makosub-wrestling
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Posts
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Personal Information
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Martial Art(s)
wrestling,gracie barra jiu-jitsu
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Location
Florida
makosub-wrestling's Achievements
Yellow Belt (2/10)
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I feel like a truck hit me! In my endevour to train with as many different teachers as I can I picked a tough one last night! A Former MMA fighter. This is the first non BJJ guy I have trained with and the first thing I found out is BJJ should do a much better job training aginst heel hooks. I took him down he pulled guard I stood up to pass and he whipped on a heel hook I spun once for show then taped. He was real good at keeping it safe and I was amazed at his skill not being a BJJ guy. But what hurt me the most was His level of fitness far exceeded my own. I did manage to guilotine him from my halfguard but I did not know it untill after he made me tap, then he told me I had him, that he blacked out for a little bit then came back...He smiled and said he never taps. I rolled with him for an hour straight and get this because it is a kickboxing school I did this on carpet and now I have some lovley burns But it was very cool to train out of my element and I learned from it and that is what it is all about!
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Big Guys
makosub-wrestling replied to TheAnimal's topic in BJJ, Judo, Jujitsu, Aikido, and Grappling Martial Arts
My training partner is 255-260 after meals, and I am 180, the best thing to do is give him the americana fast and hit the counter now your ready to jump on the big guys back. The counter: as soon as he locks it punch your arm streight your shoulder should come close to your ear. Then turn your hips away from him and go to your knees then take his back! -
can you teach it where you act just like a buisness get you insurence, charge a fee, pay your taxes, and advertise or do you have to do it under the table?
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Has anyone started their school in their garage or teaches there now? What do you have to look out for if you start this way?
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I am in the planning phase of my school and would like to hear any advice on how you set up your kids class. Does it turn into a day care situation were the kids are at your school long after your hour class. DO you need anything special to teach kids like HRS cert., Do you have to pick them up?
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Big Guys
makosub-wrestling replied to TheAnimal's topic in BJJ, Judo, Jujitsu, Aikido, and Grappling Martial Arts
Big guys with little skill are easy to take down and ware out. If they get on you go from a shoulder lock to an omaplata. My prob. is that my training partner is 6"4 260 and in shape while I am only 5'10 185. He is strong enough to force my arm to the ground any time he gets a hold of it. When he set up his key lock he keeps all his weight on me an keeps tight so escape is tricky. I have been working on a no gi spyder guard just to free my hands but when they have more size and equal skill it is tough, but when you get someone your own size you feel like its your birthday! -
Wrestling and BJJ
makosub-wrestling replied to MFGQ's topic in Choosing a Martial Art, Comparing Styles, and Cross-Training
I have seen a lot of fights in my day and never saw a single guy or girl out fight a pack. If you are attacked and can not get away your best bet is to curl up and wait for them to get tired of kicking you. The best example I saw was were this guy was behind a group of highschool kids in a drivethru lane and wanted to force the car in front to stop talking to some girls and move. He got out of his car and yelled for the car to move in an agressive manner. Big mistake because that little car was full of six juiced gang members called the Force. He took a real pritty Karate stance while the six kids hit him like a pack of wolves. If you get hit by a battle tested group and you are by your self you are done before the first hit and if you think you got a shot you and your instructor have been watching too many kung fu movies. So you should spend all your time training to fight one on one because most fights are one on one and they are the only fights you got a shot of winning. If one attacker have fun, get bloody, more than one run for cover. As My dad an ex-Navy Seal likes to say: You don't have to like it, you just have to do it. -
Some people pick things up faster and in different ways. For me It was not the moves in the books vs those taught in the class it was the amount of time and effort you put trying to do them on the mat. I devour books and dvds and have used outside instruction more often than moves taught in class because I look for moves that fit me so I will use a set up move for an ankle crank that even though they wont teach those moves in my class due to the level. The good thing is that on the mat I can work on what I want so I do. It is not what you train but how you train.
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I want to open a submission wrestling,traditional wrestling and self-defense school and bring in guest instructors as often as possible to add to what I can teach. What should I look out for? Does each instructor need to be cpr cert. Is just one enough? I have plenty of equity to draw on so should I lease in store front or should I still start of in a church or school type location? What type of ins. coverge would I need for church,school, community center, vs retail location? I also have a job that allows me to get done at three in the afternoon so I could offer after school kids class and other night classes. I plan to keep my day job for the first 6-12 months for stability and teach a saturday class. Are there special requirements for teaching kids? I trained in BJJ for six months and train in different schools everytime I go out of town. I trained at Eddie Bravo's school in Hollywood last Dec. but I believe that people would get more out of their training if a grappling class was taught like a sport and not like a triditional martial art. At least in the USA and that is what I hope to prove by opening my school. Would being cert. as a personal trainer or group trainer help with Insurance when running a school? What about contracts and waivers any advice? I have gained so much from all your help thank You.
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We worked on taking the back from the lockdown. The London( but I was not flexable enough). Also went from mission control to armbar. T the first guy I rolled aginst was a Machado purple belt, he guiltined me right off the bat. But I did ok with the other two guys , not better than just did not have to tap.
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I trained with Eddie Bravo while on vaction. His school is in West Hollywood at the Bomb Squad Gym. He let me join his class for a cheap drop in fee and before I knew it i was rolling next to one of my idols. COOL! Eddie is a great teacher, very friendly and the guys under him were very skilled. I would recomend if near LA you should stop by. I can't wait to go back and that is saying a lot because I have to fly from florida to cali. with my two yr old who hates to sit down for more than ten min. let alone five hours on a plane.
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I still am not convinced that using a gi adds any value to your submission game outside of gi compatitions. And all the examples for the gi still sound weak because nothing that a gi brings adds more value when met by using similar training in no gi. If you want better defense you work on the best no gi defense if you want better offense you work on no gi offense and so on. As to overall self-defense no gi style prepares you better for a fast and agressive attack witch is more like a real fight then the gi stlye witch is more like a game of chess where the person who can plan more moves ahead of the other is the one most likly to win.
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BJJ Ranking Requirements
makosub-wrestling replied to sk0t's topic in BJJ, Judo, Jujitsu, Aikido, and Grappling Martial Arts
I never thought you were anything but polite. And The more you train the better you are. My thought were just based on my experienced with wrestliers and those on my bigginers BJJ class and what I have found is that those who just learn from their class and only train in their class can be beat by those who train hard outside of class. -
Why I agree with most of what you say, I just do the math different. I am adding speed and strength for the wrestlier and subtracting holds for leverage, holds for attacking, and holds for defense that the BJJ fighter depends on. It is like always driving a stick then moving to an automatic you tend to look for something that is gone due to the years of muscle memory. I do think that the perfect fighter is equal experience in wrestling for takedowns and mat transition, BJJ ( no gi ) for submissions (due to their inclusive development using sambo and judo) and tuy boxing for striking.