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Arm drag to Sumi Gaeshi

When partner retreats from your arm drag, slide forward, connect shoulder to chest, and lift with right leg hook.

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Source: Volume 02, §6.2 --- Watch at 00:28:53   (full transcript)


Purpose

When partner retreats from your arm drag (pulling back reaction), slide forward and sweep.

Entry condition

Arm-drag grip established. Partner pulling back / retreating.

Mechanics

Once we're inside, get a good defensive position. Partner separates hands, we circle, end up in arm-drag grip. If our partner retreats --- whenever we feel him retreating --- we're going to slide forward.

The variation of Sumi Gaeshi:

  1. With the right foot in place, connect his shoulder to our chest. That brings his weight forward.
  2. Once weight comes forward, we have our right leg.
  3. Put your shoulder on the floor. Right leg is in as a hook. Elevate, lift.
  4. Lift your partner's arm. As they go to turn back into you, they'll find it very difficult.
  5. Gather up head and arm and go on offense.

Recap: front headlock --- establish inside-position grips --- he separates --- we separate, come through to a drag --- get a pullback reaction --- that's fine: slide, connect shoulder to chest. This connection lets us bring partner's weight forward. Put your shoulder on the mat, right leg lifts. You'd be surprised how effective you can be simply tilting your partner over and landing in top position.

Key details

  • Right foot stays in place throughout. The connection of shoulder to partner's chest is what brings their weight forward --- this is the critical load-bearing detail.
  • Put YOUR shoulder on the floor, not your back. The right leg hooks and elevates from this position.
  • Lifting partner's arm after the sweep makes it very difficult for them to turn back into you.
  • Gather head and arm immediately once on top to go on offense.

Common failures

  • Pulling partner forward instead of sliding yourself into them. The technique is about connecting shoulder to chest, not yanking.
  • Forgetting to lift partner's arm after the sweep. This lets them turn back into you and recover.
  • Landing flat on your back instead of keeping the shoulder-to-floor connection that drives the elevation.

Connections