(I don't know how to embed videos here, so if someone wants to edit this thread or yell at how lazy I am to not look it up in a PM, go right ahead.)
This is the Whizzer:
YouTube - luta olimpica - whizzer 2
The guy in blue throws it in at five seconds with his right arm; the whizzer is used to leverage another person's arm to help spin behind them, and it's usually accompanied by a sprawl. Yes, it's really that simple, basically a "reverse underhook". The guy in blue uses the whizzer to throw the other guy past him as he puts his weight down with it. He then quickly takes top control.
Usually beginner wrestlers are told to take neck and hand control with their sprawls, in order to help break the opponent's grip on their legs. The whizzer is helpful to ward off single legs, as you can use your weight on their arm to help control their leverage on whichever side they're trying to plow through.
(Neck control is basically shoving one's forearm or the webbing of the thumb/index finger into the back of the neck while defending from a takedown. It's probably one of the most basic and essential defense mechanisms for a takedown. You're probably always going to put pressure on someone's neck to get their head lower than their back. In a MMA/fight context, you can use neck control to try to encourage your opponent to raise their neck high enough for a guillotine choke- apply pressure with the webbing of your hand, then slip the choke around when you feel the resistance.)
I can't find a video for a face cake. The move is done from once you have a whizzer, if the opponent tries to stand up in close distance while you're leveraged off to his side (the side you have the whizzer on). With the face cake, you turn in to face the opponent while violently throwing your other forearm into their face, in a clothesline fashion, driving through with your hips turning, taking them towards the ground in what ends up looking like a hip-toss. From here it's an automatic side mount, but if they're stunned it should be pretty easy to go full mount. In fact it's probably a very safe bet that they're stunned, which would make training for an immediate full mount something practical from the face cake.
This is the Whizzer:
YouTube - luta olimpica - whizzer 2
The guy in blue throws it in at five seconds with his right arm; the whizzer is used to leverage another person's arm to help spin behind them, and it's usually accompanied by a sprawl. Yes, it's really that simple, basically a "reverse underhook". The guy in blue uses the whizzer to throw the other guy past him as he puts his weight down with it. He then quickly takes top control.
Usually beginner wrestlers are told to take neck and hand control with their sprawls, in order to help break the opponent's grip on their legs. The whizzer is helpful to ward off single legs, as you can use your weight on their arm to help control their leverage on whichever side they're trying to plow through.
(Neck control is basically shoving one's forearm or the webbing of the thumb/index finger into the back of the neck while defending from a takedown. It's probably one of the most basic and essential defense mechanisms for a takedown. You're probably always going to put pressure on someone's neck to get their head lower than their back. In a MMA/fight context, you can use neck control to try to encourage your opponent to raise their neck high enough for a guillotine choke- apply pressure with the webbing of your hand, then slip the choke around when you feel the resistance.)
I can't find a video for a face cake. The move is done from once you have a whizzer, if the opponent tries to stand up in close distance while you're leveraged off to his side (the side you have the whizzer on). With the face cake, you turn in to face the opponent while violently throwing your other forearm into their face, in a clothesline fashion, driving through with your hips turning, taking them towards the ground in what ends up looking like a hip-toss. From here it's an automatic side mount, but if they're stunned it should be pretty easy to go full mount. In fact it's probably a very safe bet that they're stunned, which would make training for an immediate full mount something practical from the face cake.
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