John Will seminar (May 2007)

John Will was in Perth and gave a BJJ seminar at our club on Sunday. A few of us received new belts… Jut received his purple belt, and Ryan, Alex, Leigh, and I received our blue belts. Belts don’t come easily in BJJ and represent a lot of hard work and learning, so it was a proud moment for us! :)

Here’s a photo of those of us that got a new belt. From left to right: me, Leigh, John Will, Ryan, Jut.

John Will BJJ seminar (20 May 2007)

Here is a very basic rundown of what we covered. It probably won’t make much sense unless you’re into grappling. I intend to go into more detail on some of these techniques in the near future.

After a warm up we started some standup grappling stuff:

Then we did some groundwork focused on the hooking guard and split leg guard. This was the first time I’ve played with either hooking guard or split leg guard so it was quite a lot for me to take in.

We learnt four ways to get from hooking guard to split leg sideways guard:

  1. From double underhooks – roll back onto your left side, while keeping your left foot hook in behind their knee. At the same time straighten your right leg vertically in the air like a flagpole. Their left leg should slide down the flagpole to near your head; grab it at the knee with your right arm. It is important to get onto your side and not be flat on your back.
  2. From double overhooks – roll back and try to sweep them to your right, when they post out with their left leg, hook onto it with your arm.
  3. Big step – drop your left foot to their right ankle, overhooking their right leg with your left arm, roll backwards over your right shoulder and end up almost facing backwards in position.
  4. Arm drag – replace your right foot hook (on their left leg) with your left arm and pull yourself into position, then switch to holding their left leg with your right arm.

Then we did some attacks from split leg guard. Again here I am assuming we are on our left side, with the opponents left leg near our head.

John talked about some of the differences between champion fighters and good teachers, and why they are not necessarily the same thing. Champion fighters are obviously very good at what they do, but they can’t necessarily explain or teach how or why they do it. They often have a small arsenal of moves that they are incredibly good at, and use a very specific strategy. Unless you happen to suit their style of game, their teaching will not be very useful to you. On the other hand, a good teacher forces themselves to learn all aspects of the game and all techniques, even those that don’t really suit them, and thus broaden their knowledge, enabling them to help students improve no matter what their style is.

John is an incredible teacher, always striving to improve himself and the people around him. I recommend checking out his blog. Even if you have no interest in BJJ or martial arts, he is a very smart switched on guy and a lot of the stuff he talks about can be applied to anything in life.

Updated 30 May 2007: added photo.

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