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12.16.2010
5.21.2010
3.13.2010
2010 Peoria Athletic Club Fightcamp
Skip rope
Shadowboxing
Dean stressed the importance of respect with traditional Thai hand salutation.
Economical punching warm-up. One partner has a left bag glove and a right focus mitt and the other is vice versa (i.e. right bag glove and left focus mitt). Each partner does one strike for an entire interval and then they switch for a new round.
- One side jabs, one side crosses
- One side lead hooks, one side rear hooks (twist the rear knee to point towards the lead knee, turn the hand over "check the time")
- One side lead uppercut, one side rear upper cut
- Scoop parry the jab (catch and then flick the punch laterally) followed by the rear knee
- Double or cross parry the cross (pull the punch laterally and inferiorly) followed by the rear knee
- Cover the hook, the lead hand grabs the neck on the same side (smothering the punch) followed by the curve knee
- Outside parry, cross side neck clinch, trap with the opposite hand, rear knee
- Inside slip on the cross, arm and cross neck clinch, rear knee
- "Split the middle" parry the cross and follow the arm to wrap the neck and slap your palms together to chinch it in
Knee play "shark tank" keep it light but keep it busy for the "chum" in the tank
Thai pad knee drill
- Plum 3 knees
- Hold pushes forward and feed's an arm
- Switch to side clinch on this side with 3 three knees
- (MMA variation: three inside punches)
- Return to plum with 3 knees
- Repeat side clinches ad nauseum
- To finish, throw to kick range on holder's call
Double arm clinch
- From the plum, overhook one side while the opposite side finds your opponent's shoulder and then traces it down to their elbow
- Feed this arm through to the overhook
- Cinch in both arms with the overhook
Punch-Knee-Kick Range Drill. Each range has a prearranged drilled combination(s). The coach calls out each range while the holder feeds each the drills for that range.
Punch
- "1 return 3" -- Catch the jab, return jab-cross-hook
- "2 return 4" -- Catch the jab, cover the cross, return cross-hook-cross-hook
- "3 return 5" -- Catch the jab, cover the cross, cover the hook, return hook-cross-hook-cross-hook
Knee
- Long rear knee, long lead knee, clinch 5 skip knees, throw to range
Kick
- Cover rear kick to lead leg, lead cut kick, rear body kick, hook, cross, two lead kicks
- Cover rear kick to lead leg, rear knee, rear kick, hook, cross, hook, two rear kicks
Punch kick glove combinations
- Catch the jab, return jab, catch the jab, jab, cross, lead cut kick, rear body kick
- Catch the jab, return jab, catch the jab, clip the cross to the sameside lateral line throwing the jab over the cross, rear kick, lead kick
- Catch the jab, return jab, catch the jab, slip the cross with counter cross the the face, cross side clinch with arm pin, two knees push to kick
- Catch the jab, return jab, catch the jab, front cover the cross, rear upper cut, lead hook, rear kick (step in the direction of the hook arm to create space for the kick)
- Take the rear kick on your thigh, return a rear kick to the thigh, leg cover rear kick to lead leg, lead cut kick, rear body kick
- Take the rear kick on your thigh, return a rear kick to the thigh, tiip to the body as they kick, cross, hook, rear kick
- Take the rear kick on your thigh, return a rear kick to the thigh, catch the rear kick to the body (step with it), cross side clinch, knee the the underside of the caught leg or the medial surface of the plant leg
- Take the rear kick on your thigh, return a rear kick to the thigh, cover the head kick, create a "shelf" with the cross hand, hook over the kick and swing through. A variation shown but not practiced was underhooking the kick leg with the cross hand, but then passing it to a safer position overhooked on opposite site
Punch kick Thai pad combinations
- Jab, cross, lead kick, long rear knee, three skip knees, throw, two rear kicks
- Catch jab, cover cross, cover hook, cross hand clinch, two lead knees, "garage door" (lift the hook cover hand to duck under the arm), pin the arm to your clinch hand, two lead knees, push and disengage, cross, hook, two rear kicks
2.27.2010
ActiveEdge Smoker
- Alex "Pro-cop" Prokup picked up a decision after using some devastating knees to the body.
- Matt Cropper stepped up and fought a fighter 12 pounds heavier than him. He lost after the second due to his corner tossing in the towel.
- Gavin Blythe earned a decision after first teeing off on his opponent's testicles before settling down and putting together some nice punch kick combinations.
- Vaughn Comacho swarmed his opponent like a wave, using a powerful overhand, same sharp cut kicks, and a head of stone to win a decision.
- Phil "Zombie" Halverston took a decision to win his fight with punch knee combinations.
- Alain Sothikhoun did not unleash the animal and lost a unanimous decision after a stellar first round. He did indeed present an envelope with his WoW login before the match.
- Dan "the Ukranian Sensation" Yasinki earned a TKO in the second round.
- Joe "Machete" Gradle earned a TKO due to knees in the third round.
Technorati Tags: martial arts, muay thai
1.17.2010
1.14.2010
Pain, your opponent's best friend
1.03.2010
1.02.2010
Guarding Passing and T-Bar Kneebar
On the ground we worked guard passing. It is important to remember that solid fundamentals and base are the basis of guard passing. Thus after establishing good posture working the legs and hands methodically to positions of maximal leverage to break the guard rather than hurrying to break is important. We worked two methods for breaking the first stays on the ground using a "T" position of the legs and perpendicular forearm pressure to break open the legs. From here there are two methods to pass.
The same side pass uses the leg that was not placed near your partner under their coccyx and the rearmost breaking arm to slide your opponents same side leg down as you slide you knee to the floor, past their thigh, pinning with your distal leg and shin. Simultaneously the other knee comes up, splitting your opponent's legs as you reach through and hug your partner, the same side arm hugs the head. Your opposite arm cradles the unpinned leg, placing pressure on both the upper body as well as the sinews of their thighs. Now "spider man" out, flipping the non pinning leg 270 degrees over to the far side of your pinning leg, turning your body toward the ceiling before unpinning the leg and reestablishing in a solid side mount, resuming a face to the mat pinning and attacking position over your partner's chest.
The cross side pass uses the leg under the coccyx to slide up and over the thigh, while the arm on this side controls the lapel or reaches for an underhook. The opposite hand goes for same side wrist or sleeve control, the nonpinning leg on this side escapes out and you slide over the pinned leg into a side mount position.
The other way introduced to pass the guard was from the high guard, standing and coming down with one knee up, using the feed of you opponent's guard dictates which side the knee slides through to pin. This allows you to use the coccyx knee as the pinning knee same side or cross side to perform either one of the passes above.
As part of our warm up today, the others shot double legs. I don't quite have the knee dexterity to shoot a double so I went for a high crotch position, and Dan showed me the T-bar position, where you essentially set up a biceps locked figure four position. Thus from a side clinch position the dorsal hand reaches through and grabs the biceps of the ventral arm that has posted to the far hip. The opponent is lifted and dumped to their back. From here you can slide down the leg to the ankle, and drop to the mat with a cross body ankle lock or heel hook. Alternatively you can spin around keeping the arm tucked under the armpit and sit for a knee bar.
Technorati Tags: martial arts, jeet kune do, brazilian jiu-jitsu
12.28.2009
Ever stub your toe twice?
Once I found something the other guy didn't like, I've always attempted to do it repeatedly. If it worked once and it hurt, it'll work again and hurt more. Saekson demonstrated that this hypothesis has validity.
12.04.2009
Hypothesis: Martial arts stances and kata are not for fighting but a strength and conditioning program for fighting
According to legend and somewhat supported by historical fact Bodhidharma was a Bhuddist monk who travelled from India to China via multiple other Asian countries and transmitted Zen to China. When he arrived he found the monks to be so out of shape that he provided them with instruction on how to hone their bodies called yi jin jing (muscle and tendon changing).
Apparently monks were regularly robbed and this instruction helped to decrease such activity. Perhaps Bodhidharma was preceding Gable with "Conditioning is the greatest submission hold". If you watch the video you will see a Shaolin monk go through exercises that are less combatative and more conditioning. Now if we expand the supposition that many martial arts have prearranged exercises that are at best suboptimal and look at their movements not as fighting but conditioning, it may explain why people trained in more traditional styles practice forms one way but fight another. Why do positions in yoga look so much like stances?
Since you had to do something while standing in awkward positions, why not codify some of the arts techniques into this training. I've heard multiple explanations for the low front, horse, crane, and cat stances, none of which have ever rung true. For example, "We train the low front stance so that when you are in a fight your natural tendency to rise up will give you a functional fighting stance". Or "Because Okinawa is a coral island, they could not move or fall because they would be slashed to ribbons by the coral, hence a low solid stances". This might further explain why kata is generally taught to people below shodan "first grade" or blackbelt. The first few years weren't teaching you to fight so much as conditioning for fight training in the future.
Iron and Latex
I consider myself a strong person, I can still lift and move weights that others find daunting, but this strength is deceptive. Why? If I was this physical uberman I wouldn't be writing about rehabilitating two knee surgeries as well as other injuries. Stabilizers and core are essential for strength, without them your body is exposed to forces that the primary muscle groups can handle but all the weaker links in the chain, specifically tendons and ligaments have to take up inordinate loads, they become the weakest link in the chain and the hardest injury to rehabilitate.
Primary, among my awakening are those damned stabilizers. Try standing on one foot, if you are wobbling it shows that various stabilizer muscles are firing, presumably too much to correct the deficits of other weaker stabilizers. The burning sensation is ischemia, literally those muscles are using oxygen more rapidly than your blood, lungs, and heart can deliver it to those muscles. Once you've mastered 30 secs, a minute, or two minutes whatever, try shifting your center of mass by bending your knee or reaching for the mat. Get a stabilizer pillow, the jelly donut version of a hemorrhoid pillow and stand on that, it works against your body's equilibrium establishing mechanisms, every correction making you feel like you wobble more. If those are working well try doing one-armed push-up hold or T-position. Once you've got the static part down you can start moving to dynamic movements like farmer's walk (walking lunge to lunge) or sideways lunge.
My new favorite toy are resistance bands. Typically in workouts the resistance is uniform, that is when one benches the weight really doesn't change. Resistance bands (and weight chains for that matter) increase resistance during the exercise, resistance bands are governed by F = -kx, the force is proportional to the distance moved. The further the conditioning band stretches the harder it is, usually at the limit of your bodies reach the weakest part of the motion. Aha! We are going to make you work hardest where you are weakest. I've tried shadowboxing in them, which turns 3 minutes of shadow boxing into a muscle burning good time (although I recommend doing both leads for symmetry).
Technorati Tags: conditioning, martial arts, rehabilitation
11.22.2009
Stephan Kesting's Half Guard Leg Position Drill
Nice drill! Check out more wisdom from Stephan Kesting with www.beginningbjj.com and download a free book there, too.
Technorati Tags: martial arts, drills
11.18.2009
Dog Brothers Open Gathering 2009
That being said, whacking each other with sticks just looks fun.
Technorati Tags: martial arts, philosophy
10.11.2009
Obi Wan was right!
Doing a light cursory literature search I found an interesting article (Memory & Cognition 2002, 30 (8), 1169-1178) that shows that "expert divers visualized their dives closest to their performance times. Intermediate divers visualized their dives slower than their performance times. Novice divers visualized their dives faster than performance times." This is a fascinating result because it can be extrapolated in many ways. Expert fighters have the best control of range and timing is this due to years of seeing stuff (real or imagined) flying at their head that they mentally have conditioned themselves to their own physical speed? Does the underestimation of physical time necessary to complete a task by a beginner explain why they always try to do things faster? Does this explain why despite excellent physical conditioning beginners become exhausted with the technical level of the skill set needed to fight, i.e. they are driving their minds and bodies faster than they are capable because they think that's how fast it is? This may even explain why intermediately trained folks perceive things as taking longer, their physical capabilities have reached a set point better than what they thought they started with, i.e. they are actually as fast as they thought they were when they started but are still cognitively using their (lack of) experience as a beginner to establish time dependence of what they do? Or am I ranting like a madman again?
It appears that visualizing or "thinking about the problem before attempting it" works better than just the good old college try (Behav Brain Res. 1998 Jan;90(1):95-106). This has a whole host of implications and applications. Before practicing anything, make a movie in your head describing the frame of reference as well as the dynamic evolution of the technique, see if that makes you learn it better and faster. Taking these "movie clips" would allow you to string them together, allowing you to "train" anywhere. Does this power of imagery explain why people can progress technically between practices simply because of conscious or subconscious processing of mental images of a technique? Would combat athletes progress faster if they had "previews" of material to be taught at the next practice because it would stimulate motor cognitive pathways, that could be physically refined later?
9.26.2009
Community Acquired Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (CA-MRSA)
Staphylococcus aureus is a normal occurring bacteria that is founded in almost everyone's nose. It can cause numerous infections when spread to the wrong areas or entering small breaks in the skin. Bacteria are very adaptive organisms so exposure to antibiotics has developed strains of Staphylococcus aureus that are resistant to most common antibiotics. Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus or MRSA was originally only found in hospitalized or very ill patients. Now we're finding community acquired that is the general populace getting these infections as well. This is particular interest to the combat athlete as being an athlete is a risk factor for gaining MRSA infections. The reasons for this are multifold and include:
- sharing of towels
- not showering immediately after practice
- fingernail length
- shaving that causes micro-abrasions by which bacteria can enter the skin
In addition it is important to recognize that if you have an in section not to go back to the mat but rather get it treated. One should be suspicious for MRSA in skin lesions "looking like a spider bite" and then rapidly developing worsened redness, swelling or warmth. It should be noted that products containing tea tree oil have antimicrobial action against Staphylococcus, MRSA or otherwise.
Technorati Tags: martial arts, medicine
8.28.2009
Rehabilitation High-Intensity Training
- Time under tension 48 - 72 sec
- Increase weight 3-5% @ 12 reps or time under tension > 72 sec
- 75 - 90 sec recovery time
- Lower body
- 15 minute warm-up on stationary bike
- 10 minute dynamic stretching
- Leg press (less than 60° flexion)
- Leg press (less than 60° flexion)
- Calf extension
- Calf extension
- Hip abduction
- Hip abduction
- Hip adduction
- Hip adduction
- Hip extension
- Hip extension
- Hip flexion
- Hip flexion
- Hamstring curl
- Hamstring curl
- Hamstring extension (less than 40°)
- Hamstring extension (less than 40°)
- 10 minute cool down stretch
- 15 minute warm-up on stationary bike
- Upper body
- 15 minute warm-up on stair master (or equivalent with upper body movement)
- 10 minute dynamic stretching
- Pull Up
- Dip
- Lat Pull Down
- Lat Pull Down
- Seated row
- Seated row
- Dumbell Bench Press
- Dumbell Bench Press
- Seated Dumbell Press
- Seated Dumbell Press
- Shrug
- Shrug
- Back Extension
- Back Extension
- Abdominal Extension
- Abdominal Extension
- 10 minute cool down stretch
- 15 minute warm-up on stair master (or equivalent with upper body movement)
- Dynamic stretching
- Ankle rotations
- Knee circles
- Straight leg swing forward
- Straight leg swing lateral
- Hip circles
- Trunk twist
- Front/back bends
- Side bends
- Arm circles
- Arm wrap
- Wrist circles
- Grips
- Neck circles
- Shaking head "no"
- Nodding head "yes"
- Ankle rotations
- Cool down stretch
- Feet shoulder width down, left and right
- Feet twice shoulder width down, left and right (shoulder width, wide, wider, widest)
- Feet as wide as comfortable down, left and right
- Down into Cobra
- Back up and as far hand walking backwards without sitting down
- Up and stretch left lunge
- Switch to right lunge
- Back to center and down into Cobra
- Back up and hand walking into sitting position
- Stretch middle, left and right
- Leg’s together stretch middle
- Left reverse hurdler stretch, stretch along leg and between
- Left pretzel
- Left leg pull over back stretch
- Right reverse hurdler stretch, stretch along leg and between
- Rigt pretzel
- Right leg pull over back stretch
- Crowd pleasers
- Up and do ham string stretch
- Picking high fruit
- Forward bend
- Rear lean
- Forward bend
- Stack vertebrae
- Wrist In Turn
- Wrist Out Turn
- Wrist Press
- Wrist Reverse Press
- Feet shoulder width down, left and right
Technorati Tags: conditioning, rehabilitation
8.18.2009
GNP Drills
- Coup de Grace
- Using a standard boxing round at the end of a random combination drop the level of a focus mitt to mat level simulating a downed or injured opponent. The mitt should generally be placed somewhere that the momentum of the previous strike would have put an opponent and it helps to create a little distance as a stunned opponent rarely has the common decency to fall invitingly to the ground. The fighter can finish with an overhand lead or rear, hammer fist, or stomp.
- Fall and Stand
- Using a standard thai pad round, the command "fall" is randomly called. If the holder does not encroach the fighter should stand as quickly as possible. If they encroach with pads against their belly, the fighter kicks away and stand. If held perpendicularly at head height the fighter stands by throwing a head round kick and standing with the rotation.
- Sidemount GNP
- Stack two thai pads on top of one another, the fighter places their chest on the pads to simulate the sidemount. The fighters have numerous options, such as the hammer fist to the face, belly, or far lateral thigh. They can punch, essentially an upper cut to the face or body. Also available is the knee and downward elbows. Make them stand and immediately sprawl for variety.
- GNP conditioning
- Series of cross-hook-cross or pitterpat followed by sprawl and "horizontal skip knees" essentially mountain climbers without placing the foot nearest the face on the floor, simulating a knee. Spiderman with punches added for variety.
Technorati Tags: martial arts, MMA
8.17.2009
Fall goeth before the pride
I've been theoretically aware that having bilateral ACL replacements would greatly diminish my athletic capacity both prior to and following my surgeries. I have daily experienced the indignities of limbs that are weaker and stiffer, ready to betray me without notice. I thought I had accepted these as part of the recovery process. I am...was a good athlete I have won national and international titles in different combat sports and sparred professionals to a draw (and sometimes better). I was...am prideful in the physical gifts I possess and arrogant in my contempt of the small things that are a lot more difficult than we think they are.
I was made acutely aware of my weakness with a lower extremity high-intensity training / rehabilitation workout I did today. I started with leg press, doing two sets of warm-up with only the sled, my thighs already protesting a weight that I would formerly have found laughable. During my heaviest weight training I was able to leg press over half a ton for reps, today I found my legs twitching and trembling after three sets of 12 x 180# (that's right a weight less than my body weight), these were also leg press keeping my knees bent less than 60° (or when you don't need to bother setting the safeties because you don't have to undo the brake). I couldn't even do the hack squat at the gym, even on its most liberal setting my surgically altered anatomy couldn't bend itself into a position capable of doing the exercise. I worked my abductors and adductors with three sets of 12 x 50#, embarrassed by the shaking induced by what had previously been minimal effort. One set of 12 x 10# LLE hamstring curls concluded my shame, I went to teach and stretch. If anything this injury has already made me a more grateful person, it will probably also make me a humbler one. Everything we have is a gift, take none of it for granted.
Technorati Tags: martial arts, philosophy, rehabilitation
8.16.2009
May have to join Endorphins Anonymous
Exercise | Set #1 | Set #2 | Set #3 |
---|---|---|---|
Dumbell Bench | 40 x 12 | 52.5 x 11 | 50 x 8 |
Machine Flys | 70 x 12 | 90 x 12 | 90 x 12 |
Lat Pulldown | 90 x 12 | 110 x 12 | 110 x 12 |
Bentover Row | 70 x 12 | 70 x 12 | 70 x 12 |
I'm coming down from the endorphin high...and looking for my next fix
Technorati Tags: conditioning, rehabilitation