing that story to get the most out of anything.
So respect your opponent’s by playing the game of rolling correctly. Respect your body and it’s longevity by tapping to legitimate submission attempts. And lastly, embrace your failures. Lose the aversion you have to failure and move towards it! Failing is what you’re supposed to do! Because that’s where you need to go to improve.
-Chewy
When you first start as a new BJJ White Belt, it can be overwhelming. There is so much going. It can be overwhelming and somewhat confusing about where to start.
I experienced this issue when I began training. And it is a question one of my new White Belts named Taylor recently asked me about. His question was essentially asking what to focus on as a new BJJ White Belt.
(If you’d like to read more about my early days in BJJ read this old post.)
So in this video, I share several tips about how I personally went about the initial phase of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu as a brand new White Belt with little to no submissions in my useable technique arsenal.
I share some tips for people who are more comfortable on the bottom playing form Full Guard and I share some options for people who are more comfortable playing from the top positions.
The general idea in this video is that if a brand new BJJ White Belt. Your goal should begin as just being able to control position as best you can and survive initially.
If you can control the basic positions (holding full guard, maintaining top position, etc) then overtime you’ll find that you’ll be able to mount some sort of offense attacks afterwards. Brazilian Jiu-jitsu has the old saying of “position before submission” and this is so true. If you can control the position consistently and reliably. You’ll be able to have more opportunities to attack or defend yourself effectively.
But in the beginning, if you don’t have the ability to maintain positions properly. You’ll be hard pressed to mount any submission attacks or offense techniques. So this should be one of your main focuses in the beginning of training. So if you are brand new, and you’re wondering what to focus on during rolling or Bjj training. This is a basic answer.
So for all the newcomers to BJJ, I hope this video is useful to you!
-Chewy
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If you’d ever like to train with the team and I. Check out my gym Derby City MMA in Louisville,KY.
This is the question I received from our BJJ White Belt friend Brianda who asked,
” I’ve been training for four months and I know I’m improving a lot (everybody tells me), but when I roll with white belts. Why do I feel like I can’t do anything? When I roll with higher belts everything goes better and I can practice all the movements and submissions I’ve learned, is it normal?”
In this Chewy ramble video I discuss this common situation in Brazilian Jiu-jitsu.
When it boils down to it this is caused by a couple things.
A higher belt (Blue Belt, Purple Belt, Brown Belt, Black Belt) is in much better control of the roll and is much more relaxed. This relaxed state is usually fueled by the fact that the higher belt can finish the roll and gain the upper hand at any point. This oftentimes leads higher belts to play down a little bit during BJJ training to allow the newer student to move around and attempt their techniques.
The roll takes on a back and forth flow dynamic. Rather than the super intense style of roll that happens when two people of the same level are rolling with one another. So if you’re a White Belt and you’re rolling with a higher belt who is playing around a bit. This is why you feel like you’re doing better against them during BJJ training.
In contrast you might feel like you roll worse against a White Belt. This is because a fellow White Belt does not have the security of being more advanced technically. They don’t have the same control a more experienced grappler does. So, instead they are fighting life and death when pitted against another beginner during a Brazilian Jiujitsu class.
The roll then takes on a much more aggressive nature and makes it more difficult to execute techniques. And this would lead you to think that you are doing “worse” during the roll.
I go into more detail in the video and share a few stories. But don’t worry, in short, yes this is a normal situation.
If you’re running into this as a BJJ White Belt. I hope the video is helpful!
Thanks!
-Chewy
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If you’d ever like to train with the team and I. Check out my gym Derby City MMA in Louisville,KY.
Want 3 tips on how to use your BJJ book effectively for training? Maybe the book is just filled with awesome content and BJJ techniques. Well how do you decide on which BJJ techniques to focus on and implement?
In this video I give several tips on how to use a Brazilian Jiu-jitsu book effectively. I focus my attention on Jiu-jitsu University, as an example since it was requested by one of the viewers.
He said that he bought this particular BJJ book in order to help him develop his grappling abilities and is wondering on how to make the best use of it for training and his BJJ development.
1. USE THE INFORMATION! Don’t let the books, dvd and videos you consume go to waste. Put into motion the things you’re absorbing. Remember, information is just information. Execution of this information is what matters.
2. Focus on problems you’re encountering during your Brazilian Jiujitsu training. Oftentimes when we have a deficiency in our game. We somehow seem to find ourself there constantly. So it’s very helpful to plug the holes in your game. Find areas to help you focus on those areas is a good idea.
3. Focus on positions where you’re already effective. This will allow you to easily slide new techniques into the mix. Often if you’re already good at a particular position. Adding another technique you see in a BJJ book won’t be a problem.
3. Augment the training your BJJ coach is already covering. So for instance if you’re covering Guard Passes. Find more options on Guard Passing in the book to go along with what you’re already doing. This will help you further develop those areas and stay on track with your coach in your gym.
I also share an idea on how you might use a BJJ journal along with a BJJ book to hold yourself accountable in regards to the techniques you’re trying to add to your game.
I hope the video is helpful!
-Chewy
If you’d ever like to train with the team and I. Whether you are visiting or if you want to do Brazilian Jiujitsu in Louisville , KY. Click Here to check out my gym Derby City MMA in Louisville,KY.
When you’re an older BJJ practitioner on the mat. Often you have to do things a bit differently than your younger training partners. Like moving a bit slower. Now, does moving slower during BJJ training make you lazy? This is a worry that one of our friends has currently with his training.
He is a 40 year old 2 stripe white belt and is wanting to move towards a slower Brazilian Jiujitsu game. This is because he often putters out during the Bjj rolling session when he tries to match the pace of some of his training partners. The issue he is having though is that he feels like his coach will look at him as if he is lazy and not progressing.
He also shares that he feels like he is kind of hanging on to his younger self and that part of the reason he goes so fast during training is because he is still trying to be that younger person.
In this video (below) I talk about slowing down your BJJ game to adapt to being an older guy or woman in Brazilian Jiu-jitsu. While this is directed towards an older BJJ White Belt in particular. The same tip could be used for anyone in BJJ who is trying to make their game more efficient.
As I share in the video. Moving slower when you’re doing BJJ doesn’t mean you’re being lazy or not progressing. In many cases, it just means you’re attempting to become more efficient with your movements and making everything count. Rather than expending lots of energy unnecessarily with movements that don’t really get you anywhere.
So whether you’re an older BJJ practitioner who is in the thick of Brazilian Jiujitsu and is looking to adapt to a slower game or if you’re just looking to slow down your game a bit when you’re rolling. Hopefully the tips in this video are helpful to you!
Thanks for watching!
-Chewy
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If you’d ever like to train with the team and I. Check out my gym Derby City MMA in Louisville,KY.
What is the most efficient way to train BJJ? Is training yourself Brazilian Jiu-jitsu an effective way to learn the martial art? Should you teach BJJ to yourself?
In this video I touch on this subject.
Our friend Nate on Youtube sent a message saying that he wants to maximize his time and save money by training with his friend in a basement first before he eventually joins his local 10th Planet BJJ gym.
He’s doing this to sort of bypass the White Belt phase of his training and prepare for his Blue Belt. So he plans to do this by using his friend to teach BJJ to each other.
As I share in the video I think this is a bad idea for your BJJ growth. Primarily because I’ve done it.
When I started training Brazilian Jiujitsu. I started like Nate is thinking about and piecing together moves in my basement with my friends. This was the way I began my Brazilian Jiujitsu experience.
We did this for about a year.
I found a BJJ gym in Louisville where I would eventually train. And when I did eventually step into an actual BJJ program led by an expert. I realized I wasted so much time training myself! I learned more in that 1 day of training than I did in the year of trying to teach BJJ to myself.
In any form of Martial Arts. It’s always a more effective means to growth to learn from someone who has been there before.
If you’re contemplating joining a BJJ gym or training yourself. I hope the video is helpful to you!
Thanks!
-Chewy
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