Thursday, 11 May 2017

11/5/17: 8 angles of the knife, long range knife sparring and side control/scarf hold escapes.


KNIFE

8 angles of the knife
1: Downward forehand slash
2: Upward backhand slash
3: Upward forehand slash
4: Downward backhand slash
5: Stab to the abdomen
6: Backhand horizontal slash
7: Forehand horizontal slash
8: Backhand stab on the high line to the head

No wasted motions, keep it all tight and smooth. One person at a time working the motions on their partner.

Mirroring:
Facing your partner, using them as the focus for the knife and both partners performing each angle in sync.

Defanging:
Cutting the weaponised hand or wrist as one partner feeds the 8 angles, this was a long range practise.

Checking range:
Cutting and passing or cutting and checking the 8 angles. In this drill, footwork, controlling the knife hand, being zoned off behind the knife hand were key teaching points.

Long range knife sparring
8 or 9 rounds. The target in the early rounds was the knife hand and lead leg, in later rounds, the abdomen (if available). A constant mantra from Steve was keeping the knife out in front of you as well as always pointing it towards him coupled with staying edge on. High work rate and repeated change of partners made the drill both challenging and tremendous fun.

GRAPPLING

Back break fall:

Sit the hips low, rock back, keep the chin tucked and slap the floor with both arms.

Tactical get up:
Base out with the left behind you, have the right arm up in front defending the head space. Swing the left leg back to get both feet flat to the floor and keep that right hand up and extended. Now step back and around with the right to create distance between you and him.

Scarf hold escape to side control escape loop drill:
Building on the learning from the last two weeks but this time the drill was modified to contain both elements of practise.
Person A has Person B in scarf hold, Person B escapes with the T-bar then sweeps and moves into side control. From here, Person A escapes with the shrimping then bridging escape (Person B must drive back into Person A to receive the right direction of pressure) and once again moves into scarf hold. Repeat.

Scarf hold escape to back take sweep:
As you get the hips moving away from him whilst escaping the scarf hold, if he is canny, he will try to follow you to limit your space to escape. If you’re on your left side, throw the right leg over to get the hook in his inside thigh and put the right hand around his shoulder and take the bicep. From here, pull down and back on the bicep as this open his chest and torque his body which will enable you to simply sweep him over. He will end up face down on the matt. Apply pressure through his shoulders to stop him getting up as you take the leg out and get to the feet.

Back take sweep to face crank:
This is if he holds tight to the head on the above sweep. Step over with your leg that is at his hips, not his head, then pull it in tight to his abdomen. Adjust yourself to get tight behind his head and shoulder and use the blade of your forearm to grind into the jawline or cheekbone – imagine you are trying to press the forearm into the floor. But do try to regain a strong spinal posture as pushing his face through the floor. This will at worst cause discomfort and provide space for your next option, at best, he will give into the pain quickly and release his grip of your head.

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