Continuing on my theme from the last couple of posts I wanted to talk more about fluidity. This is another area I’ve studying from all BJJ video’s I could find on Rickson Gracie. What does fluidity mean in BJJ. Watch any video’s of most top BJJ practitioners– past and present. Then watch two white belts or two blue belts at your gym. Invariable one will have lots of movement…the other very little and lots of stalling.
I’m going to argue that the big difference isn’t in the amount of technique a blue vs high level belt knows but the core difference is in how they roll and create opportunities. A part of that is the use of triggers. Beginners learn techniques but aren’t wired yet to instinctively know the triggers and what to do. A beginner is all intent and zero opportunity.
Using this principle I’ve totally gone against Cross Face from side control. I can’t stand it any more as it doesn’t create opportunity. The position anchors the top person onto the bottom person. Making it hard for either person to move or work. It’s this type of position that restricts fluidity. As a person on top what option have I left the bottom person. None. So what is he going to do, keep tight and defend.
Everyone quickly learns the lesson of elbows in and protecting the neck. So you aren’t going to get what you want, unless you give the other person what they want. The other person wants the opportunity to escape. To this extent, use less pressure (pressure for pressures sake) when on side control and mount. Become more mobile and use your hips to deflect their arms and stop their escapes thus creating opportunities for yourself.
For myself I’m putting into practise triggers. Depending what the person on bottom is trying to do, I’m trying to find very simple answers to that. The end result is many opportunities for submissions arise and now I’m getting many submissions every roll if I get on top.
So I’m happy with my progress in this area. Each training session I’m becoming more fluid and more dangerous with my attacks. To do this I’ve eased up on the pressure, relaxed and concentrate on breathing and moving in reaction to whatever the opponent gives me.
Here are some tips I’ve been using myself when on top attacking:
- Never Cross face (shoulder of justice) from side control, it locks you to your opponent. Good for points, bad for everything else.
- Never use excessive pressure – it locks your opponent so they can’t move and therefore can’t create opportunities for you.
- Don’t get into static escape fights– you engage in arm battles instead of redirection with hips and movement to stop your opponent escaping.
- Don’t try to force a particular submission – only go for it once the setup opportunity has arisen.
- Switch hips to redirect pressure from escapes.
- Keep moving at a nice easy RELAXED pace. Use a 3 second rule so you don’t stall. Stalling is just another word for a loss of opportunity, trying moving and switching your hips when you feel stalled.
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