the dog fight is gold

Thread: the dog fight is gold

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  1. Andrew Alexander's Avatar

    Andrew Alexander said:
    Quote Originally Posted by Johnny Billingslea View Post
    I started making it my go to sweep series as of late and it works 80% of the time. A++ Eddie
    I LOVE the dogfight, ive been hitting alot of Black Mamba and going to dogfight from 1/4 guard. espically if they start to M2 Pass i catch the ankle and whip up ASAP. Also been hitting the Plan B as well, get them to post hard defending the boa sweep then boom Plan B
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  2. Joshua Jarboe said:
    Quote Originally Posted by Aiseop View Post
    Sorry to bring this thread up. I've been studying the MTS, particularly the Lockdown Flowchart. Quick question about the Dogfight. Is it truly a 50/50 position? If I have the underhook deep, keeping the wizard out, then I am in the advantage, right? Is that the ideal dogfight for me? Or does one not go to the dogfight position with the deep underhook advantage at all?
    Correct me if I'm wrong, but typically in dogfight you have the underhook and they *might* have the whizzer (many of my gi opponents don't bother). Based on what I've learned from MtS and the books, one is well advised to test their whizzer and go one way if it's strong and the other way if it's weak.

    Trying to be helpful, not speak out of turn, so if someone else can say more, please do.

    Edit: having read what David said I think I understand your point better Aiseop. I have to think that if you've denied the opponent a whizzer that you have improved your percentages.
    Last edited by Joshua Jarboe; 09-03-2014 at 11:23 AM.
     
  3. David Rosado said:
    Quote Originally Posted by Aiseop View Post
    Sorry to bring this thread up. I've been studying the MTS, particularly the Lockdown Flowchart. Quick question about the Dogfight. Is it truly a 50/50 position? If I have the underhook deep, keeping the wizard out, then I am in the advantage, right? Is that the ideal dogfight for me? Or does one not go to the dogfight position with the deep underhook advantage at all?
    The term 50/50 isn't literal. If I recall correctly, the way I was taught is that a 50/50 position is a skill based position. Meaning whoever has the higher skill level will win. So for example, if I get into 5050 guard with a fresh white belt, I"ll be tapping him with ease. If I get into 5050 with Brandon McCaghren, my knee pops (true story, haha..no injury though.) So to use that point in dogfight, if your wrestling sucks, the odds are a better wrestler will beat you in that position. But, dogfight is still worth getting to because you have a ton of options besides the kneepick and all that. Those options are what will level the playing field against a strong wrestling with a good whizzer.
     
  4. Aiseop said:
    Quote Originally Posted by Joshua Jarboe View Post
    Correct me if I'm wrong, but typically in dogfight you have the underhook and they *might* have the whizzer (many of my gi opponents don't bother). Based on what I've learned from MtS and the books, one is well advised to test their whizzer and go one way if it's strong and the other way if it's weak.

    Trying to be helpful, not speak out of turn, so if someone else can say more, please do.
    Thank you.
     
  5. John Mejia's Avatar

    John Mejia said:
    Quote Originally Posted by Aiseop View Post
    Sorry to bring this thread up. I've been studying the MTS, particularly the Lockdown Flowchart. Quick question about the Dogfight. Is it truly a 50/50 position? If I have the underhook deep, keeping the wizard out, then I am in the advantage, right? Is that the ideal dogfight for me? Or does one not go to the dogfight position with the deep underhook advantage at all?
    I wouldn't say it's a 50/50. More like a 70/30. If you're going against a strong wrestler/grappler who knows whats up, his wizzer will can potentially snap you to the mat. But if your underhook is deep and you're blocking the far knee and driving though (Bulldozer,Half and Half) or Boa-ing you're definitely at least 70/30. However that's just my interpretation and opinion. Others may disagree.
     
  6. Joshua Jarboe said:
    Quote Originally Posted by John Mejia View Post
    I wouldn't say it's a 50/50. More like a 70/30. If you're going against a strong wrestler/grappler who knows whats up, his wizzer will can potentially snap you to the mat. But if your underhook is deep and you're blocking the far knee and driving though (Bulldozer,Half and Half) or Boa-ing you're definitely at least 70/30. However that's just my interpretation and opinion. Others may disagree.
    Do you feel that having wrestling skills yourself can help counter a strong wrestler?

    I'm a bit terrible at this position and want to be stronger.
     
  7. NotReady said:
    Quote Originally Posted by Joshua Jarboe View Post
    Do you feel that having wrestling skills yourself can help counter a strong wrestler?

    I'm a bit terrible at this position and want to be stronger.
    Trying to fight against the whizzer against a wrestler can be tough, but going underneath and exposing your own back (to the mat as in a pin in wrestling, not in the BJJ sense) is something wrestlers aren't as experienced in defending. That and some of the submissions such as jumping to a triangle, DPO I think it is called in the book.
     
  8. John Mejia's Avatar

    John Mejia said:
    Quote Originally Posted by Joshua Jarboe View Post
    Do you feel that having wrestling skills yourself can help counter a strong wrestler?

    I'm a bit terrible at this position and want to be stronger.
    Absolutely, The small amount of wrestling I do know Thanks (Josh, Javier, Matt) helps so much. For Example You may not use Spiral, DLR, Berimbolo, etc. But if you know it, you can find away to defend it because you know the paths/finish. The same goes with wrestling, you know when and where the pressure's gonna be you know where their base is, you know if they're gonna peak out, or any other common moves then you can try and stop it. Some guys are just savages and you can't do anything but get crushed down to the mat with an overhook, some guys you can catch sleeping with the Limp Arm. It's about how much time you spend in those positions.
     
  9. NotReady said:
    Quote Originally Posted by John Mejia View Post
    Absolutely, The small amount of wrestling I do know Thanks (Josh, Javier, Matt) helps so much. For Example You may not use Spiral, DLR, Berimbolo, etc. But if you know it, you can find away to defend it because you know the paths/finish. The same goes with wrestling, you know when and where the pressure's gonna be you know where their base is, you know if they're gonna peak out, or any other common moves then you can try and stop it. Some guys are just savages and you can't do anything but get crushed down to the mat with an overhook, some guys you can catch sleeping with the Limp Arm. It's about how much time you spend in those positions.
    Great points.

    Wrestling (and leg locks) are two underutilized skillsets in BJJ that you can get a lot better at in a short period of time. Most people don't really work them so in just a few weeks you can get a lot better than most people you spar with or compete against.
     
  10. John Mejia's Avatar

    John Mejia said:
    Quote Originally Posted by NotReady View Post
    Great points.

    Wrestling (and leg locks) are two underutilized skillsets in BJJ that you can get a lot better at in a short period of time. Most people don't really work them so in just a few weeks you can get a lot better than most people you spar with or compete against.
    Agreed however, against a BJJ player any wrestling will give you a leg up, against a solid wrestler (NCAA) I wouldn't recommend getting into those battles. But some wrasslin' is better than no wrasslin' especially when coupled with Jiu Jitsu