When it comes to strategy and planning your game in jiu-jitsu pretty much every top instructor will say the same thing…
NON-STOP Jiu Jitsu
Grappling’s Gameplan: What is the Power of a Gameplan?
When it comes to strategy and planning your game in jiu-jitsu pretty much every top instructor will say the same thing…
They’ll tell you, “Attack, attack, attack.”
This is great advice. It applies regardless of whether you’re trying to sweep your opponent, hunting for a submission, or passing his guard.
You have a tremendous advantage from both the top and bottom by moving forward and keeping your opponent off the defensive. That’s because your opponent is reacting to you instead of setting up his own game. He’s so busy trying to catch up, adapting to a changing landscape, that he doesn’t have the mental bandwidth to launch his attacks on you. He’s automatically a step behind.
However, the truth is that “Attack, attack, attack” It is much easier to say than it is to do.
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The fact is that most people’s jiu-jitsu is really a bunch of single moves. This sweep is all by itself. That guard passes by itself.
These isolated techniques get thrown at the opponent, but they don’t connect together in combinations and there is no big picture.
Combinations are far more effective than single moves. And that’s largely because you avoid analysis paralysis.
This is what it means. Try your move. If it doesn’t work then you need to stop, analyse the situation, and plan your next move. That’s the moment of paralysis. You don’t have to know what next to do automatically. It takes time to figure it all out.
During the time it takes to do that analysis you’re no longer attacking, and that delay gives your opponent a golden opportunity to start launching his own offence.
Jiu-jitsu can be done in one move, with no game plan. This is similar to a boxer throwing giant Hail Mary roundshouse punches one after another, hoping this one punch will make it connect. No second attack, no backup plan.
But that’s not how boxing works. A good boxer will use combinations and throw punches in groups. The first punch sets up the second punch, the second punch sets up the third punch, and so on…
Your jiu jitsu should be the exact same.
Combination attacks embedded in a coherent step-by-step game plan should allow you to flow around the resistance you encounter, and neutralise your opponent’s reactions. A framework that tells what you should do next reduces your decision-making time.
Even if your cardio isn’t the greatest then it’s still better to fight this way. It’s much more tiring to launch ineffective single attacks and get crushed by your opponent than to use 3 to 4 moves together, getting into a dominant position, then taking a break to recover your energy.
While some people can create these gameplans by themselves, it can take a long time. There will undoubtedly be periods where their jiujitsu stagnates while they attempt to figure it out. This can be frustrating.
So yes, ‘Attack, attack, attack‘ is the right answer. But it’It is not the complete answer.
This strategy can be followed by a gameplan. It is a set of steps that can be taken to accomplish your goals. Framework for linking different techniques together to create a powerful, flexible strategy.
Non-Stop Jiu-Jitsu
This resource will help you develop an attacking style Jiu-Jitsu
If you’re not using combinations and gameplans in your jiu-jitsu then you’re giving your opponent an opportunity to turn the table on you after every technique you try. Single moves are great, but they’re not what high-level jiu-jitsu is all about.
This is to make it quick and easy for people to add this. ‘Attack, attack, attack’ Brandon, BJJ blackbelt world champion Brandon brought a different mentality to the game. ‘Wolverine’ Mullins.
We created Non-Stop together Jiu-Jitsu It includes a series gameplans to help you control your opponent in open guard, sweep him, pass his guard and stabilize your dominant top position.
Brandon is an expert at connecting the right techniques in the correct order. He can also take the most advanced jiujitsu and simplify it into its most simple steps. That’s why in this instructional you’ll get complete, beginning-to-end, cradle-to-grave strategies.
This drag and fall formula will revolutionize your jiu-jitsu game, regardless of whether you are a beginner or an expert black belt.
This instructional is a new way to learn the material.
It will help you to defeat your training partners and your competitors in competition. It will help you to understand how elite professional competitors use their techniques, combinations, and strategies.
This isn’t just another BJJ instructional that teaches random techniques.
One of the first things you’ll learn in Non-Stop Jiu-Jitsu Here’s how to correctly set up your open guard.
How to control your opponent’s hand, get your feet in place, off-balance his body, and keep him busy enough to forget about your guard. Techniques that’ll work even if your opponent is fighting you tooth and nail.
Then you’ll learn the guard sweeps and attacks themselves.
This section of the instructional is about the guard sweeps for the Butterfly Guard and de la Riva guards. Brandon will show you how to set them up, how they can be used against different resistance types, and how to transition into other techniques.
This section has a ton of competition footage that shows these exact techniques being used against fully resisting competitors at the highest level.
You’ll be getting a complete step-by-step game plan for your open guard. But that’s not where we’re stopping; there’s a lot more material than that in Non-Stop Jiu-Jitsu…
The next thing you’ll learn are the exact techniques that world class competitors are using to pass the guard.
Guard passes are often taught in isolation, which creates a problem: if you learn to pass the guard this way then after you sweep someone you’ll have to completely reset your position in order to start your guard pass.
Resetting your position allows your opponent to create his own position. It makes the fight fair. Your best guard can attack their best guard.
But you don’t want it to be a fair fight. You want to make sure you have all the cards and control the situation, so he can’t get in on the action. You want guard passing to be an unfair proposition…
In essence, you’d like to bring a gun to a knifefight!
That’s why the best time to pass the guard is IMMEDIATELY after a guard sweep or takedown. While your opponent is still disoriented and hasn’t yet established his preferred grips and hooks.
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This instructional will also teach you how to link attacks and move directly from your guard sweeps into guard passes.
Correctly combining guard sweeps and passes will result in your guard passing being able to use the hooks and grips you made for the guard sweep to help him. He will be just as helpless on the bottom than he was at the top.
Non-Stop Jiu-Jitsu You will learn how to finish your guard sweeps by using the strongest guard passes in grappling. You’ll learn seamless cradle to grave progressions of what winning world class jiu-jitsu looks like.
Brandon was so detailed when we filmed this together, I was stunned.
It’s an incredible product that address topics, techniques and concepts that have never been covered in any other Grapplearts instructional, nor, to my knowledge, in any other instructional available in the market today.
Here’s What You Will Get In NON-STOP Jiu Jitsu
Course Features
- Lectures 0
- Quizzes 0
- Duration 50 hours
- Skill level All levels
- Language English
- Students 90
- Assessments Yes