Wednesday, February 07, 2024

If You Yell "Shark!" ...

Trained today like I have not trained in a long time. Inspired after the fact by these insights from the Oracle of Austin, John Danaher.

Sparring tired: It’s common to feel utterly exhausted some days in the middle of your sparring rounds. Sometimes you come in feeling fine and have a couple of very tough rounds and feel very fatigued. It’s natural to feel like stopping, maybe taking off a round a two and then starting again. You think this way because you are thinking in terms of WINNING OR LOSING rounds. If you’re exhausted it’s going to be very difficult to win and quite likely you’ll lose to your next partner. So you take some rounds off and start again when you’ve recovered a little. 

This not good if you want to play at a competitive level. Doing this means you will never get the experience of performing through exhaustion. Change your mindset. Tell yourself - I’m exhausted - but I will keep going with a lowered set of expectations. Let’s imagine I’m ahead in a tough match and have to protect my lead and not get submitted. This will simulate the skill of operating under great fatigue and duress - a common thing in tough matches. You don’t want the finals of a tough competition to be the first time you do this - your own mind will start to fight against you - learn to tame it in the gym first and it will be much better than trying to learn it in the middle of a big match. 

Obviously if you are more recreational, older, perhaps not in competition shape, this will not apply as much, but you can still experiment with it to some degree. Remember, you don’t have to stop completely, just lower your goals and keep going - you will learn a lot about yourself in those rounds.

Monday, January 08, 2024

Eight Months Out, Two Weeks In

After being off the mat for eight months due to injury and The Big Move Back, I finally returned to the tatame last week.


There's a lot to say about my current and future jiu-jitsu home and I do plan on getting around to saying much of it. I'm currently training twice a week with a great bunch of guys and gals at a school here in Tucson that I'll name later. 

What's making the biggest impression on me right now is how my jiu-jitsu game will change with my current set of training partners - compared to those folks I've trained with for years, decades even. 

Presently, I'm almost always the smallest and oldest guy on the mat. I've had success with some of my bread and butter moves from days of olde. But there are a few new areas I want to underscore as goals for 2024.

Omoplatas Uber Alles

One of the very first jiu-jitsu magazines I ever bought boasted the effectiveness of omoplatas against larger opponents. I suspect leg v shoulder attacks could become very valuable submission tools when I'm giving up a major size advantage. Rafa has more than a few ideas

No Bull Sitting Guard

I'm not going to give up my Leandro Lo guard any time soon. But there's likely a lot I can gain from using the sitting guard that Cobrinha, Otavio Souza, and Rodolfo Viera have so effectively deployed. 
Typically, I've held back using it with training partners my own size. Now, with larger training partners, it may be an optimal time to take off those gloves. Tip o' the hat and a bow at the waist to BJJ Scout on this one. 

Ole, Ole! ... Ole, Ole!

Speaking of bulls ... I want to murder this maneuver. In 2024, I turn every guard pass into an opportunity to train the toreando. 

There's more, especially when it comes to preferred dominant positions going forward (attention S-mount!), as well as full body guards like Marcelo Garcia's X-guard. But for the first few months of training in 2024, these three concepts will be my guide.

Sunday, January 07, 2024

2024: Operation Omoplata



Wednesday, January 03, 2024

Swimming with Sharks

 


#mako