#20 Wrestling fundamentals: stance is everything. Yours probably sux

Your stance is the most important aspect of wrestling. If your stance is weak, you will get out of position. Then you’re at risk of getting taken down when it matters most. Work endlessly on your stance so that you can hold this position when you’re exhausted. Here, I show the proper stance and a drill you can use to strengthen your stance.

Пікірлер: 65

  • @dominicmagliocco7523
    @dominicmagliocco7523 Жыл бұрын

    Another fantastic instructional. I have to say I sometime forget HOW important the basics are. Good to see you bringing it up again.

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Fundamentals win titles

  • @stefangurguriev1047
    @stefangurguriev10473 ай бұрын

    Stance is everything! Position before takedown, before position before submission!

  • @husseinshahine1
    @husseinshahine111 ай бұрын

    Great video! Love the focus on fundamentals

  • @organicenergy5124
    @organicenergy5124 Жыл бұрын

    Firstly absolutely 👍 brilliant channel really helpful and insightful! This video reminds me of a drill that I learned from Andy from school of grappling which is you win a point if you put your opponents hands on the mat and a point if you touch their knee , he said teaching this to kids enables them to instinctively learn through play

  • @lolzaloud
    @lolzaloud Жыл бұрын

    Just making my way through your videos now and have already learned so much. I enjoyed this fundamental style video and would love more.

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    I am glad you’re finding it useful. Thank you for your support!

  • @ArmbarPapi
    @ArmbarPapi5 ай бұрын

    Love these!

  • @ethankpetersen
    @ethankpetersen8 ай бұрын

    Just found your channel and am super excited about it. I've been doing BJJ for about a year now and our classes are pretty big with limited matt space, so we are normally starting on the ground. One of the biggest holes in my game is wrestling and starting on the feet. Your videos have been super helpful so far, and I look forward to diving deeper into the Chanel.

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    8 ай бұрын

    I am glad to hear that! Keep working at it. Make sure to work on your stance more than anything. It’s the most important

  • @BernardoFlor_Krio
    @BernardoFlor_Krio Жыл бұрын

    Instant like and save

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Excellent!

  • @porkysugrim
    @porkysugrim Жыл бұрын

    Such a gem to find this channel ❤

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I’m glad you enjoy the content

  • @a.m.4479
    @a.m.4479 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so so much for all the work you share with us, Joseph. I started wrestling 2,5 months ago and your videos have been of TREMENDOUS help. I'm learning a ton. PRICELESS information. Can't believe we get this for free. Again, thank you so much!

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I have always coached to help people and never expected money in return. So much knowledge was given to me freely, so I always felt the need to pass it on. Now, if this channel blew up and some money came in, I wouldn’t be disappointed, lol. Actually, it would allow me to do more of it. I am glad it’s working for you. Please let me know if there’s anything in particular you would like to see

  • @dominicmagliocco7523

    @dominicmagliocco7523

    Жыл бұрын

    Keep watching for more high level instructions.

  • @a.m.4479

    @a.m.4479

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 Man, that's incredible. I deeply appreciate what you do. And I hope that you get the recognition you deserve. I'll keep learning and will let you know if there's something I need help with. Again, thank you so much!!!

  • @a.m.4479

    @a.m.4479

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dominicmagliocco7523 Of course! It's a privilege!

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    @@a.m.4479 thank you for your support brother. I’ll keep on posting and we will see what happens.

  • @JSMinstantcoaching
    @JSMinstantcoaching Жыл бұрын

    Love this :-)

  • @RippedPantsss
    @RippedPantsss11 ай бұрын

    Amazing video!

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you! Feel free to ask questions. I want to develop a community here where people help to learn from each other. I will answer any questions, but I want other people to feel free to jump in as well. It’s a learning community

  • @DeclanMahony07
    @DeclanMahony074 ай бұрын

    This is great stuff Joe! (And Dom!). Im 44yr old blue belt in BJJ and really want to improve my wrestling for BJJ as it sucks. I absolutely love how you focus on the stuff that works at all levels. I first heard of you from the course you did with Jordan Preisenger. When I have some extra dineros kicking around I will definitely be buying that. In the meantime I’ll be keying in on these awesome videos. Keep em coming!!

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you! I appreciate it. We are the same age. Dom is 51. Just keep moving or you’ll lock up, lol

  • @user-fd3yz1ip3o
    @user-fd3yz1ip3oАй бұрын

    Thanks alot this helps me with my jiujitsu.

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Ай бұрын

    That’s been my goal all along, so I am glad it’s working for you!

  • @user-fd3yz1ip3o

    @user-fd3yz1ip3o

    Ай бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 Yessir, ive been doing jiujitsu for four years now and i've come to learn the battle starts standing at first contact. Wrestling is so important for grappling and I believe the two are unseperatible. Learning stand up has really raised my confidence when it comes to selfe defense, I like thinking about my Jiujitsu from self defense/MMA perspectives. I truly care more about becoming a better grappler than I do getting better at jiujitsu, in return this mindset has made getting to and staying in top positions easier, wrestling up easier, takedown defense has gotten alot better. Theres so much of the game you dont see if you choose to only be a guard player.

  • @serafimciobanu3021
    @serafimciobanu302110 ай бұрын

    My son who started wrestling loves it and wants to get to the top! I want to help him and get involved by asking you two questions, since you have a lot of experience 1. what would be the most important things that make the difference between an average athlete and an outstanding one? 2. what should we focus on in the beginning, more to create a solid base? Thank you very much!

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    10 ай бұрын

    I’m super excited for you and your son. #1 has a lot of levels. In the beginning and throughout high school, grit and consistency are essential. Competing year around is crucial for becoming a state level competitor. When I coached kids regularly, every single kid who placed in high school states was first a state placer in freestyle and/or greco. That’s not because of raw talent. I had several state placers who were not gifted athletes, but they put in a lot of work. Wrestling is definitely a sport that rewards hard work. There is no substitute for competition experience. It will teach them skills about how to win that you just can’t get in a practice room. I don’t care what anyone says about competition being the same as a practice room. They are full of it and/or never competed themselves. In competition, you don’t get a do over like practice. That scoreboard doesn’t lie and it’s locked in time. And people don’t give anything up in competition like they do in practice. #2. Stance is absolutely the most important. If you have a solid stance (see my video on it) you will make your opponent get out of position by trying to get you out of your stance. They will get frustrated and take bad shots. It allows you to get close and attack elbows for control. Never shoot from distance. It takes you out of your stance. Conditioning is essential. Mental toughness that is built on conditioning is also crucial.

  • @serafimciobanu3021

    @serafimciobanu3021

    10 ай бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 Thank you, very much!!!

  • @Sjman548
    @Sjman548 Жыл бұрын

    Great videos as always thank for the coaching. I find myself revisiting a lot of your content to find the missing details, just shows the depth of your instruction. Any chance on a solo drills video or shadow wrestling for those that don't have wrestling coaches irl lol

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Yes the details are what make these systems work. There are BJJ professors showing wrestling moves and putting out instructionals, but the details that actually make them work are lacking. A whitebelt can show a triangle from closed guard, but the details that set up the move-how to bait him into it, how he will react, what to do when he does xyz, how to react to that etc-is what actually matters. In this video, I mentioned how I used to essentially walk around my house in my stance and how I don’t ever come out of it-off shots, stand ups, etc. Positive mental visualization is a real thing. I trained myself to visualize someone in front of me and could see outside myself from like the top down. I would move and predict how he would react and “shadow wrestle” all the time

  • @Sjman548

    @Sjman548

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 Thanks man keep up the awesome content!

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sjman548 thank you for your support!

  • @dirtygeazer9266
    @dirtygeazer92662 ай бұрын

    Nice video not sure why I'm not explosive i was stuck under with double overs body lock tried to do sit out twice wasn't exposive enough

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    2 ай бұрын

    If he is getting double underhooks on you when you shoot, then you’re shooting with your elbows flared out. Also, if he has double unders on you from that position (you have double overs), then sitting out is a bad idea. You will get put to your back. Maybe I am not picturing what you are saying correctly?

  • @dirtygeazer9266

    @dirtygeazer9266

    2 ай бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 IDK what the position is called but I get sprawled on after a bad shot and they're deeper than front headlock and are grabbing around my belly what I was told is to do a sit out either side. I think I got there from bad posture head down shots I know some front head escapes like try to fight for a single I saw that video with the options I also really like the sucker drag and dump combo but since they're around the body and not on chinstrap/choking position that eliminates the drap and dump and I was told the option from there is a sit out

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    2 ай бұрын

    @dirtygeazer9266 kzread.info/dash/bejne/fZyEqKqAfqTHn9Y.htmlsi=eWzFPXv0GN7ctSSD kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZJhplNZyedXRmqg.htmlsi=u4df5oQlyIpVoYDG

  • @davidinawe791
    @davidinawe791 Жыл бұрын

    Could you do a video on the slide by?

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    I kinda did, but it was more about strategy, assuming people already knew how to do it. So, I didn’t go into any level of detail on the technique, but I show the kind that I like. That video was about managing the out of bounds so that you score on the edge where people tend to let up kzread.info/dash/bejne/Z6J60alydpvenco.html

  • @ElijahLevy-xr6eu
    @ElijahLevy-xr6eu Жыл бұрын

    Hi coach, I’ve been thinking a bunch about using leg riding to pass half guard. I’ve found that fighting to upgrade position with my legs makes their hands come down, exposing underhooks and cross faces. I’d love too hear the opinion of a wrestler though. Thank you!

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    The most important part of being in the top half guard (or half mount as my coach calls it) is that you keep his back flat on the mat. That takes away a lot of his offense, because mobility is substantially decreased. Sometimes in the Gi, I will do the opposite. I will threaten a cross collar choke, which doesn’t actually work well from half mount, and that makes him bring is arms up to defend. Now, he has exposed his elbows and I can go under them, smash, and free my leg to 3/4mount. Most guys will bridge, which is the wrong thing, because now they will let go of my foot, which gives me full mount. Because I was already under his elbows, I can bring my knees up high to high mount. Now you have a number of awesome submissions with minimal effort. Whatever you are doing to scoop under the arms and get them over the head is fine. That’s the goal, because he can’t do shit to you from that position. Also, I’ve seen some amazing back takes from top half guard. The 10th planet guys have some great stuff from there.

  • @ElijahLevy-xr6eu

    @ElijahLevy-xr6eu

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the reply! I train mainly no gi, so I can’t use the collar choke to make them move their elbows. I was thinking that leg riding (splitting the legs, making their hips face away from their head) could be a good way to do the same thing the collar choke does in the gi: force them to react and move their hands, exposing upper body grips

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Being in top half guard is the same as the “Turk ride” in wrestling. You can use it to lift that leg hard and crossface to flatten them out. You can also get a head and arm choke and if done just right you can finish it. If they know what they are doing, they won’t let go of that leg even if you advance to 3/4 mount. At that point, you can start working under both elbows and smother until he gets desperate and tries to bridge. Then you’ll end up in full mount. Different way to get their in noGi vs Gi (from my examples) but accomplishing the same thing (high mount)

  • @K_x_P
    @K_x_P Жыл бұрын

    I watched some wrestler explaining to me that you should be low enough that your lead hand fingertips barely touch the mat. What is your opinion on that

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve also heard people say that, but it’s not exactly true. It’s far more complicated than that. You don’t want to start off so much lower that he can just put you into a front headlock. You sort of want to be near where they are and then at the level change on the shot (see some of my other videos on shots off set ups), you definitely should be low. My collegiate coach liked a higher stance, like what Nick Suriano does. If your hands are low, but out front, then you have great defensive position

  • @K_x_P
    @K_x_P Жыл бұрын

    I just tried this stance drill with yanking. This really sux big ass. Everything was burning after 1 Minute

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, it’s amazing! But it shows how important it is to build those muscles and the timing of locking in position right when he starts to pull. It will be come automatic, and people will get themselves out of position while trying to get you out of position

  • @magnuseriksson3996
    @magnuseriksson3996 Жыл бұрын

    If you are in this good stance, do you think that you still need to level match if the opponent goes lower (as I hear many people say)? I don't mean when they are taking a shot, just if they are taking a lower stance.

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    If they drop their head lower than mine, the first thing I am going to do is check them. Snap down to see if I can get the front headlock. Then, if they overreact and lift up their head super hard, I can level change under them and penetrate deep off the shot

  • @magnuseriksson3996

    @magnuseriksson3996

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 Thanks for the reply, makes a lot of sense!

  • @counterkidnapping1737

    @counterkidnapping1737

    Жыл бұрын

    What about Jordan Burroughs stance? Is he wrong ?

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol! He’s Jordan Burrows, lol. Hard to emulate someone like him or like John Smith. There’s really never been any two like them. When coaching, you try to teach what will work for most people-not the freaks of nature. Like I always told my students would say that…you’re not him. I’m not him. Only 1 and 100 million are like him. He’s faster than everyone and his timing is unbelievable.

  • @counterkidnapping1737

    @counterkidnapping1737

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 yup. I always tell myself "you are not him". He can do that , but it's not sure you can do the same thing as him. So you need your own skills, tactics, strategy. I once try emulate Jordan Burroughs. Guess what? It's freaking exhausted and his style is not compatible with me.

  • @johnconor5485
    @johnconor5485 Жыл бұрын

    Isn't the squared stance vulnerable to the techniques like the snapdown? I thought the fundamental stance is in wrestling and grappling in general the staggered stance, no? Can you please enlighten me on that?

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    I lead my right leg, just not a ton like I did as a kid. I first teach it this way first, so that people can understand the importance of having a rock solid foundation. I am still leading my right leg, just not as much-and I use this when I am tired and need to defend. The snap down ONLY works when he is pushing/leaning. Check out video #13. I actually will have an easier time snapping him down if he has a staggered stance, because I will snap to the side where his leg is back. Really screws people up, because now they think they must be pushing too much. So now they stop pushing and then I use offense from video #14

  • @johnconor5485

    @johnconor5485

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 wow great stuff thank you for the reply! You are helping a lot of people doing this :)

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnconor5485 that’s the only reason I do it, man! I just want to help give people the right information

  • @johnconor5485

    @johnconor5485

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 cheers highly appreciate that

  • @BjjDrillers
    @BjjDrillers Жыл бұрын

    Hey coach. In BJJ would you say it's applicable to switch your stances once you get different grips? I'm working on incorporating judo throws but closing the distance breaks my wrestling stance. I generally start out with a wrestling stance if my partner shares a similar head height.

  • @josephbreza-grappling9459

    @josephbreza-grappling9459

    Жыл бұрын

    You can’t force throws. They only work when he is pushing. You want to get him out of position my snapping him down and forcing him to get desperate. I hit judo like throws all the time in wrestling, but I wasn’t trying to make them happen, I just work on getting him out of position and then see what he gives me. If you’re looking for one thing then you’re likely telegraphing it and giving it away. If he is in a stance like you then snap him to a front headlock and take his back like I show on my channel. If he is backing away, then you have to use what I showed on a stalling opponent. Chances are that you will use a lot more osoto gari then you will uchi mata or hari goshi. Like I say in that video, if he is backing up, it’s osoto gari-if he is pushing then it’s hari goshi. If he bends over a lot at the waist, then you should snap him down

  • @BjjDrillers

    @BjjDrillers

    Жыл бұрын

    @@josephbreza-grappling9459 Thank you so much. This advice is gold 🥇