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Grapple Culture

30 members • Free

5 contributions to Grapple Culture
How to roll with White Belts
No need to "flow roll" or "let them work" simply slow it down and don't grip fight like its a competition. the #1 goal of rolling with newer people should be to get them as good as possible as fast as possible, good fundamental habits can only be understood in live rolling when we they feel safe and when they have time to understand & feel what is happening. and - think about rolling with new people as your way of giving back. - avoid WB's when your getting ready to compete.
0 likes • 1d
Lmao avoid them before comp! 😃😄
Joe Rogan said beat up blue belts...
What do most people think when they slap and bump? Most of the time its "how can I survive this roll and not get submitted" So they don't put themselves in bad positions because that would be bad, right? Wrong. Watch this and tell me what you think?
0 likes • 1d
Just beat the piss out of blue belts
Private lesson or instructionals.
If you are not solving a current issue or problem you are mearly spinning your wheels.... Change my mind lol
0 likes • 1d
PTs are great! And I’ve often thought about doing PTs with an instructional going on in the background.
What did your FIRST legit submission FEEL like?
A few months ago I talked a friend of mine into starting jiu-jitsu. Brand new white belt. Good attitude. Some kickboxing experience, zero but scooting knowledge lol Whenever we rolled, I made a deliberate choice about how I approached those rounds with him. I didn’t try to “win the round.” I lost most scrambles because of how deliberate I was moving. (Basically how I tell all coaches to roll with new people) Instead, I rolled slowly and methodically. I’d work my way through the positions step by step. I would usually let him get to a dominant position and begin to attack... the id would Escape. Reverse or sweep. Pass the guard. Stabilise. Climb to mount. And then eventually finish with either a rear naked choke or (but my main priority) a head-and-arm triangle from mount. AKA; how jiu jitsu should look when rolling with and untrained person. Not because it’s the only thing I can do, but because when you’re rolling with someone new, consistency teaches far more than variety. I recorded a one of our rounds and did a voiceover here https://youtu.be/5dcaXQUH9uM (no subs in this because submissions are to distracting for people in the first stages of JJ learning) Recently he messaged me from another country. He had his first roll at a new academy. He told me he hit his first submission in a live round, you guessed it, a clean head-and-arm triangle. He was absolutely buzzing but not as much as i was, if you have tried to teach a head arm triangle to somebody for the first time you will know what I mean. For him it wasn’t just a submission. It was proof that the training was working. Proof that he was working towards his goals. A lot of the most important things in jiu-jitsu can’t be fully explained in a class. You can show a technique 10 times and make sure they know EXACTLY what you mean... even have them drilling it to perfection... But the small details ... the pressure the timing the patience the way your weight moves through the position, those things are felt, not just taught. (one of the benefits of CLA games but i digress)
1 like • 28d
@Lexy Moore when it locks in for the first time and you’re exactly like that 😄🤩 It really feels like that lmao “This actually works!!”
Insta & Website breakdown
just uploaded a new video where I take a look at a Gracie Barra gym in San Diego and do a quick breakdown of their Instagram and website. My aim it’s to show a few small things that can create friction when someone new first finds your gym online. A lot of gym owners focus heavily on: - techniques - classes - competition results - showing the head coach as the best in the world Basically forgetting how they felt when they first started... And when a complete beginner lands on your page they’re usually asking themselves very simple questions: - Is this place for someone like me? - What do I actually do next? - Is this gym welcoming or intimidating? - Why should I choose this academy instead of another one nearby? In the video I walk through a couple of small improvements that can make a big difference when it comes to: - first impressions - beginner clarity - and converting curiosity into someone actually walking through the door... how many ideal clients have visited our site but never come into our gym? If you run a gym, help with marketing, or are just curious about how people experience a martial arts academy for the first time, I think you’ll find it interesting. I’d also be curious to hear your thoughts: - What was the first thing that made you decide to try a gym? - Was it something online, or something someone told you?
0 likes • 28d
I didn’t know GB did all this for their students! I should cut them some slack.
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Michael Cragholm
1
4points to level up
@michael-cragholm-6636
🥋Michael Cragholm is a ret. US Marine and Jiu Jitsu Black Belt. He owns Space Coast Mobile Jiu Jitsu, GrapplApp, and the JJ Entrepreneurs Mastermind

Active 1d ago
Joined Jan 30, 2026
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