The fact this is free. Thanks, I plan to drill this a lot until I get it. I favor outside sinkaku to inside heel hook or belly down and backside. They continue to work well for me but I want to elevate into this. I find it difficult to hit lag trap saddle style entanglements live especially if there’s a big size difference. -Corejitsu
I usually try for inside heel hooks from saddle first and if that fails then progress to diagonal ashi or outside heel hooks or ankle locks/aoki locks. Why not try the simpler moves first? If they don't work progress upwards to higher degrees of complexity as required by the level of sophistication of your opponents defense.
Thank you man! Trying to blend concepts and specific details as much as possible into a digestible format. I'm growing as an instructor trying to balance theory and practice. Always a challenge because I love concepts and theory a lot haha
i love your content, you are sincerely one of the best. so thank you. A question for you: i dont see how this is a 'new' meta strategy? enter the system leglocks same out in 2018 i believe, and the lucky folks in the blue basement (you included! :) were learning / experimenting with the double trouble principle to blow the competition away way before the DVD came out. Do you actually see this as a new thing, or do you think that it is something that perhaps people are coming back to / reinventing in different contexts?
It's not double trouble that is not but rather attempting to adhere to double trouble not just up until you go for the submission, not just until you get the submission, but up until and through the actual application of the submission. Diagonal Ashi Garami is overall the best position I have discovered to achieve this very specific goal and I think it is absolutely the future of the leglocking meta (so long as people understand the value of it). Leglocks without double trouble will also always be valuable but in my opinion this strategy I outline in this video is probably the highest percentage leglocking route to victory with the highest degree of safety from counters as well.
@@robertdeglejj7125 Ah ha, no release problem. Cumming’s trap another example of this particular goal, although perhaps not so robust. Good stuff, thank you!
The fact this is free. Thanks, I plan to drill this a lot until I get it. I favor outside sinkaku to inside heel hook or belly down and backside. They continue to work well for me but I want to elevate into this. I find it difficult to hit lag trap saddle style entanglements live especially if there’s a big size difference.
-Corejitsu
I usually try for inside heel hooks from saddle first and if that fails then progress to diagonal ashi or outside heel hooks or ankle locks/aoki locks.
Why not try the simpler moves first? If they don't work progress upwards to higher degrees of complexity as required by the level of sophistication of your opponents defense.
Outside sankaku is a inside heel hook finish btw.
Amazing instruction
Thank you man! Trying to blend concepts and specific details as much as possible into a digestible format. I'm growing as an instructor trying to balance theory and practice. Always a challenge because I love concepts and theory a lot haha
i love your content, you are sincerely one of the best. so thank you. A question for you: i dont see how this is a 'new' meta strategy? enter the system leglocks same out in 2018 i believe, and the lucky folks in the blue basement (you included! :) were learning / experimenting with the double trouble principle to blow the competition away way before the DVD came out. Do you actually see this as a new thing, or do you think that it is something that perhaps people are coming back to / reinventing in different contexts?
It's not double trouble that is not but rather attempting to adhere to double trouble not just up until you go for the submission, not just until you get the submission, but up until and through the actual application of the submission. Diagonal Ashi Garami is overall the best position I have discovered to achieve this very specific goal and I think it is absolutely the future of the leglocking meta (so long as people understand the value of it).
Leglocks without double trouble will also always be valuable but in my opinion this strategy I outline in this video is probably the highest percentage leglocking route to victory with the highest degree of safety from counters as well.
@@robertdeglejj7125 Ah ha, no release problem. Cumming’s trap another example of this particular goal, although perhaps not so robust. Good stuff, thank you!
I’m 1 year late into finding this gem😢
Would you mind sharing you favorite entries into Diagonal Ashi?
For sure, I will have a lot of that in the future.
Thanks Robert, do you like the outside heelhook from here if all else fails?
Yes, absolutely. It's a great fall back strategy.
How do you enter into this position?
As far as I understand the rules, this would even be legal for blue & purple belts at Grappling Industries? Very helpful, thank you!
I'm not sure, as long as reaping is legal this is legal.
@@robertdeglejj7125 Yes, I just looked it up. Reaping, Knee Bars, and specifically Z-Locks are legal at blue.
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