Quote:
Originally Posted by anerlich
You may have technical issues with the proper execution of face locks, as you claim knifefighter does with the RNC, even with a whole year as a Lloyd Irving [sic] BJJ white belt behind you.
I never claimed to be an expert on face locks. I've only claimed that they weren't "banned" in the BJJ competion I was in. Learn to read.
Quote:
Ive had competent (the difference, IMO) grapplers catch me with this and I definitely felt the real possibility of injury. I had no choice but to tap.
Great. Wonderfull. Now did you have a knife on you? Reality check. This thread is about dealing with an opponent that had a knife. Not about getting someone to tap.
Quote:
I've heard of broken jaws, every black belt I've talked to about this mentions it so I very much doubt it is the urban legend you claim, and it's obviously possible to at least break someone's nose this way. You may be too tough to go to the ER in such a circumstance, but that would be your choice (and a foolish one).
Never said it wasn't a possibility. But if you honestly think a 135 lbs woman is going to stop a 240 lbs biker from stabbing her just with a pain submission you're kidding yourself.
Quote:
We could go into eye gouges, neck cranks, etc. from this position as well, chin tucked or no.
I suppose it was only a matter of time before someone brought up the "almighty eye gouge".
Quote:
I would imagine this would be treated as a "pressure point" attack in many tournaments, not that its illegality or otherwise is a central issue here. Try it in your next tourney and see how popular it makes you with the ref, judges and your fellow competitors.
Ohhhh....pressure points. I'm sure that has every biker that's been to a George Dillman seminar shaking in his boots.
Quote:
I saw two tough customers in UFC8 (Elvis Sinosic, Chris Haseman) submit to chin pressure to the face. You CAN hurt and damage people this way.
Again, neither of those people had a knife. Neither of those people felt they might "die" if they lost.
Quote:
LOL, you ask him here he trains, he answers your question, then you berate him for it by saying the above :p
Reading isn't your strongpoint is it? Knifefigher asked me where I trained FIRST and he asked me in a smartassed way. It wasn't the "Hey let's just trade information about where we train" way but the "Your sensei must not know anything because he told you something different from what my sensei told me" way. And I haven't "berated" him for answering the question. I haven't "berated" him at all. I'm berating you because you can't read.
Regards,
John M. Drake