October 26, 2009
The Exercise I Was Doing "All Wrong"

At the end of the DVD I have a short bonus section covering the five most useful weight training exercises to develop a killer kneebar. And it's no coincidence that the very first of those exercises is the barbell squat.
If you can only do one weightlifting exercise then it should probably be the squat - it's a great exercise for your legs, and the legs are so very important in jiu-jitsu and grappling. Also the squatting motion itself is a very sports-specific movement.
The squat also strengthens your torso, because your core muscles really have to work in order to stabilize the weight of the barbell on your shoulders.
The squat has been one of my cornerstone exercises since about 1996 or 1997. I was taught how to squat by a friend of mine who was a personal trainer. He took me under his weightlifting wing, making sure that my squat form was good so that I didn't hurt myself with this exercise.
This coach was advocating powerlifting squats for grappling and MMA conditioning. A powerlifting-style squat has the bar lower on the back, the legs wider, and sitting your butt backwards as opposed to bringing the knees forward.
A great review of the different squatting styles can be found here.
The net effect of these changes is to spread the effort out over your whole body, with a special emphasis on your posterior chain (the muscles on the BACK of your body).
After a little more research on the topic I decided to change things up and switch to a power-lifting style squat. I wanted to see how I felt with this style of lifting. I figured that if I didn't like the results I could always stop and go back to my regular squatting style.
The following article by Dave Tate really helped me when I made the transition to the powerlifting squat: "How to Squat 900 lbs."
Labels: conditioning, squatting, training
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October 09, 2009
The Chimpass, aka the Sao Paulo, Tozi, or Wilson Reis Pass
The bad news is that I'm NOT an expert at this guard pass (yet). This means that I'm not the best person to break it down for you.
Heres's part 1 of the Chimpass (www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMfKdjf0A2g)
and here's part 2 (www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQxCVjyVjlQ)
The funny thing is that I actually came across a complaint on the internet about the two videos I recommended above. Specifically, the person was complaining that it took Justin 17 and a half minutes to explain a single technique.
I hope that the complainant is a beginner, because that'd be a pretty silly statement if he or she had more than a couple of months of actual training...
To master a technique you have to rip it apart. You've got to understand all the little steps, adjustments and details that makes the technique work. Then you have to be able to verbalize and articulate what you do and why you do it.
From that perspective, taking 17 and a half minutes to teach a single technique is a GREAT thing. I wish that every technique I learned was shown to me with that level of detail.
P.S. If you want a different perspective on the same guard pass, check out this post on the dutchassasinbjj blog.
Labels: Brazilian jiu-jitsu, ChimChim, guard passes, Sao Paulo guard pass, submission grappling
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