Submission 101, I am going to demonstrate a couple of arresting techniques and these are techniques for pins and holding the suspects down on the ground. Now, I'm going to start from actually having the suspect on the ground. I'm not doing the take down right now just so you can get the subtleties of how you are pulling something down.
Dylan is on his belly. Now this comes from classical Japanese Jiu-Jitsu. It's very important that if you're going to try to pin someone to the ground. This is a basic pin. His arms extended out, what you're going to do is just push it up just past 90 degrees. I'm going to put all my weight on his wrist and my other hand is grabbing on to his elbow. I'm not grabbing on to his triceps, super important, you are putting your hand on the elbow.
Next thing I'm going to do is I'm just going to rotate my palm so it's right there and it's at the base of his triceps. Then I'm going to put all my weight and lean on that muscle. Now, what I can do to make this more painful is just move my hand up and take my shin and place it right on that muscle and when you do that you're placing it, this is the knee, it's the top of the shin bone. So I grab on, back straight and I lean. This does hurt a lot.
Now, what I typically will do if I'm holding someone down, I'll come here, I'll place it right on that muscle and then I'll lift up the arm as well. You're basically giving an armbar on the ground as you can see. It's here, at hyper extend, and you pull, you lock it out and there it is.
Now the second one I'm going to show you is the shoulder lock, I am just keeping Dylan doing here. If you have someone down and you want to keep them where they are and here I'm going to lift up, bring this hand up to the shoulder and then I'm going to swing in and thug his shoulder with my knees, taking his hand and cutting into across, sometimes I grab on to my clothing whatever like here and here, very important, hand on top, hand on the bottom, back straight. Now you will turning towards the camera, it blocks up the shoulder.
Now I'll show you from this position, just turn around. So Dylan is down, I'll lift up, coming in, you got to lock your knees around the shoulder, clamp in, hand on top, the other hand on the bottom and now I'll turn, locking in. Now, if he goes to try to stand up or move and he pulls up, here all I do is turn, break shoulder if I have to. So, these were our two basic arresting techniques.
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