The Clumsy Ninja


A month of half-guard

Took the week off last week, as I (and all of my roommates) felt slightly under the weather. (One of them ended up with strep throat.)

A few of our guys went to The Best of the Best Pro Ams in Omaha on Saturday and did pretty well. Jon and Wes got second in their gi divisions and Steven got third. I don’t think Sheldon placed but Wes said he had a huge division.

The guys also mentioned that there were quite a few more girls than what the website had said—I think six in total. Heard someone say that the blue belt from Nova Uniao (the one who choked me out because I waited too long to tap) won most of her matches. I wish I’d been able to afford to go to the tournament; it would’ve been fun. But according to the website the Omaha Pro Ams are held four times a year, so I’ll have other opportunities.

Class

Tonight was pretty low-key. We worked on several half-guard techniques. I feel like we’ve done a few of these before—we probably learned some of them from Jason Bircher when he did a half-guard seminar a few months ago. During September we’ll be focusing on half-guard, so expect a lot of posts on this.

Rolls

Rolled with Cody twice, Chris twice, and Rusty once.

My first roll with Cody, I took it easy, trying to remember to breathe and not scramble for things. He got to side control on me and I was excited about working an escape—and then the buzzer sounded. Second roll wasn’t too good for me; he got me in a triangle choke and I couldn’t stack him. I fought it for probably a minute. Could hear someone hollering at me to posture up and push his hips down. Tried, but every time he’d grab an arm for the armbar and I’d have to fight to get it back. I was having unpleasant flashbacks to fighting that blue belt and did not particularly want to black out again, but didn’t want to tap yet. The buzzer sounded again and I focused on breathing for a few seconds.

First roll with Chris, I pulled spider guard. Tried to do the one pass I could remember. He walked me through it and I landed in knee-on-belly, but we had to stop and move over to a less crowded portion of the mats. I think I landed that sweep on more time. Second roll, he let me get to mount. I tried for a keylock and didn’t know what else to do, because I hardly ever get to mount. He let me work through an armbar. After we restarted, he let me take his back, but I didn’t execute the RNC correctly. I usually forget to squeeze my elbows tightly enough, so I was focusing too much on that and not on my hand placement. I think my free hand was on the top of his head, not behind it. D’oh!

Rusty asked me to roll next. He had some great tips for me: “Take advantage of your speed and flexibility. You’ll never be able to muscle these guys. When you start out, go for an armbar right away.” He showed me what amounted to a flying armbar from the ground and showed me how to transition into a triangle if the armbar failed, and back into an armbar if the triangle failed. He also showed me this sort of lying-on-side armbar, where you cup your hands over uke’s elbow, hip out so they’re lying on the ground, and armbar them.

When Rusty was walking me through these techniques, I felt sort of dumb. These things made perfect sense, much better than pulling guard and then getting squashed under mount and side control. But I also felt hopeful. I could glimpse a time far in the future in which I can readily access a good base of knowledge, see and create openings, and be physically and mentally fluid. That’s the kind of game I want to have: thoughtful, agile, and slippery.

Techniques below the cut.

(more…)

I brought a girl!

Posted in Class,Technique by NinjaEditor on August 11, 2010
Tags: , , , ,

I brought a girl to class on Tuesday! (Who is also named Jennifer, so that might be confusing to the guys.) She’d actually come to my previous school and loved it. As a dancer, she took to forms and stand-up Japanese jits pretty quickly, but that’s way different than getting down and getting rough on the ground. I already thought she was just about the coolest person on the planet aside from Wil Wheaton, but being willing to try BJJ just proves it.

This wasn’t the easiest class for a newbie, either. We did some passes and sweeps without going into all the positions. Jennifer worked with Tamra and me and did really well. No doubt she has a lot of questions; hope to answer those when I see her later this week.

Did positional sparring from half-guard, partnered with Chris. Managed to work the pass we’d done earlier. Escaping his side control was tougher. Then rolled with Tamra, starting out in side control. I’m focusing on those escapes for the foreseeable future. Hope also to eventually learn some counters so people can’t pass to side so easily on me.

Techniques below the cut. (more…)

Post-tournament

Posted in Uncategorized by NinjaEditor on August 10, 2010
Tags: , , , ,

I was still tired from the tournament on Monday but went to class anyway. Had a couple of new new guys, as well as a couple of sweaty newish guys who started coming last week. Don’t remember their names. We worked some basic escapes from side and mount during class.

Rusty and Tamra (Jake’s wife) came by. Rusty’s a long-time friend of the school who I somehow hadn’t managed to meet yet. He came out to support us at the tournament on Saturday and ended up reffing half the matches, as the original ref had wrenched his ankle on the terrible mats. He gave me some great tips and walked me through some techniques, and said I’d done really well in the tournament considering the weight and experience difference.

Rolled with Jonathan. Was pretty exhausted—hadn’t rested well even after the tournament—and I don’t remember much, except that we restarted three times.

Rusty rolled with me at the end. Again, more of a pause-and-teach than a full roll. He talked to me about takedowns first, because he’d seen how I hadn’t been able to deal with the other white belt in our matches.

Rolled a bit from there—got a spinning armbar. Pretty sure he gave it to me. Retaught me the armbar. Then Tamra taught me a butterfly sweep. Pretty sure Jonathan taught me this a while ago.

Chatted with Tamara a bit afterward. She and Jake train with Rusty twice a week, I think, at a local college where he’s an instructor for the fire department (I think). She showed me some bruises from a nasty roll and we talked about guys who don’t want to tap to girls. I mentioned that that’s one of the things I love about GCKC; the guys here are great about rolling with me, generally. But I try not to roll with the new guys straight off—I’ll watch how they roll with the other guys first and see if they have any modicum of control. At that point we realized one of the new guys (one of the returning ones) was sitting close enough to hear our conversation. Think we managed to pull off a “Oh, but this guy seems cool” save…oops. Well, if he overheard anything, maybe it’ll prove educational. So many guys aren’t used to doing sports with women.

Techniques below the cut. (more…)


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