Martial arts, coaching, fitness, stress management and personal development from coach Phil Wright. Crazy Monkey Defence Programme, BJJ and MA Life concepts and principles. Phil is an Elite Trainer in the CMDP and holds a purple belt in BJJ, both of these are certified by the PCWA founder and Machado Black Belt, Rodney King.

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Street Tough Membership site

If you haven't had a chance to check out the STWA Membeship site yet you need to go and do so. With a forum specifically discussing training in all aspects of MMA, the CM structure, Mental game and martial arts as part of a holistic, developmental lifestyle you can't find better information out there.

Sign up for a full membership, or get one as part of Revolution's Gold Membership package and you get access to the full range of materials with more indepth discussion boards, articles and downloadable videos covering many aspects of CM and clinch from Rodney King as well as BJJ material from the very experienced Machado BB John Will. Want to see CM3, get on there, want to upload video for comments by worldwide coaches in any area of your training, get on there. Just want to hang out and network with people training the way we do from all around the world. Get on there!

Get on the forum and start asking questions, their are loads of coaches on their all of who will pitch in and help you out. You might get some of my ramblings to.

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Sunday, January 15, 2006

Getting the fundamentals right - half guard

There are three points that you need to bear in mind when playing half guard. Without these you'll find it difficult to work into any sweeps or submissions and run a big risk of getting flattened onto your back and having your opponent pass.

1. Posture
This one is a no-brainer. Look at any aspect of combat athletics and posture will sit at the core of success. In standup and clinch you will see the same slightly hunched curve to the back. On the ground the same posture comes into play, especially when you are playing against guard.

Q. How does this equate to half-guard?

A.Your posture in half guard is almost totally reliant on the angle you make between your chest and the floor. If your top shoulder is above or behind your bottom shoulder you can be turned onto your back as easily as you could be pushed back if you were stood up straight or leaning back on your feet.

If you keep your top shoulder in front of your bottom one, so your chest is slightly pointing into the floor, you are very difficult to push over. If an opponent pushes against you their energy will feed down into the floor. In effect the will be pushing against the ground with you as a medium for their force rather than an object for it.

2. Defend your face
Your bottom arm's primary role in half guard is to defend your face - the only time it can give up this role is if you have scooted so far under your opponent they can't cross face you.

The cross face will destroy your half guard if you let your opponent work it. If they apply pressure across your face with a hand, arm, crook of elbow or shoulder to turn your head towards your back you will get rolled flat.

The safest way to defend your face from this position is to keep your arm in an 's' shape with your elbow kept low and your hand hooked over their arm. As they move their arm keep the hook in contact, let it go and they'll nail you everytime.

If they really try to force the move plant the back of your hand onto your forehead, this way even if they use all their strength they won't be able to get forc going in directly to your head.

It is vital when you're doing this that you keep hooked over the most active bit of their arm, there is little point controlling the crook of the elbow or bicep of they are using a hand to 'finesse' your head around.

3. Fight for the 'top' arm control
This is the key to making half guard an attacking game. If you have good posture and keep your head safe you can use this last point to set up whatever your preferred attacking game is.

There are two strategies for top arm control here, each allowing a different set of options.

a. Underhook.
First thing to remember with this position is that the underhook should go across the back, so you are putting your arm around your opponent. If you go for a more standard underhook you will struggle to dig it deep enough because of the space between your bodies (it is impossible to hip in from half guard because your opponent is on their knees).

This allows you to use the underhook to shuck yourself down their body to set up sweeps or to pop their arm over your head to give a clear route to the back.

If you scoot down low under their hips, get your head as tight into their leg and hips as you can, this keeps you asfe from the cross face and gives you both arms free to set up sweeps like the old school.

b. Overhook.
Lock this in tighter than a tight thing. The over hook will hold your shoulders above theirs, this can make some sweeps difficult to set up but gives you a huge head start if your game is to use the over hook as to whizzer them down into the mat and scramble your way out to top control.

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Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Being active in 2006

With the New Year upon us I've been looking at how engaged people are with their training, on a number of levels. I think many of us fail to realise our true potential due to passive responses to situations whether on the mat, in the ring or in life in general. I want to look at a few examples of changing passive responses to active ones and hope that some of you may look at making some of the changes I am looking at for my training training over the next year.

As a coach I spend a fair amount of time trying to convince people to come down training, whether that be new students who are thinking of trying the gym or old students who have let their training slip. The most common 'reason' I hear back for not training is that people, who are often extremely interested or have enjoyed training in the past, couldn't find the time.

Those pesky time thieves at work maybe?

For the most part it is a case of not making the time. Many coaches, and students, train/teach a number of nights a week, prep lessons, work full time and juggle family commitments. We make time because we have/want/need to.

These two sides of the passive/active balance have most leverage on how successful your training is. If you can only make time to train once a week guard that time and make the most from it.

It is easy to allow work commitments to erode time for everything else, working 14 hour days to try and hit a deadline, burning yourself out and living off microwaved leftovers. I've been there in the past and know how easy it is to allow work to expand to fill free time. Notice the use of allow, passive voice again.

Making time to train becomes vital if this is the case. Splitting up your day for a chance to get refreshed and energised by training is important. Even a tough work out that leaves you trained physically will give you an opportunity to switch gears and recharge in other ways. For example, taking your mind off work, relieving stress or just giving you a ritual that divides the work day from family time.

All necessary as part of taking control of how you balance different aspects of your life.

As well as working on a macro level - we can look at how being actively engaged can change your approach to both learning and physically training your skills.

First let's look at learning. How active are you on this score? Do you turn up to class and wait for your coach to tell you what to work? Or do you come in with personal goals in mind and blend your learning with the coaches teaching to get as much out of each session as possible?

Taking the second gives you real hands-on control of the development of your game, you know your problem areas, as Paul Sharp wrote a while ago, work the things you hate. Look at your game and work out where you are sitting on your laurels. What skills have you consigned to the box 'Good enough'? This is that passive response creeping back in, dragging your game down like an anchor.

If you don't know where your weak spots and lazy habits are, ask your training partners they will be able to tell you in an instant because they'll have been exploiting them in every round of sparring and every roll. B*stards.

Once you've identified them, meet them head on, drill your weakest areas - physical, technical, mental, theoretical and emotional. Control them rather than letting them control you.

To help you with this keep a training record, set yourself goals and write them down, work out exactly what outcomes you want and write them down to. Then you will know when you have got to where you are going. Make notes on what you cover in class, what you were working to improve, how much progress you made, what new challenges you identify along the way and how you are thinking and feeling about your training while doing this.

Then make time to go and talk it all through with your coach/training partners/Rodney/people on here... I'll start keeping a training log on a blog as an example of this for people to see. If you just keep it to yourself and never look at it with anyone else then you will only get from it what you already know. Having someone else talk through your training with you will help you keep this up.

Finally I want to look at performance. Possibly the single biggest difference between beginners and experienced players is level of efficiency and efficacy. Many of the techniques you learn in the first 6 months of training will become the core of your game, but the more advanced players make them work better with less effort.

This translates as pressure, you can't get away from a tight, efficient, aggressive game and the more advanced guys (and girls) seem to be able to generate time from nowhere as they make use of beats you didn't know existed.

Bullet-time aside, much of this comes from activity, not in a go like Speedy Gonzales sense, but by making everything work all the time. Nothing gets left behind.

Look at grappling as a great example. You should be able to take a snapshot at any moment in a role and mentally check whether everything is doing it's job. Is your base good? Are you balanced? Are both your arms and both your legs working to help you? If you have a grip on a gi, could adding pressure with your arm help? Same thing with feet, shins, knees etc in guard. What is your head doing? Can it help?

At any given time you should be looking to co-ordinate everything to further your progress. This is active and whether in microcosm or macrocosm it'll help your game and make the time you do make to train much more valuable.

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Welcome to the Revolution Coach's Blog

Hey everyone. Thanks for coming and looking into what I'm doing.

My plan for this blog is to discuss coaching ideas, training issues, keep an online training diary and provide links to interesting resources.

If you have any questions please feel free to comment or drop me a mail at phil@revolutiongym.co.uk

Phil Wright

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