People get hurt easy, becasue the teachers don't truely understand leg locks themselves.
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And the victims would rather spazz randomly rather than just giving up and asking how to get out of an attack. I don't even apply heel hooks in class but sometimes guys will worry me when they contort their knee into weird angles to try and force a turn out for an escape from something as simple as a leg lock.
When I compare the spastic spinning heel hook defense of Gurgel or Mike Brown (both versus Imanari) to the calm and controlled heel hook defense of Robson Moura against Ryan Hall, you can see how both Gurgel and Brown were injured.
does anyone know witch arm lock Antonio Peinado pulled on Kamil Uminske? the angle on the stream is bad and i dont have any idea what it could be.
Escaping heel hooks, especially the inverted heel hook is very dangerous even when you know what to do. If you are in a leg control position where your opponent can do a heel hook to you then you already made the mistake. Good awareness will keep you from being in the position to be heel hooked in the first place. And if your opponent has the heel locked up or the toe hold on then it's better to tap than risk a ligament tear... unless you're a pro mma fighter and you are getting paid tens of thousands of dollars. Just my opinion.
You know you need leg lock defense when you and your friends are white belts, and then one of your buddies watches Erik Paulson Killer Leg locks 1 then the next day submits you 6 times in a row with achilles/straight ankle locks. Learning the defenses you cant help but to learn the offense.
Just learning some leglock basics has helped my defense a ton. The only problem is most of the tournaments around here don't allow reaping the knee and that's how I finish more times than not. I cannot wait until the Herzog seminar to take it to another level.
Yeah, i've also put time into the old school style of ankle lock where you just pinch your knees around their leg and fall over onto their free leg. Way less control and easy to counter but I added that Bill Cooper leg lock pass (from the Rolled Up episode) and now I can get an easy pass if they engage me with a proper ankle lock defense (the boot while pulling your head) while I'm setting up my grips for the lock.
It was like Galvao said in his interview about Palhares. "He is very dangerous in that position, but I knew I had better jiu-jitsu". Trusting in his technique was what allowed him to defend all Palhares' attacks where EVERYONE else has basically wilted. He was cool as a cucumber in all the leg entanglements and dominated the rest of the match.
Good point
Another great point
True. The whole weekend everyone was playing open guard. So, like Dean Lister said(Who won the gold in his weight class all by heel hook), he goes for whatever's available, but guys always seem to put their legs out there so that's what he gets a lot.