Leg weave mount from side control
Friday, February 8th, 2008We learned a cool mount from side control. This technique inflicts a lot of pain on your opponent. The goal is to get his hips torqued over as far as they’ll go while his shoulders are still flat on the ground. It reminds me of the twister because you basically turn your opponent’s body like a corkscrew.
- Get head and hip side control with your head-side arm over your opponent’s far bicep and your tail-side hand guarding his hip.
- Isolate his near arm by backing up and driving it back with your butt.
- Your opponent will raise his leg to block your mount.
- Weave your hand in the gap between his legs and drive his hips over until your hand touches the mat.
- Block his leg by posting your arm strong on the mat - this will keep the gap between his legs open which you need because next you..
- Put your tail-side foot into the gap and pin his leg to the ground with your shin
- Slide your head-side arm under your opponent’s head.
- Get an underhook with your tail-side arm and walk your opponent’s far arm up until it is over his head.
- At this point you can mount by swinging your tail-side leg over.
We didn’t talk about this but I noticed that when you finish Step 8 you are in a position to get a kata-gatame (arm triangle). Or else you could get an arm bar if you transition to S-mount. I want to try and see if I can get a kata-gatame if I can put this whole sequence together on the mat.
I have a couple other things I need to remember from class this week.
Why is it better to grab under your opponent’s armpit rather than atop his shoulder when you are stuck in side-mount?
- Because it makes it harder for your opponent to isolate your arm by underhooking it.
- If your opponent gets head-and-hip side control and you want to go for the single leg, you’re already set up to shoot your hand across his body and around his leg. If your hand is on top of his shoulder then you have to work it under his chest first and then try to get the leg.
When you’re stuck in side-mount why should you always make praying mantis arms with your hands hooked?
If you push with your hands and extend your arms, your opponent will just sit out and get underneath your arm. If you make a praying mantis hook, you can just drop your elbow to the mat and you have effectively made a “wall” that he can’t get through when he sits out.
When is it safe to go around your opponent’s front side when you’re transitioning to side control?
When you have a grip on his bottom ankle, which prevents him from hip-escaping away from you. If you don’t have a grip on the bottom ankle, you must go around the back.