Subject: Friend, Why You Shouldn’t Grapple in a Street Fight

ISSUE #302   GUIDED CHAOS NEWS     Endorsements
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Going To The Ground…Are You Kidding Me?!!?!
By Joseph Riggio, Ph.D., Guided Chaos Student Practitioner
"The main reason for learning Guided Chaos is protection from murderous street attacks. Not for sparring...Contact Flow and Combat Flow are only tools for developing the five principles of GC: Balance, Body Unity, Pliability and Sensitivity--culminating in the final principle: Total Freedom of Action"
---Grandmaster John Perkins
Why You Shouldn’t Grapple in a Street Fight

Here's the simple truth, all other things being equal (and they seldom if ever are) ... strikers will always beat grapplers on the street.

”In a real street situation MMA/BJJ will likely get you hurt or killed if you try to apply it the way it’s used in the ring or octagon - on the street there are no rules, and there is no padding.”

You must know how to strike (first) and kick (second) to survive a street situation, especially against more than one opponent ... FORGET GOING TO THE GROUND!!!

I’ve worked in many clubs in the U.S. and the U.K, as a doorman, and if anyone "went to the ground" who was on my staff I did two things in sequence: 1) saved their ass from the many kicks they were receiving from "on-lookers" and 2) immediately fired them from my staff when the dust settled. I’ve never seen someone go to the ground intentionally in a street fight against a hardened fighter and get back up.

If you wanted to survive the club scene working the door or the floor you needed to know how to keep your feet, striking skills, some disarmament techniques against weapons - improvised and other, the ability to submit someone in a STANDING position to walk them out ... and some serious attitude (all in the order presented, except attitude which was the umbrella under which all other things reside).

My first issue with grappling and going to the ground is that often grapplers lead with their head, and heads aren't effective at blocking … no matter what you may have seen in the movies.

In boxing and MMA bouts we see folks take strikes to the head and shake them off. However, there are three critical aspects to these strikes:
  1. They are being delivered with gloves on that soften the blow significantly, even if it’s only an 8 ounce boxing glove or a MMA glove.
  2. They are being delivered to prepared opponents that are highly trained and fit so very seldom does the strike land as solidly as it may look to the audience.
  3. These folks are conditioned to absorb more punishment than the person on the street…including most fit people and even well trained athletes who are not professional fighters.
We’ve also seen single blow knockouts in plenty of boxing and MMA matches. For example, Connor Mc Gregor’s 13 second knockout of Jose Aldo was a one punch strike to the head, delivered to a trained and very tough opponent. That would have been very bad for Jose Aldo in a street fight, and that’s my main point.

If you watch the Mc Gregor strike in slow motion you’ll see that Connor Mc Gregor is standing almost straight up the whole time, with his head away from the fray so to speak. Meanwhile, Jose Aldo leans in, leading with his head, every time he tries to strike. Jose Aldo has his head literally fully extended past his body towards Connor Mc Gregor just as Mc Gregor nails him with a blow that has his full body behind it like a sledgehammer, and knocks him out. That’s my point in spades: some grapplers tend to lead with their heads.

My second point with grapplers in street fights is that they often try to hold on to their opponents even as they are getting struck. This just makes it easier to keep hitting them for the most part. They assume that the opponent is also trying to grapple instead of just knocking their block off with any strike available to them … hands, elbows, forearms, shoulders, knees, feet, and of course their own head too.

For instance, a favored move for many grapplers is grabbing at an opponent’s arms, legs or clothing in preparation for executing a throw or shooting the opponent for a take-down.

Depending on the way the throw or shoot to take down is executed the grappler often exposes the back or top of their head to the opponent while they are holding on to them. This actually helps the opponent maintain proper positioning for a well executed strike. Again, a very big mistake that’s potentially deadly on the street. You do not want your head to be below someone’s hands or other weapons even for an instant on the street … ever … end of story.

A skilled street fighter will feel the entry as you’re setting up your throw or shoot, they may even set up the opening for you. In the instant you duck your head to enter and get leverage they will strike the exposed part of your head, often naturally with an elbow due to the body mechanics present.

A third issue with grapplers on the street is the presumption that going to the guard will work for them. Your opponent wouldn’t even have to strike or spear you to make that obvious. Getting slammed into the ground, on concrete, a tile or hardwood floor, or even just hard packed dirt, is not like getting slammed into a padded floor in a sporting event. They just need to pick you up and slam you down, very likely head first. If that’s into the concrete … fight over.

Of course we’re also ignoring the entire consideration of multiple attackers, where while you have one person in the guard, the others are pummeling you with their feet with kicks to the head, face, neck, ribs and kidneys. Simply put, the guard really has no place on the street.

None of this is overturned by the exceptions when a fight goes to the ground, or a gappler wins the fight, or someone using the guard overturns an opponent and wins the fight. There just is no good argument for going to the ground as a strategy against an unknown opponent on the street.

Okay, So That’s What You Should NOT Do in a Street Fight

While I’m at it I want to attempt to overturn another bad idea in a street fight, attempting to block as the first movement when someone attacks.

Unless it’s absolutely necessary defensive blocking is inefficient and wasted movement … unless it’s actually a disguised offensive movement.

Most martial arts training begins with training to strike with blocking. I spent years learning how to block strikes, even going so far as to toughen up my forearms and shins to both become more effective weapons and to be more able to block strikes from others. So I know the drills.

When I began to box competitively I learned something different about blocking and striking. As a boxer, it's much more important to learn to bob and weave, use footwork, and get inside, than it is to block incoming strikes. As you become a truly effective striker your need to block becomes lessened, because you are more or less unavailable to be hit when you're moving well.

By learning to move well, you don’t allow your opponent the opportunity to strike you at all, and when you can’t avoid the incoming strike learning to deflect it rather than trying to stop it, so that your block becomes the set-up for a counter-strike. Even more effective is allowing your counter-strike to become your block. That's not to say you don't need to learn to cover up or clinch, you do, but it's secondary to movement and counter-striking.

As Guided Chaos practitioners, we do learn to both block and turn blocks into blows with great specificity. A simple example is using the “answer the telephone" movement to cover up our neck, ear and head from a surprise strike coming in at us, while driving the elbow up into the opponents face or head if possible.

This leads to the idea of becoming a highly trained and effective striker, what I’d argue is at the heart of the art of Guided Chaos, and essential in a street fight scenario.

Using sensitivity we strive to become aware of where the opponent is at all times, what they are doing (almost before they know themselves they are doing it) and what is possible for them and us given relational body dynamics and mechanics of engagement. Then we are trained to strike and keep striking, using our strikes to prevent the opponent from resetting and getting back into the fight until we’ve effectively ended it.

Simultaneously with our focus on developing sensitivity, and what I'd call "combat intuition” (the sixth sense some fighters possess that makes them really difficult to hit or grab, and on the other hand makes it easy for them to connect when, where and how they want to), developing effective movement also becomes critical to becoming a highly trained striker.

The way of movement in Guided Chaos is really specific and frankly takes some time to get used to because it's so natural. What I mean by that is that if you are "trained" in a combat art you will have learned to move in a particular way. For instance as a boxer I learned to keep up on my toes and only plant my feet when I was throwing a punch, if at all ... constantly in motion for the most part.

In Guided Chaos we move much less, in fact only as necessary, and sometimes with an imperceptible shifting of weight from one area of the foot to another (much like you might see a Tai Chi player comment about). Yet despite the appearance of being flat-footed you seldom see Guided Chaos Masters standing stock still for even a moment in practice or when sparring.
This creates a very silky and deceptive experience for the opponent. They don't perceive any movement per se, but the dynamics have now changed such that the angles of attack that were present a moment before cease to exist. Now where they thought they had superior body mechanics, they are unable to either strike or defend against a strike. The Guided Chaos folks refer to this as "becoming invisible” … a throw back to the original name of the art, Ki Chuan Do, the “Way of the Spirit Fist” … the art of being simultaneously unavailable and unavoidable.

So you can see with this art, "blocking" becomes less depended on, as well as learning to "take a hit" (something that was essential as a boxer if you decided to go toe-to-toe even for a couple of punches). In Guided Chaos we’re much more impressed with someone who doesn’t get hit at all than with those who can take a hit … or for that matter is an expert at blocking hits that could have been simply avoided with enough skill in place instead.

The presumption of being able to block and take a hit are more available as options for larger individuals who are less trained and whose body naturally allows them to absorb more punishment to handle conflict in that way. But, put a 100 lb. woman up against a 250 lb. man, and let’s for the sake of this discussion say they are equally trained, and she better not try to either block or take a hit at all. And, forget about “going to the ground” when your opponent has a 100 lbs. on you!!!

Sensitivity, movement and the ability to strike, and to strike hard and accurately, make all the difference when you are that 100 lb. man or woman. Now if you are a 250 lb. man and you can still move and strike in such a way as to not get hit AND you are able to land hard strikes at will ... well, once again, “fight over” as they say.

Think about how all this argues against “going to the ground” in a fight unless you find yourself there without intention on your part, and then it would be best for you if you’ve done some Guided Chaos Ground Fighting training until you can get back to your feet and finish what got started in your favor.

So the moral of this story is:
Stay on your feet, finish what got started, and get yourself home safely.
Dr. Joseph Riggio, Ph.D is a cognitive scientist working in the field of elite performance and decision making, renowned as an expert in neurocognition and somatics.
GRAPPLING MONSTERS
IS SUICIDE


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