
Originally Posted by
Slick Rick
Thanks for the feedback Herzog. I hope you wouldn't play RG from your back. Angles are golden. But what if I were to take that angle away and every time you tried to put your foot on my hip, I sat through and repositioned. I can't imagine someone pulling it off their first few times, but give it time. I've perfected it for my game. The outcome: I pull my arm back, we stall out, or I roll out of the omo-plata.
Ive posted it on the net because I want someone to find the answer to this counter. If you have the answer, it would be great to see some vid. It's not enough for me to have a counter, but I am always looking for that next "what if" scenario.
Thanks again for your insight.
Taking away the angle is a HUGE "what if". If you spin or attempt to roll out of the Omaplata, that doesn't make it a counter for you, it makes it a sweep for me. If you’re trying to block with your elbow and pass to side control, the Carni is there. You’re basing an entire counter on "pain compliance" which has a huge scale of effectiveness. Submissions, sweeps, escapes need to be based on functionality and frequency. If the foundation of a techniques is based on pain you will have varied results, consistency will be unreliable at best. An entire series of counters on “I hope he reacts to this” is like building a house on soggy ground. None of the “what ifs” will matter if they don’t respond to the “pain compliance” you’re attempt to gain a reaction from.
Just to be clear, I'm not saying it won't work. I'm stating you must ask yourself will this work with most people, most of the time? In my experince with pain compliance techniques the answer is "no", the levels of response vary far too greatly.