The Ground Fighting Game
Coming to understand more and more that it is like a game of physical chess and this determines how you teach it. There are apparently a few million potential moves in every chess game; maybe not so many in a groundfight but there are still many potential combinations of attack/counter attack with varying degrees of complexity.
You can’t teach a Chess student every potential move but you can give the bases, the building blocks of strategy, defence, attack, positioning for the counter-attack, containment etc. They will need to develop.and perfect these skills in an actual chess match with a non-co-operative opponent. Mutatis mutandis, the same applies to the ground-fighting game, you can give the tools but students need to perfect their application in a nice ground-fight, with punching etc. allowed of course, with this being UKM.
And after that use of Latin in the previous paragraph, let me just revert to type and say that if anybody tells you that if it goes to ground all you need is to be able to bite, headbutt and eye-gouge your way out of trouble, they are talking bollocks and should spend 2 minutes on the floor with a semi – accomplished grappler to test their theory.
