Standing passes, I like using explosive power movements while pinning the body and moving round to side (marcelo style)
Standing passes, I like using explosive power movements while pinning the body and moving round to side (marcelo style)
I'm not a big guy either Ross. 5'9 175. The leg extensions actually make the pass easier. When he extends his legs slightly loosen your grip around the thighs an move your arms to right above the knee area (bundling his legs). From here simply hop over his legs. An get to the twister pass position asap
Ooooooooooooooo very nice!!!!!! This is gonna help me sooooooo friggin much!!!!! Thanks man!!!
Also, when you're flying over, do you do anything to deal with them stiff arming your back, or does this not really matter when trying to get to twister side?
This video is interesting. It helped me a lot with me no-gi knee slice passing, but one of the reasons I think it's weird is that Rafa Mendes often talks about why it's beneficial to pass squatting or even combat base or both knees for no-gi, since you don't have as many gripping options to prevent them getting under your base for X, spiral, deep half, and a bunch of other guards.
It's interesting because if you watch his ADCC matches or him sparring on his website, he mostly passes standing in no-gi with a lot of leg drag, toreando, and back steps, despite him teaching a lot of stuff like this.
Ross Davidson, Cobrinha I think is the best knee slice passer in no-gi. I'd study all of his ADCC and NoGi Worlds stuff from 07 to now. He uses it all the time and I try to imitate that style. The pressure on it is so heavy and he's great at using it to step 180 around the head for back takes, far side armbars, or locking up darces and guillotines.
If you have a good darce/guillotine/anaconda/JNT game one of the things Cobrinha does that I really like is he stays heavy in the knee slice position but lets them keep his foot trapped in quarter guard. That way when he attacks those chokes they're so busy trying to fight to keep their guard in place that they're sticking their own hips in place. So it's way easier for him to get a submission or if he decides to switch to the pass, he's basically all the way through and just pulls his foot through and spins around to the back.
Jeff Glover, Bill Cooper, and Marcelo Garcia, Rafael Lovato Jr, and Leandro Lo would be the other 5 I really study. I'd say check out Gui Mendes but he rarely does any no-gi stuff. But he's probably the best pressure knee slicing passer at the lower weights. Anything you look up from him though is probably going to involve the brabo (lapel darce) grip. You still might be able to get something from it.
BJJ Scout has good videos on Lo's knee slice (gi and no-gi) Bill Cooper's EBI match is good to see his knee slice. Glover's rolled up episode with Budo Jake is good, and so are his ADCC matches from '11. The best way to see Marcelo's knee slices are on MGinaction so those are harder to find.
No it matters. If they are really committed to stopping the pass on that side I usually hop to the other side mid pass an it usually catches them off guard. I don't always go right to twister pass here. Sometimes I just go to traditional side.. after I hop over their legs I use my far side arm as a block in front of their hips (to stop them from following me). Sometimes going straight to knee on belly works too.
I would have to disagree. I think there are small details and entire techniques most gyms keep under wraps as long as possible. You see the tech or detail everywhere after it has been hit at a big tournament, but sometimes that is a year or two after it has been fully developed in training.
Check out this pressure pass. This one has worked great for me against high level grapplers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7dGm0KCcTY
Definitely get good at both Ross. Earlier this week we showed some nice standing passing. Mix those up with your close quarter pressure passing and you should be able to keep your opponent busy. No one pass is a be all end all of passes. The guys that are passing are going under, over, left, right, and directly through people. This is where you will be when everything comes together brotha.
I like pressure passes. I like to smother my opponent and not give them any room to create a scramble