Showing posts with label mma workout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mma workout. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2008

MMA Workout 3/16/08

by Mike

Theme: Now that we've got a couple months until Jim's next fight, we're able to try to work some new techniques into his game. Ideally, the theoretical bits of this workout should carry over into other parts of his game. Specifically, keeping hips low, maintaining pressure on the opponent when in a dominant position and keeping mobile despite the semi-awkward position. Also some strategic decisions and worked the "Ettish" and Downed Guard.

Warmup:

With little time, we hopped right into pummeling for position.

Worked from this to pummeling to takedown and passing to dominant position.

A little bit of dirty boxing and we were off to

The Fun Part:

One of my favorite techniques is to hold someone in my guard and then let them out. When they stand (either to slam or pass), I like to break my guard and bust out the Silat, getting something like the Saddle and then working for a heel hook or forcing a takedown into a very strange position to allow for some ground and pound.

This is easily accomplished if someone has their hips high. If they're slightly more clever and following BJ's advice in the MMA Book of Knowledge, you need to get tricky as well.

Staying in the shell/downed guard is kinda boring and doesn't let you do too much except stall and force a standup or wait for the opponent to kick the hell out of your legs and/or try a low-percentage but fun cartwheel pass or even the vaunted somersault pass.



Will probably never work for you, but the crowd sure loves it!

In the interest of staying mobile on the ground, forcing a standup and/or training your opponent to abandon the ground game, we worked on what we call the "Ettish."

Affectionately named after the ill-prepared kareteka from UFC 2, the position is a basic one taught in martial arts schools all over as a "self-defense" technique but derided due to Fred Ettish's not-quite-enough attempt to use it - it may be more familiar to Jiu-Jitsu players as the butt-scoot. But now you get to kick and maybe even roll into a takedown.

We'll cover the Ettish in-depth in the future, but needless to say, the last thing you're expecting someone lying on the ground to do is kick you in the face. Especially when you're about six inches taller than they are and you know for a fact that they can't kick above their waist.

It's a surprisingly strong position, much like the kick is a surprisingly strong kick.

Getting back to the workout:

Working the shell

Moving in on the shell

Working the Ettish

Moving in on the Ettish to pass

Once some basic principles are understood, it's surprisingly easy to pass the downed guard, while it's possible but frustrating to do so to the Ettish.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

MMA Workout 2/24

Theme

Catch everyone up who wasn't there last week. Hips, hips, hips.

Exercises

More balance ball madness, learning to keep your hips under, working cartwheel pass (I recently nailed a cartwheel pass from my knees against a very skilled player, so don't tell me it can't be done, even from standing)

More work with the Paulson pass

Due to injuries, we couldn't work guard passes on a person necessarily, but went with different passes on the grappling dummy

Technical work on thai-kicks and showing your junk, as well, as the proper way to block (shield and parry-by-opposition) with stuffing or moving away from kicks. Some full-speed drills to work on reaction time and technique.

Short session due to the aforementioned injured people and that we needed to put on our shoes and help out the Savateurs who are going to be competing in April. Exciting, because it looks like we'll be sending a good contingent to face the Belgians.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

MMA Workout 2/17/08

by Mike

We hold an MMA workout every Sunday at our gym. Usually, these are workouts to tie together what Eric and Jim have been working on with their specialty coaches and training specificly for upcoming fights.

We're going to record our workouts here. Normally each workout has a theme, whereby we work on a number of drills that accomplish the same thing in different areas. That is, if we're working on movement, like we spent most of Jim's training for his last fight on, we'll work circling both while striking, defending takedowns and escapes on the ground.

This week only had one student show up, which wasn't surprising considering bad weather, one guy coming off an injury and another taking a break after his fight. This session was a little more "so whadda you want to work on today" than they normally are.

Also, since we only had one student, we were able to cover a lot more ground without having to take time to swap partners, let both sides practice, etc.

Theme: Balance and keeping hips low. Maintaining balance while keeping the other guy off balance to set up for your offense.

Time: ~ 3 hours.

Warmup

Balance Ball drills to work keeping weight centered and work scrambles

Guard passes on grappling dummy

  • Throw legs to overhand
  • Throw legs to Paulson pass
  • Throw legs to knee-on-belly
  • Somersault pass
Transitions on grappling dummy

Kesa-Getame to cross body to knee-on-belly to mount to knee-on-belly to cross body to kesa-getame and back

Striking on grappling dummy

Mount, "crucifix," knee-on-belly

Grappling dummy drills for when you're lonely
  • Clinch
  • Striking to changing levels and takedown
  • Throws
  • Strength & Conditioning
Stuffing kicks and returning punches
Guard Passes
  • Knee-in-the-ass
  • Standing break to Lindland squat
  • Standing break to cross body
  • Bear walk
Defending the slam

Standup sparring

Finisher
  • Jump squats/broad jump
  • Bear crawl
  • Shrimping
Quiet time and note-taking