slideyfoot.com | bjj resources

 Home
 Contact
 Reviews
 BJJ FAQ  Academy

This website is about Brazilian jiu jitsu (BJJ). I'm a black belt who started in 2006, teaching and training at Artemis BJJ in Bristol, UK. All content ©Can Sönmez

11 April 2016

11/04/2016 - Teaching | Mount | Take the Back

Teaching #492
Artemis BJJ (MYGYM Bristol), Can Sönmez, Bristol, UK - 11/04/2016

A photo posted by Artemis BJJ (@artemisbjj) on



Technical mount is useful for maintaining your mount, as per the drill we regularly do where you pull the elbow back up. It also enables you to take the back, with Galvao's method. Simply drop back from technical mount, rolling them over the knee you have near their head. The foot you had by their hip becomes your first hook, so you just need to bring the second hook over. Cut your knee underneath them to help facilitate that back position.

The same kind of motion works as a method of retaking the back if you lose one hook, so it has some versatility. In the context of retaking the back, the time to use this is before they get their shoulders to the mat. They've managed to clear one of your hooks and started bringing their hips over. Before they can get their shoulders to the mat, press your chest into their shoulder and roll them onto their side, in the direction they were escaping. You'll probably need to balance on your shoulder and head to get into the right position.

As they have cleared one of your legs, you should be able to then slide that knee behind their head (you might need to post on an arm, but see if you can do it without releasing your seatbelt grip). Sit back and roll them over your knee, then re-establish your second hook. You can keep doing that from side to side as a drill.

You can also take their back after moving to a really high mount. The first option from here tends to be an armbar, as getting their arms worked up high normally forces the arms to cross over the head/neck. If they have managed to position their arm in such a way that you can't get a good grip, swing your torso around so that your ribs are pressing against their forearm. That wedge means you can now walk sideways on your toes to roll them and take the back.

You could go all the way until they end up flat on their belly, for what is arguably the most dominant position in BJJ, full back mount. However, if you do that, I'd recommend getting an arm under their neck before you fully roll them over, as it can be irritating to dig your hand in once they are completely flat (after all, there is a reason judoka treat that paradoxically as a defensive position, used to stall for a few seconds in competition so they get stood back up).

My preference is to instead walk them just far enough to get them up on their side. From there, I can then move into technical mount. At that point you can then go for the back take from earlier, or you have the numerous attacking options, like chokes, armbars etc.
________________

Teaching & Sparring Notes: Next time I'll emphasise tightness, especially chest to shoulder, which slides around to middle of back. Generally ok though, it's a basic technique. Should I add anything? I wondered that last time, but felt like there was enough this time, so the small changes seem to have done the trick. Mainly that was talking about putting the hand in the collar and pulling up, building off the Saulo tip I watched on BJJ Library recently.

In sparring, I'm continuing to play with the aforementioned Saulo upright mount where you open up the collar, lots more attacking options. My balance feels ok, but is that just down to my experience advantage? Either way, I'm finding myself going for more stuff, opening them up more too as they defend. I'll be sticking with this rather than my usual low mount, as I don't find I'm just holding them in place with this. Of course, we'll see what happens when I try it on more experience people, I'm expecting I'll be getting rolled a lot more. ;)

No comments:

Post a Comment