As a man who grew up in Australia, missing out on wrestling is one of the many things that made me wish I wasn born in the USA. At 37 years old, I have a group of guys and we mix in folk, catch, and BJJ in our training. The power half is a great move all round. Can also catch an arm with your leg and use the power half to get off a hume stack nelson - my favourite sub right now.
My go-to move when I wrestled in HS. Effective, flashy, you inflict a little pain on your oppenent, rack up back points. I wasn't the strongest upper body wrestler but this is a hip based move. Everyone has strong hips..
Excellent and detailed points i never realized on the power half and this looks different from what i did. Yep I did a leg hook and put my weight on him every chance until i broke him down flat, cut my leg loose at the same time i power halfed him from the left most times (I'm left handed) then extended and walked around for a pin. My go to move but i degeress 😅 i love power halfs as shown here and never hurt anybody with one. Full Nelsons are illegal and thats the only ones i ever heard people got injured from. Thank Coach!!
@@SwordTune This may be a dumb question, but why would you try to submit your opponent in wrestling. I thought the goal was to put the other guy on the back by legal means
@@get_shanked9433 Nothing illegal about submissions. Catch wrestling is the source of folk and freestyle wrestling. Instead of tapping out, catch wrestlers (at least those in the early 1900s, I haven't read sources from before) would go to their back and let themselves be pinned, rather than have a wrist or ankle be broken. Chokes were occasionally banned if both wrestlers agreed, but it's name came from the term catch as catch can, meaning catch "by any means." While modern amateur wrestlers understand pins as the win condition, professional wrestlers (historical pro wrestling, not WWE) understood that you can threaten a submission to get your opponent to pin themselves, or you can use a pin to move into a submission and make your opponent give up the fall.
@@SwordTune glad you know what your talking about, kids are clueless saying why would you do a wrestling submission, lol you wanna punish your opponent to give you a pin
Combat sports tend to lead to injuries for under trained, under conditioned and poorly coached wrestlers. Go play competitive sports if you are not willing to put in the work.
This guy single-handedly taught the whole bjj community how to do a proper Power Half Nelson.
Interesting.
Shelby 🏡🕗🇱🇷🚺🔋🚘🕗🏡🩳👟🩳☀️🇱🇷✈️🪟🕶🎄🕗🏡🏡🏡🏡
@@KOLATCOM
Shelby 🏡🕗🕶🩳👟🩳📱☀️🇱🇷✈️🪟🕶🎄🚘🛏🛏🛏🛏🛏🛏🛏🥃🥃🏡
As a man who grew up in Australia, missing out on wrestling is one of the many things that made me wish I wasn born in the USA. At 37 years old, I have a group of guys and we mix in folk, catch, and BJJ in our training. The power half is a great move all round. Can also catch an arm with your leg and use the power half to get off a hume stack nelson - my favourite sub right now.
Glad to hear it is helping our brothers down under!
Shelby 🏡🏡👧📱🇱🇷☀️🎄🇺🇸🌏👇😁🌍🚘👧🏖🍾🥃😊🎤🪨❤️🕶🇱🇷🌏@@KOLATCOM
My go-to move when I wrestled in HS. Effective, flashy, you inflict a little pain on your oppenent, rack up back points. I wasn't the strongest upper body wrestler but this is a hip based move. Everyone has strong hips..
Cool!
Great video breaking this down. I like that butterfly lock. I will definitely be implementing this for jiu jitsu.
Yes, it's a powerful hold!
Excellent and detailed points i never realized on the power half and this looks different from what i did. Yep I did a leg hook and put my weight on him every chance until i broke him down flat, cut my leg loose at the same time i power halfed him from the left most times (I'm left handed) then extended and walked around for a pin. My go to move but i degeress 😅 i love power halfs as shown here and never hurt anybody with one. Full Nelsons are illegal and thats the only ones i ever heard people got injured from. Thank Coach!!
P.s. soon as rolled him over with a power half I went with a head and arm if possible and put a squeeze from hell on him to prevent a arch up 🪦
Animal!
Power half is a grinder!
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Shelby 🏡🏡🏡🛏🇱🇷☀️🏡🕶🪟🚺🔋👟🔋🕗🧢👟🩳🛏🚘🏡
@@KOLATCOM
Shelby 🏡🚘🩳👟🚘🇱🇷☀️🕗✈️🚺🪟🕶📱🚹🚺✈️🚘🕗
Kids at my club have this down to a T, hate this move but it works
1:27 "coaches, tell kids pick a spot, and your son is gonna know what to do" ❤
Right on!
1
Shelby 🕗🏡🩳👟🔋🕗🚘✈️🏡🩳👟🩳🪟📱🚺🚹🚺🕶🪟
This guy is so famous . I saw A random guy in England watching his videos
Good to know we have some British support!
Thanks!
Thank you, sir! You're still #1 on our leaderboard!!
sadistic science ! amazing
It really works! Just note closely the breakdown and exactly how he rolls him or doesn't roll him with the "ref's don't like it". Reference 🙏
Nice, plus you can move to a lot of submissions from there.
This is wrestling
@@Alipford Uh, yeah? Hammerlock, head chancery, heel hooks, the list of wrestling submissions goes on.
@@SwordTune This may be a dumb question, but why would you try to submit your opponent in wrestling. I thought the goal was to put the other guy on the back by legal means
@@get_shanked9433 Nothing illegal about submissions. Catch wrestling is the source of folk and freestyle wrestling. Instead of tapping out, catch wrestlers (at least those in the early 1900s, I haven't read sources from before) would go to their back and let themselves be pinned, rather than have a wrist or ankle be broken.
Chokes were occasionally banned if both wrestlers agreed, but it's name came from the term catch as catch can, meaning catch "by any means." While modern amateur wrestlers understand pins as the win condition, professional wrestlers (historical pro wrestling, not WWE) understood that you can threaten a submission to get your opponent to pin themselves, or you can use a pin to move into a submission and make your opponent give up the fall.
@@SwordTune glad you know what your talking about, kids are clueless saying why would you do a wrestling submission, lol you wanna punish your opponent to give you a pin
Sadly this move does tend to lead to shoulder injuries at times.
For real?
@@skyisthelimit1898 yeah. My nephew hurt his shoulder defending against this move vs a stout kid. Caused him to miss the rest of his sophomore season
@@joshuaadams738 thanks for telling me. I’m gonna be real careful with that now.
For the person who’s doing it or the the person who’s the one getting that position done on?
@@karma3481 to the person it's getting done to, I just had this move done to a month ago and it dislocated my shoulder
El mejor canal de youtube sobre lucha 🤼♂️, usted es el mejor hay miles de videos
Muchas Gracias Amigo!
Shelby 1
Shelby 🇱🇷🛏👟🩳🏡🚘🚘🚺🚹🚺📱🪟🩳👟🏡✈️🎄🇱🇷☀️🇱🇷🔋☀️🇱🇷🚺🚹🚺📱🩳👟🏡🛏🇱🇷
Shelby County 11th Shelby County You have your Shelby Shelby County Slebhy Crook
✨
Glad you like it!
I wish wrestl8ng is more popular where im from . Was nrver exposed to it as a kid . I do love wrestling and jiu jitsu tho its amazing!
Im too old now
Yes it is!
@@UndefeatedEaglewe desperately need a old timers division!
Combat sports tend to lead to injuries for under trained, under conditioned and poorly coached wrestlers.
Go play competitive sports if you are not willing to put in the work.
When doing such a job - a trainer - you don't need a wife, girlfriend or possibly a boyfriend