The next submission that we are going to wok on is actually a series of submissions. There is a couple of them that we have an option for, alright. We are going to assume that we have gone ahead and gone to an S Mount, or however we want to set it up and we have gone ahead and gone to an armbars. A lot of people run into this. The guy stacks his arms however he wants and you get caught here and a lot of people stay right here and they sit here, they pull, they pull and they pull and this guy fights me, fights me, fights until finally they lose the armbar.
That's no good. We do not want that, alright. We set this armbar up with our forearms. I am just going to cross his forearms and leg laid back until we have good wrist control with our hands. Well, we want to to take his forearm right underneath here and we do not want it to be flat, we do not want it to be thumbs up, we want it to be side ways. The reason for that is because we don't want - we want our arm to have the bones each side, we want bone touching the bone on this side of his arm, and the muscle on this side of the other arm or the other side of the arm.
So when we are here reaching through, reach harder. Another easy way to remember this is we are going to stack our wrist. I am grabbing my own wrist, I have reached under, I am grabbing my own wrist here and with this hand, I have gotten his wrist. His elbow is directly on my chest, directly on my sternum. Alright, when I am here, I am literally going to sit up and try to use this hand to pull his hand towards his shoulder,alright. It is called the bicep cutter. This puts a tremendous amount of pressure on the muscle, on the bicep muscle, it really, really, really hurts.
Normally you will get a tap almost immediately when you do this. So we have gone for the armbar, he is protecting it, immediately, reach through, stack the wrist, stack on top of his and pinch. A lot of people will make the mistake in trying to do it out here, they do not have any leverage because they are pulling, they are pulling and there is nothing really to give you any leverage. When we have this elbow directly on our sternum, now when we pull down, you are going to tap really quickly, alright.
So we will go through that from the beginning. Right here and we have set up an armbar however you want. We have gone to an S Mount, we have gone it over and we are in an armbar situation. We can't complete the armbar because our opponent keeps holding. So while we are here, we can go ahead and finish the fight directly from here. I have put my arm through, I stack my wrist and I put my hand on top of his forearm. Now with the elbow directly on my chest I squeeze. Be careful trying this because it does hurt a lot when I squeeze.
A lot of people will let go of this because it is an immediate jolt of pain. When you go here, he will let go, when he lets go, now you get your armbar. That's where we are going for the first place. Assuming he is a really a strong guy, you want to go right here,alright. There are a lot of ways that you can go ahead and work through this armbar. I mean, you can put your feet on his other arm and kick it and go to the armbar. But this does not do you much good if he is screwed up like this and we kick, he rolls away from us. Now he is getting out of the armbar altogether. We want to keep him in tight and if he tries to roll away from us, this bicep cutter just gets tighter, alright.
One variation of the bicep cutter that we want to use is when we have gone for the armbar and he feels it coming so he blocks his own arm and we get here, a lot of guys have really strong arms or a really high pain tolerance, that is fine. We can't just move from here for any reason, we are just not strong enough and we are afraid he has going to turn away from us, he is going to roll out of the armbar altogether. Well, just like when we fed the leg through here, into the triangle we have another option. Instead of feeding the leg through, we can feed the leg over and grab it right here in our hand and we get a tap pretty quickly. If he is just really, really strong, we need a lot of help keeping this directly on our chest. I do not want any space right here, keeping this on our chest we can sit back and I can triangle my legs over his arm. It is just very, very powerful.
When I sit back I can triangle my legs and put this foot behind his head. Now when I pull my hands, it is very, very painful. That is one variation of the bicep cutter. On the other side, I setup the arm bar, I am sitting up, he feels it coming, I try the bicep cutter; he is really, really strong and he has got a high pain tolerance for whatever reason I can not get him the tap. Immediately, what I can do is throw this leg over his arm, over and I can stack my wrist and grab it. This often times is enough to finish him or I can go one step further and triangle my legs. I go all the way over here and this goes down behind his head. Now I get a really quick tap. Be really careful. You can do a lot of damage to the guy's biceps, his elbow and even his forearms. There is a lot of pressure on his arm right here. That is a good variation that you should have.
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