Hey Chewy ! That was a great video . Any chance in the near future you could explain what the honey hole is ? I’m assuming it’s a position from the half guard???
sarah vanek it’s a position where you kinda get a triangle lock on your opponents leg, keeping their femur in place, it’s used to set up quite a few leg locks, especially in no-gi
Hey Chewy I wrestled for 7 years and now have been doing BJJ for 3 weeks. I have very strong takedowns but they almost always result in a guillotine when I transfer them to BJJ. While deep in a shot have my head high and glued to the side of his hip and keeping good posture allows for your hips to be under allowing, defense against sprawling, and for a great finish for a takedown. Do I just ditch my high crotches and double legs when it comes to BJJ and just work something else? I'd hate to stop doing something I've done over 10,000 times.
Evin Kilicarslan try cutting the angle more. I’ve had some success with shooting on a high crotch and then cutting the angle and going for the double leg. I’ve found that if I can get that angle, they can’t get square enough to get a guillotine grip. Also if you wrestled for 7 years and you’re just starting bjj, maybe work on your guard a little bit more. A wrestler with a good guard is a scary thing.
Whenever my head is on the side I get guillotined as well. It's been working better if I keep my forehead on the center of the chest. The guillotine grip is hard to get, and I'm generally safer. I'm a 7 month old white belt though so what do I know, maybe a higher belt wrestler can show you how to pull it off
Makes sure you land in side control, and not just driving forward into their closed guard or even a half guard. Once your inside your neck is safe. Also google von flu choke, it’s an attack once you’ve passed the guard and they don’t let go of the choke attempt
Hey chewie I got a question. I’ve been training bjj for a year and I want to join wrestling at my high school. I’m wondering how can I make the transition smooth and if it’s a hard transition. Thank you
I know this is for Chewie, but a kid in our gym went from bjj at 15 to wrestling in high school as well as bjj. His grappling game went up dramatically. It was tricky for him to learn the wrestling rules at first, and its definitely a different sport, but it was a benefit for him, and really increased his standing takedown game.
Hi, my name is Mo. I've been watching your videos for a while now as i've just started training jiu jitsu about 3 months ago, I just got my first stripe today. With that being said, everyone in the gym seems to compliment me VERY often, BUT at the same time, they tell me I have no skill and i'm just using my strength/athleticism, now heres the part that I can't wrap my head around...IM NOT USING MY FULL STRENGTH OR AGILITY, at MOST I'm going 50-60% during training AT MOST (my coach tells us to go about 50-60%). I've never been the type to show boat or try to one up someone, so I get extremely frustrated when they're telling me that I'm going to hard or using too much strength when Im just barely putting any force into it. I know this may come off as being arrogant or not being a good student and I do apologize, I just really want to figure this out, am I supposed to lower my strength even more to compensate for my training partners? Because if thats the case then how am I supposed to ever learn anything if I'm applying nothing but technique and my opponent just uses his strength as well as his higher belt technique to hinder me. There are plenty of higher belts in the class, I've tapped 4 of the blue belts, and every time I tap them its blamed on me "going too hard". I swept a purple belt today and he got angry at me and said " don't use that much strength" but luckily in that case my teacher even agreed that I just did a swift sweep, no real strength involved, just speed. so I guess my base question would be, if someone is naturally stronger than their opponents during training, is the stronger person supposed to not use any strength or speed at all? like I said, I'm genuinely not even going full blast (I promise I'm not saying that as a brag, I'm just being honest), do I need to show them full blast to get them to understand that I'm actually being really calm? or just kinda lay there and let people do what they want until I find sometype of opening?
Best way to think about it I've found is when rolling with young students. We have a couple of young lads in our class that like to roll. I know I could smash them with my weight alone, but what would be the point of that? I even try not to put my full body weight on them in side control, which then allows me to practice my fluidity of movement, not looking for submissions, but transitioning constantly. If you only have one stripe, then saying your skill level is low isn't an insult, it's just a fact that you are on the first steps of learning a lifelong art. Your strength will falter eventually on that path, but your skill levels will only improve.
This question has nothin to do with this vid but I figured I'd post it on a recent vid so someone hopefully sees it. I have just started training in BJJ, love it, but also want to take some boxing classes. Just wanted some opinions from guys who are more experienced, should I stick with just jiu jitsu for the time being and 100% focus on that, or do yall think training in more than one martial art at a time is okay?
Yeah man do both if your enthusiasm and fitness levels can take it. Having a strong striking and ground game makes for the best fighter. The only caveat is you can't go full on all the time in boxing like you can in jiu jitsu, as you can only have your bell rung so many times in life.
If someone sits into the saddle/honeyhole and doesnt block you with the shin, they're not doing it right. This is not something you can really avoid easily as the defender, if you're able to roll to this back take you're kinda getting away with something you shouldn't be able to, haha.
This is true with any technique. Do everything right and it works. But we're humans and we don't do everything right. It's what makes Jiu-jitsu so fun. Small mistakes open up opportunities. . . haha. . .
Very slick. A bit too technical for my skill level though
S1 R1 give it time!
That's awesome, i love it. That back step / leg attack is something people go for on me a lot. I will work on this. Thankyou!
had my first day of jiu jitsu it was fun im excited to learn
Awesome!!!!
I have had only 120 classes of BJJ and 30 classes of Wrestling. Not much
Keep it going bro, you'll have tough times, but it's sooo much fun!
Ninja roll is my favorite from any half/quarter guard, this is such a cool entry
2:58 is there a calf slicer there?? (Your opponents right leg.) Is there a toe hold on his left leg??
Adam 👐
Have you tried to use that to get a twister? Looks like you can use it to get an easy twister submission
that actually does look like a good setup for a twister!
Freaking slick Chewy!!!! Love it
kyle denzik thanks Kyle! Hope to see you in the gym soon brother.
Definitely using this
Adam's unwavering stare is legendary
It only grows stronger with time.
that was sick
Akademik Productions Gaming thanks!
@@Chewjitsu Thank you for doing all these videos.
Nice back take
Very nice. Looks like you could pull the leg out and go straight to vaporizer?
Really good video! :D Thanks for the tip! :)
beautiful
Mr.Adam..staring at my soul..
If you pull the knee out early on their back step, you can go right into a berimbolo. I do it all the time.
Hey Chewy ! That was a great video . Any chance in the near future you could explain what the honey hole is ? I’m assuming it’s a position from the half guard???
sarah vanek it’s a position where you kinda get a triangle lock on your opponents leg, keeping their femur in place, it’s used to set up quite a few leg locks, especially in no-gi
Richie Lavey oh ok !! Cool I appreciate the explanation. Awesome .
Hey Chewy I wrestled for 7 years and now have been doing BJJ for 3 weeks. I have very strong takedowns but they almost always result in a guillotine when I transfer them to BJJ. While deep in a shot have my head high and glued to the side of his hip and keeping good posture allows for your hips to be under allowing, defense against sprawling, and for a great finish for a takedown. Do I just ditch my high crotches and double legs when it comes to BJJ and just work something else? I'd hate to stop doing something I've done over 10,000 times.
Evin Kilicarslan try cutting the angle more. I’ve had some success with shooting on a high crotch and then cutting the angle and going for the double leg. I’ve found that if I can get that angle, they can’t get square enough to get a guillotine grip. Also if you wrestled for 7 years and you’re just starting bjj, maybe work on your guard a little bit more. A wrestler with a good guard is a scary thing.
Whenever my head is on the side I get guillotined as well. It's been working better if I keep my forehead on the center of the chest. The guillotine grip is hard to get, and I'm generally safer. I'm a 7 month old white belt though so what do I know, maybe a higher belt wrestler can show you how to pull it off
Makes sure you land in side control, and not just driving forward into their closed guard or even a half guard. Once your inside your neck is safe.
Also google von flu choke, it’s an attack once you’ve passed the guard and they don’t let go of the choke attempt
Calf slicer half way thru that roll too
Or vaporizer
Nice
Hey chewie I got a question. I’ve been training bjj for a year and I want to join wrestling at my high school. I’m wondering how can I make the transition smooth and if it’s a hard transition. Thank you
I know this is for Chewie, but a kid in our gym went from bjj at 15 to wrestling in high school as well as bjj. His grappling game went up dramatically. It was tricky for him to learn the wrestling rules at first, and its definitely a different sport, but it was a benefit for him, and really increased his standing takedown game.
xOld Man Frank thank you brother. Oss
Does this work when they control the far leg in saddle?
Hi, my name is Mo. I've been watching your videos for a while now as i've just started training jiu jitsu about 3 months ago, I just got my first stripe today. With that being said, everyone in the gym seems to compliment me VERY often, BUT at the same time, they tell me I have no skill and i'm just using my strength/athleticism, now heres the part that I can't wrap my head around...IM NOT USING MY FULL STRENGTH OR AGILITY, at MOST I'm going 50-60% during training AT MOST (my coach tells us to go about 50-60%). I've never been the type to show boat or try to one up someone, so I get extremely frustrated when they're telling me that I'm going to hard or using too much strength when Im just barely putting any force into it. I know this may come off as being arrogant or not being a good student and I do apologize, I just really want to figure this out, am I supposed to lower my strength even more to compensate for my training partners? Because if thats the case then how am I supposed to ever learn anything if I'm applying nothing but technique and my opponent just uses his strength as well as his higher belt technique to hinder me. There are plenty of higher belts in the class, I've tapped 4 of the blue belts, and every time I tap them its blamed on me "going too hard". I swept a purple belt today and he got angry at me and said " don't use that much strength" but luckily in that case my teacher even agreed that I just did a swift sweep, no real strength involved, just speed. so I guess my base question would be, if someone is naturally stronger than their opponents during training, is the stronger person supposed to not use any strength or speed at all? like I said, I'm genuinely not even going full blast (I promise I'm not saying that as a brag, I'm just being honest), do I need to show them full blast to get them to understand that I'm actually being really calm? or just kinda lay there and let people do what they want until I find sometype of opening?
Best way to think about it I've found is when rolling with young students. We have a couple of young lads in our class that like to roll. I know I could smash them with my weight alone, but what would be the point of that? I even try not to put my full body weight on them in side control, which then allows me to practice my fluidity of movement, not looking for submissions, but transitioning constantly.
If you only have one stripe, then saying your skill level is low isn't an insult, it's just a fact that you are on the first steps of learning a lifelong art. Your strength will falter eventually on that path, but your skill levels will only improve.
Adam looks like someone that mugs muggers.
I don't know if anyone knows the answer, but I was wondering if there's any correlation between leglockers and the cuckold lifestyle ?
Slick
So.. berimbolo?
This question has nothin to do with this vid but I figured I'd post it on a recent vid so someone hopefully sees it. I have just started training in BJJ, love it, but also want to take some boxing classes. Just wanted some opinions from guys who are more experienced, should I stick with just jiu jitsu for the time being and 100% focus on that, or do yall think training in more than one martial art at a time is okay?
Train whatever you want. There are no rules to what you can or can't train. Take a basket weaving class too, not a big deal
Yeah man do both if your enthusiasm and fitness levels can take it. Having a strong striking and ground game makes for the best fighter. The only caveat is you can't go full on all the time in boxing like you can in jiu jitsu, as you can only have your bell rung so many times in life.
Check out Muay Thai.
Hey chew. There is a class I just started taking. I wish I found you're channel sooner. Can you check him out for me? To see if he is legit.
If someone sits into the saddle/honeyhole and doesnt block you with the shin, they're not doing it right. This is not something you can really avoid easily as the defender, if you're able to roll to this back take you're kinda getting away with something you shouldn't be able to, haha.
This is true with any technique. Do everything right and it works. But we're humans and we don't do everything right.
It's what makes Jiu-jitsu so fun. Small mistakes open up opportunities. . . haha. . .
@@Chewjitsu Indeed, every move has a counter! Enjoying your videos, Cheers Chewy
I’m a white belt , idk why I’m watching this
Shoutout to breno bittencourt
Beautiful