
Originally Posted by
Isaac Atley
I'm not sure I agree with you but just to find out what you mean. from what you said in the first paragraph, do you grab every submission you can, even when rolling with a total beginner? that doesnt sound right sorry and i dont think it is what you mean, but its the way it sounds to me.
and more importantly do you not think that there is a time when rolling without strength can benefit people rather than hinder them? i think marcelo garcia said he often lets people get something on him so he can work on getting out of it. im sure that he wont going 100%
im not having a go at you at all, becuase everything I hear about you on the forum points to you being a god/stand up guy. im just trying to understand what you said better.

Let me attempt to respond to you with a story. (Everyone likes stories!)
Not so very long ago, I stepped onto Eddie Bravo's mats at Legends MMA as a wee white belt, happy as a clam to be engaged in an activity both physically and mentally stimulating. I had wrestled, and Eddie didn't have any policies about new people live rolling back then, so I started sparring immediately from my very first class (generally inadvisable, btw). Combining the techniques we'd covered with my wrestling skills into some hideous bastard pidgin grappling language, I attempted some moves on my training partners; mostly they failed, but occasionally succeeded. After a few rolls, I had tapped less than a handful of times and this tiny idiot voice in my head told me, "Hey, you must be a natural at this jiujitsu stuff! Experienced people were barely able to do much to you! And you were able to do things!" For about 6 weeks or so, that was how it went. I'd try a slow, sloppy flyover pass or use a rubber guard looser than Jenna Jameson, and I might sweep a blue or purple belt! Awesome!
Then one day Matt Horwich came in and asked me to roll; he was a blue belt and had been knocking people out in the IFL. We slapped hands and fist bumped and then I grabbed a single leg; he grabbed a guillotine and I tapped out. This sequence of events took about 1 second, literally less time than it takes to read the sentence describing them. "Nice!" I thought, "I'll have to watch out for that tricky guillotine." I pulled guard and he immediately passed and guillotined me again. And then again. And then again. And then he armbarred me. And then he kimura'ed me. And on and on. It was effortless, fluid, graceful as ballet, spiritual even. I felt like a 3-year-old getting his clothes put on by his parents. I felt like a cod fillet being flopped around in breading and then deep fried. My own pitiful floundering served solely to provide some colour and flavour to the methods of my destruction. We rolled for probably 5 minutes, and he tapped me at least 15 times; 8 of these were guillotines (I specifically remember this number). Awestruck, I profusely thanked this grappling demigod for deigning to descend from the clouds and allowing me the honor of tapping his arm as he choked me.
I then sat out the rest of the night and watched him intently in his next rolls against my usual training partners; I hoped to gain some understanding of the game. He did alright. He got a few subs, but was subbed more. Against the purple belts, he was bested convincingly. This thoroughly confused me. How could he destroy me effortlessly and then be beaten by people I was competitive with?
So that's when I realized that everyone had been taking it easy on me. It was like waking up from the Matrix; everything I had known about jiujitsu had been a lie. I sat there, stunned, on a disused punching bag in a sweaty gym, mentally replaying my matches of the past 6 weeks. Virtually every pass and sweep had been an allowance by my training partners. Looking at the details, I realized that it was obvious that the poor mechanics of my "known" techniques simply couldn't be effective. Up until that point, I had been complacently learning a silly pretend grappling.
Having my ass kicked by Matt Horwich (thanks) marked the beginning of my first leap forward in the sport, and I can mark many other such notable times. Ricco Rodriguez used to show up and tap me (thanks) with just a claustrophobia-inducing control. Brent Littell would literally chuckle out loud (thanks) as he shrugged off my pitiful D'arce and rear-naked choke attempts. Einstein, 100 lbs smaller than me, would dance past my "guard" and freedom rock on my neck so bad that my Adam's apple would hurt for a week. And I still have nightmares about the first time Josh Barnett suplexed me (thanks?). By now probably hundreds of people have whipped my ass, providing me mental footage to review and improve upon.
Alright, I'm done spewing that severely long story, but hopefully it sheds some light on the genesis of my mentality. To respond to you directly, I will say that a 'total beginner' shouldn't spar at all; Einstein generally makes newbs watch on the sidelines for a month before allowing them real sparring. Do I grab every submission that I can? No, I mentioned that I approach every match with 3-5 moves that I will use; I place myself in position to use them. If I'm working on the Heisman, I pull side control. If I'm working on turtle guard, I'll give up my back. Since I don't care about points, this is something I could do in an actual tournament as well. If I'm rolling against a white belt I will change moves after I use the same one a few times, but I will still have specific targets. Whether I'm rolling against a 250lb brown belt or a 150lb white belt, I will focus on perfect execution of the technique and I will apply enough force to accomplish this. In general, I believe that injury does not come from strength and size; injury comes from incorrect form.
Rolling without strength is extremely valuable, but I call this drilling and see it as quite a separate beast from sparring. The S training described in the above video (nice post, Royce) is awesome and can certainly help your game, but of course not as a whole-hog substitute for actual sparring. There are many components required to construct your technique. You need to learn from a good instructor, watch footage on youtube, read books, warm up properly, drill, flow with your friends, think about and dissect matches you've had in the past. And you need to roll for real.