As I promised here, this is my review of Roy Dean's latest volume: Brown Belt Requirements.
"After all, this is your personal expression"
"After all, this is your personal expression"
The music-lead voice of Roy Dean
introduces this giant volume. The brown belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu is quite an
advanced rank and rolling with a solid brown belt is quite a humbling
experience and that's exactly the feeling you get from watching the 3 minute
flow of techniques that starts off this DVD: humbled. Humbled by the skill of
presentation but also by the amount of effort and production quality that Roy
invested in this product. We are treated to a variety of Roy's personal
expressions of the usual techniques of jiu jitsu. Triangles, chokes, sweeps,
leg locks and armbars are not just performed, they are expressed.
Roy doesn’t instruct as much in this
volume. Rather, he shares. He shares his (and in some cases his instructor’s Mr
Roy Harris’) experiences and expectations for the brown belt. I have tried to
outline my review to reflect this.
The key to getting good at submissions,
which is the key to the brown belt stage as Roy explains, is pressure. We are
treated to a number of expressions of this pressure. Chest pressure, shoulder
pressure, bridging pressure and many others. Using placement and weight
distribution, Roy shows pressure inducing techniques I haven't seen before.
Some even from the guard (i.e. you are on your BACK exerting pressure!)
Leg locks:
Starting with the straight foot lock in a
myriad of variations, Roy progresses to show heel hooks and toe holds. Beware,
however, of the leg reap position he shows. Obviously brown belts have reached
a level of awareness and care but it is an IBJJF illegality.
Bonus: Roy shows a sweet armbar you can
pull off when you are being calf-cranked! This one surprised me so bad I
started laughing uncontrollably like a village idiot!
"Remember: At this level, it's how
you do it that matters the most."
Top game:
Starting with one technique (the
americana), Roy shows many details of how to create the pressure before, during
and after the submission entry and how that same pressure can open doors to
further attacks and counter attacks.
Deconstructing the choke:
This was fantastic. I am passionate about
BJJ but just as passionate about teaching and learning. Here, Roy not only
teaches us a couple of details of the proper entry to the cross choke from
mount, but shows us how to apply that same method of reverse-engineering to
other techniques too. "Start with the end in mind", they say and Roy
leads the way.
Odd positions:
Roy treats us to how to generate pressure
and utilize it from positions such as the Reverse Knee on belly and the Reverse
Sidemount.
Next Roy delves into the two reasons I
have as to why non-advanced students should still buy this DVD (will talk more
about that later)
Let's dive into Details:
Shin Sweep: from the side control escape
and ends in an armbar
Bicep sweep from spider guard: Biceps
slicer from both top and bottom with options.
Adjusting the armbar: The armbar from the
triangle: changing the angle for the elbow. very nice!
Don't expect to learn how-to details of the techniques. For that, buy the Blue Belt Requirements. What you are shown here is deeper ideas and principles that power the techniques and allow you to exert your will.
Pressure when...
Passing the guard:
Scissor sweep counter: post out and
change base
Single underhook pass: Make it a choke
and don't actually pass.
What if they roll to turtle: three
versions of clock choke. It's jiu jitsu detail Christmas!
Z-guard: dexterity and awareness of where
his ankles are is shown in detail flowing into closed guard passing
Sprawling on the knee: killing the
Z-guard potential and changing directions
Bull pass: very nice details on the exact
timing and positioning to either pass or take the back
X-pass: Obviously, not the same level of
detail as Saulo's own X-guard dvd but sufficient. Further, Roy shows an
alternative finishing position that flows very nicely into a back take.
"Allow yourself to be vulnerable. On
the road to brown belt, you've already tapped a
thousand times, so don't let one more bother you"
Naples Seminar: Rolling
Excellent camera work. It was nice to see
Roy show the many levels of pressure a black belt can give. He rolls no gi with
seminar participants, the first of whom gives him (for the initial minute or
two) quite a hard time before he picks up the pace and pressure. It's beautiful
to see Roy apply many of the concepts he shows earlier in the first DVD.
This is followed by a thorough breakdown
of the rounds. Roy happily explains the techniques he gets caught with.
Sequences of importance are repeated in half speed. He shares the emotional /
intellectual journey as well as the technical which for me is very important
and I don’t think I’ve ever seen any one do this:
"It's the first guy so I know I have
to finish him"
"He's a big dude. He's giving me
some serious pressure so I decide I need to go to top"
"You can feel it, at brown belt
(when a move can work even from wrong positions)"
"A brown belt should be able to roll
with a room full of beginners and deal with it, strategically and technically.
For me that's a brown belt requirement"
Rolling analysis: We get to witness a few
rolls between Roy and his students TJ and Brendan. This is another gem that I
always looked forward to in the Roy Harris instructionals and it's nice to see
that Roy has continued his instructor's tradition.
Brown Belt Evaluation: David Bowerman*
"A brown belt is an individual who
should have the ability to exert their will"
We are invited to share an evaluation of
one of Roy’s purple belt students by both Roy Dean and his instructor Roy
Harris. Many of the comments are from Mr Harris himself:
“When I start giving you the Countdown
10-9-8…etc. I expect you to know what it is I want you to finish” Roy Harris
Part one:
This is the usual demonstration of techniques against cooperative partners followed by a number of rounds against an increasing level of BJJ experience.
This is the usual demonstration of techniques against cooperative partners followed by a number of rounds against an increasing level of BJJ experience.
Nice to see the quality of Roy Dean's
blue and purple belts as they test the metal of David Bowerman and help him, as
the slogan goes, discover who he is.
Part two: The evaluation:
Mr Roy Harris spends a fair amount of
time helping David understand how best to improve his game to meet the
standards of the brown belt. He spares no details and drives home his point by
demonstrating exactly what needs to be done. This part is truly worth the money
alone!
Demonstrations: 5 of them!
It was nice to see David Bowerman from
earlier feature in the demos as Uke for the first blue testing for purple.
Trailers:
Best Of Roy Harris: 3 Inspirational dvds
in which Roy Dean features (amongst others). I have these from the good old VHS
days and they are nothing short of amazing.
Purple Belt Requirements: What makes a
purple belt?
Blue Belt Requirements: One of the best
pure instructionals out there
Art Of the Wrist Lock: Intra-disciplinary
look at wrist locking
No Gi Essentials: No gi is a slick
version of BJJ and this is one slick instructional
The verdict? Buy it. Buy it now.
If you are an advanced student (upper purple), you will want to know these details and work with them. You will want them in your arsenal. If nothing else, you want the Naples Seminar Analysis and the detailed Brown Belt Assessment by Mr Roy Harris. That's worth the money you pay for the whole set.
If you are less experienced, I still think you should buy these DVDs for this reason: They give you hope.
Every time you roll with someone bigger, more experienced or both, it kicks your BJJ ego in the balls. It's part of the beauty of BJJ and how it humbles you but when we are broken down, sometimes we really need a pick-me-up: a display of elegant execution of technical prowess against a very mortal portrayal of how the ego plays in the background. Listening to a man who has NOTHING to prove share his thoughts so honestly and openly is a privilege and that's why I feel these honest (yet super-fly!) DVDs belong on every grappler's shelf. You can buy it from Budovideos here or download it from iTunes here.
Also, feel free to check out Slidey's take on these DVDs here.
Every time you roll with someone bigger, more experienced or both, it kicks your BJJ ego in the balls. It's part of the beauty of BJJ and how it humbles you but when we are broken down, sometimes we really need a pick-me-up: a display of elegant execution of technical prowess against a very mortal portrayal of how the ego plays in the background. Listening to a man who has NOTHING to prove share his thoughts so honestly and openly is a privilege and that's why I feel these honest (yet super-fly!) DVDs belong on every grappler's shelf. You can buy it from Budovideos here or download it from iTunes here.
Also, feel free to check out Slidey's take on these DVDs here.
*Nice to see a number of people sporting
British gi brands
--------------------------------------------------
Liam "The Part Time Grappler" Wandi
Proudly sponsored by Predator Fightwear: Built for the kill and Brutal TShirt: Made By Grapplers For Fighters
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2 comments:
Good review of Roy Dean's latest DVD. I have his purple belt requirements DVD and loved it. Sounds like the brown belt one is also a must buy. He is great teacher.
It really is a beautiful and insightful set!
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