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Crappy notes from Jeff Glover mini-seminar
1. Guilittine Guard Pass. when somebody sits up and goes for a single leg, push their head to the other side of your leg and put in the guilitine. dont actually try to lock it, you are just baiting them. With your other arm secure their pant leg with your free arm. Fall forward and jump over using your forehead as the pivot point.
2. Armbar transition to back, to choke, to armbar. Really simple i thought, when you have your opoonent laying flat on their back in an armbar position and you are about to execute an armbar but you can't break their grip. You take your leg off their head and fall backwards, pulling them up into a sitting position as you switch grips and secure the back.
3. Mounted Triangle- Good set up. When in side neutralize the near arm, and secure your arm under their head. Grab their far wrist and pin it to their belly button. Now step back on your knees, and then step over. Like a quick pivot step back and then over. As you step over pull their head up, then try to feed your leg under thier head. Next lean forward and post on your hand as you lock the triangle. Before you post up make you you secure the triangle with your hand temporariliy.
Kalib Starnes was there and he gave me a tip on a triaangle when you have it, but you cna't get it any tighter cause of how big the guy is. Reach around your knees with both hands and clasp them together, then pull tight with your arms, pinching the knees together, and pulling them into your body with your legs.
4. Ezekiel choke from behind. Starting from One arm under, one arm over. the under arm goes into the over arm's sleeve in front of opponents face. Now you put your free hand behind their head for the ezekiel. Jeff emphasized getting a good angle when you are going for any choke from the back. You don't want to be directly behind them, in fact, he gives up his hooks when doing this and pretty much sits back and out to get the angle.
Kalib liked to set it up by pretending he was going for the rearnaked choke as he sneakily got his fingers in his sleeve. Then when the opponent went to push his one arm off(the one in the sleeve), he'd willingly let them and instantly just throw it behind their head for the ezekiel.
I think there may have been one more technique but i can't think of it at the moment.
Jeff seemed to emphasize that when a submission is being defended well, he usually cant outmuscle the opponent. so what he does is always look for a transition, and he showed a couple examples from that armbar, like going to triangle by sliding one of your legs under their gripped hands and setting it up from there.
Overall, some nice slick moves. If anyone wants some clarification, i'll try my best.
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