IBJJF, and often our teammates and coaches, tell us what positions we should be striving for. The hierarchy puts mount and the back at the top. They're the default endgame of BJJ. Until they're not. Truthfully, as we progress in our journey we find our own endgame positions where we are likely to submit opponents. How can we build a game around achieving endgame positions?
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--- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/appWe Asked Facebook to Predict the Top Submissions. They Were Dead Wrong.
Reflecting on the Meta of ADCC
The Science and Game Theory of ADCC
Why It's So Hard to Get Guard and Sweep Data
The Collar Choke Isn't an Advanced Technique, Just a Bad One
Three Submissions Outperform All Others at Every Belt Level
How Rules Should Dictate Training
If You Can't Submit Someone In Three Minutes, It's Probably Not Going To Happen
The Data That Is Killing The Self Defense Industry
How Do We Record the Matches?
The Law of Large Numbers
Why Your Memory Isn't Reliable Under Pressure
Blue Belts Are Infinitely More Dangerous Than White
How We Know Ground Fighting is Safer
How Do Women Fight Differently Than Men?
Why Training For "No Time Limits" Makes No Sense
Can You Apply Game Theory to Self Defense?
We Know the Highest Percentage Submission, And It's Not Even Close.
Why The Chess Analogy Doesn't Work.
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