I love when my guys catch with a technique that I taught them. It makes me feel like I'm doing my job properly.
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I love when my guys catch with a technique that I taught them. It makes me feel like I'm doing my job properly.
YES! I rarely "let" people tap me, but I often choose to tap to students using good technique. I think one role of the instructor is to provide students a super intelligent grappling dummy to provide problems with the body and not just words. If I let a student put me in spiderweb and his technique is clean he should get a sub. I present him with problems, but smashing him every time doesn't teach much.
All great responses. I was definitely referring to actually technically tapping a blackbeltch and not so much using strength, size, or athleticism.
If a black belt isnt getting tapped, he's/she's either not trying new things or he/she has too big of an ego which should have been crushed out long ago.
Tapping is just part of training and means nothing. Had a black belt once tell me when he was a blue he tapped a BB. Doesn't mean he was a BB. Now that he is a BB he has been tapped by a blue. Doesn't mean he is not a BB now.
A red belt is at least 67 years old. His joints are probably in a used state after 58 years of training. His fitness isn't as good either because in theory his heartrate doesn't get over 153. A younger, heavier, faster and fitter blue belt could wear down an old guy and tap him out before the end of the round. This doesn't mean that technically the red belt is not excellent, it just means he knows his joints, physical limits and is taking it easy so he can come back and train the next day.
In any case, I'd try my luck with Eddie Bravo but I'd respectfully not submit a Grand Master(even if I could).
After you roll it's Highlander rules, you tap someone higher ranked you get there belt
That's how I got my brown