Sunday's a great day at Lovato's. Very small classes and then open mat time. I got to live roll for the first time today, with a bluebelt who outweighed me by about 25 lb.
He was really great with me. He moved nice and slow for me, walking through the curriculum against me, allowing me ample time to try to stop him. It didnt work and I eventually left my arms sticking out and he caught one. Armbar tap.
Then we started with him in my guard. The guy is much heavier and stronger than me, but he sort-of allowed me to break him down. I went into mission control, which he kind of just sat patiently in, not really doing much to stop me. I think he was just curious what I was going to do with it. I Zombie'd him (this took some struggle), double-bagged, cleared his neck, and kung fu'ed him.
At this point I thought I was in good shape, being set up for the gogo and all that. But he was keeping his head turned and his chin tucked so I couldn't get my shin into his neck, it was more across his chin. At that point I started thinking, and he started to actually defend (I'm pretty sure he just let me have everything up to that point, not sure).
He passed my weak side leg. Not sure if he fully passed or just half past. Either way it allowed him to really stack me and smash my gogo leg right into my own face, stretching out my hip, and causing me to tap.
I'm pretty sure about the 3 or 4 biggest mistakes I was making. But no big deal. I'm 3 months into Jiu Jitsu and this guy is a bluebelt who outweighs me by at least 25 lb.
But after class in the locker room he tells me I should not mess with rubber guard because "it's hard on the knees". Instead I should stick to the curriculum until I'm more advanced before I mess with fancy stuff like rubber guard.
I know what he's saying. Clearly I need to work on my fundamentals. And I didnt argue with the guy just thanked him... but...
So far I have learned (in class) exactly ONE attack from a closed guard, the armbar. No open guard stuff at all, no sweeps, nothing but that one closed guard armbar. It's hard to perform an armbar from closed guard and I'm pretty damn sure a bluebelt with 25 lb on me is going to not only escape my armbar attempt, but pass my guard as well.
I have a bunch of things I'm familiar with from RG, so I felt that was my best bet. Clearly this guy didn't agree. But in the time I was rolling with the guy, the brief RG work was the only time I was doing anything at all other than trying to stop him from advancing on me.
He also told me how easy it is to waste training time with exotic stuff.
Personally I felt like I learned a tremendous amount from that roll, and a lot of it was about what can go wrong in RG. I guess I have to leave it at a difference of opinion.
Do you guys have any thoughts on this? I should shelve RG work while I learn how to keep my arms from getting broken and how to stop people passing me? The only time I get into RG is when we're doing open mat, and I'm squarely focused on learning what they teach in class, in class. But if I have a guy in my closed guard, I WANT to play RG against him. I have the flexibility, and maybe I suck at it right now but I can tell you for sure I don't suck any worse at RG than I do at any of the standard curriculum stuff.
He was really great with me. He moved nice and slow for me, walking through the curriculum against me, allowing me ample time to try to stop him. It didnt work and I eventually left my arms sticking out and he caught one. Armbar tap.
Then we started with him in my guard. The guy is much heavier and stronger than me, but he sort-of allowed me to break him down. I went into mission control, which he kind of just sat patiently in, not really doing much to stop me. I think he was just curious what I was going to do with it. I Zombie'd him (this took some struggle), double-bagged, cleared his neck, and kung fu'ed him.
At this point I thought I was in good shape, being set up for the gogo and all that. But he was keeping his head turned and his chin tucked so I couldn't get my shin into his neck, it was more across his chin. At that point I started thinking, and he started to actually defend (I'm pretty sure he just let me have everything up to that point, not sure).
He passed my weak side leg. Not sure if he fully passed or just half past. Either way it allowed him to really stack me and smash my gogo leg right into my own face, stretching out my hip, and causing me to tap.
I'm pretty sure about the 3 or 4 biggest mistakes I was making. But no big deal. I'm 3 months into Jiu Jitsu and this guy is a bluebelt who outweighs me by at least 25 lb.
But after class in the locker room he tells me I should not mess with rubber guard because "it's hard on the knees". Instead I should stick to the curriculum until I'm more advanced before I mess with fancy stuff like rubber guard.
I know what he's saying. Clearly I need to work on my fundamentals. And I didnt argue with the guy just thanked him... but...
So far I have learned (in class) exactly ONE attack from a closed guard, the armbar. No open guard stuff at all, no sweeps, nothing but that one closed guard armbar. It's hard to perform an armbar from closed guard and I'm pretty damn sure a bluebelt with 25 lb on me is going to not only escape my armbar attempt, but pass my guard as well.
I have a bunch of things I'm familiar with from RG, so I felt that was my best bet. Clearly this guy didn't agree. But in the time I was rolling with the guy, the brief RG work was the only time I was doing anything at all other than trying to stop him from advancing on me.
He also told me how easy it is to waste training time with exotic stuff.
Personally I felt like I learned a tremendous amount from that roll, and a lot of it was about what can go wrong in RG. I guess I have to leave it at a difference of opinion.
Do you guys have any thoughts on this? I should shelve RG work while I learn how to keep my arms from getting broken and how to stop people passing me? The only time I get into RG is when we're doing open mat, and I'm squarely focused on learning what they teach in class, in class. But if I have a guy in my closed guard, I WANT to play RG against him. I have the flexibility, and maybe I suck at it right now but I can tell you for sure I don't suck any worse at RG than I do at any of the standard curriculum stuff.