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Fighting from Your Back

Fighting from Your Back
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US$ 17.99 (+ tax)
Most fighters' worst nightmare is being pinned on their back. This book deals with defences and attacks from that position and shows that it can often be a favourable position when you have the knowledge. It shows you how to escape and finish with strikes, chokes, broken strangles, bars and butts.
Summersdale Publishers Ltd.; August 2004
96 pages; ISBN 9781840249002
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Excerpt
Since time immemorial, being on your back in a real fight has been, it would seem, synonymous with defeat. The person underneath is only seconds away from being beaten by the assailant on top. In the majority of cases the synonym was correct. Being pinned on your back (unless you are a trained ground fighter) is the final pre-cursor to defeat, even to a trained ground fighter it is still not the favoured position, though it is certainly not the coup de grace. If you study a good Judoka he will be as comfortable fighting from off his back as he is sitting at a table eating his dinner. The reason? He fights from there in Newaza (ground fighting) all the time. So our indoctrination into believing that the back position is a weak position has to change. It is/can be a very powerful position - it is the knowledge of how to fight from one’s back that makes it more favourable. There are many escapes from the back position. These are covered in-depth in The Escapes, and whilst they can of course be considered as ‘fighting from your back’ they are out of the context of this book and I would ask you to refer to the said volume for detail to complete the picture. The beauty of fighting from your back, besides the fact that once learned you no longer harbour it as a weak position, is that it lulls the opponent into a false sense of security - he sees a finish when really there is not one there. When people see a finish they invariably rush to take it and completely forget about defending their pin (even on the pavement arena). This is where you can easily escape, or more appropriately draw them into a finishing technique.