Archive for July, 2012

[VIDEO] Scramble’s Adventures in Tokyo 2012

by Matt - Scramble ~ posted July 31st, 2012

Scramble Matt took a trip to Tokyo recently and this is the result.

It’s basically me getting my butt kicked at three jiu jitsu classes.

I can’t say enough great things about the fight community in Tokyo – so helpful, friendly, welcoming – not to mention tough.

I visited Rikako Yuasa at Jewels BJJ class, Nakamura Daisuke at Grabaka, and Hiroyuki Abe at AACC gym for a spot of no gi / catch. Ouch!

I had visions of much more footage of Tokyo but sadly it rained most of every day which limited the amount of filming I could do. So just enjoy gratuitous jiu jitsu rolling.

Rikako
Hiroyuki Abe
Daisuke Nakamura

I highly recommend visiting all three if you find yourself in Tokyo.

Special thanks to Kinya Hashimoto and Takehiro Iso for looking after me during the trip.

Music:
Bulgarian Voices
Dakhabrakha
Akoya Afrobeat Ensemble

Gyms:
Grabaka

AACC

Jewels MMA Studio @ Muse

 

[VIDEO] Nakamura Daisuke: 3x All Japan Black Belt Champion!

by Matt - Scramble ~ posted July 30th, 2012

Nakamura Daisuke, fighting out of Grabaka in Tokyo, is probably the toughest BJJ fighter in Japan right now. And he’s wearing Scramble on his back. That makes us incredibly proud.

Last weekend he won the All Japan tournament (black belt, featherweight) for the THIRD YEAR RUNNING. He also bagged the Absolute gold, which I think makes him 2x absolute champ, too. That’s an incredible achievement. Oh, and he is also old enough to be in the Masters category, too…

If you have the time, please watch these fights. You can see the heart, skill and technique need to win – very inspirational. There are times when Daisuke looks tired or in trouble, yet he keeps pushing forwards.

おめでとうございます、大輔さん!

Videos below…

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[VIDEO] Oli Geddes: International Grappling Competitor…?

by Matt - Scramble ~ posted July 27th, 2012

We are ultimo-pumped about this vid!

Shot and edited by our friend Daniel Willmott, a name to watch out for on the BJJ video scene, it’s a great introduction to Oli Geddes, a household name in the UK BJJ scene and soon to be worldwide. Oli delivers one of the funniest intros I’ve ever heard in a BJJ video, too.

He’s heading off to North America for THE GREAT NORTH AMERICAN COMPETITION TOUR OF AWESOMENESS and I highly recommend you keep up with his progress at his blog, here.

Please like, share, enjoy! Turn it up and make sure HD is on.

 

[VIDEO] YURI SIMOES: WHAT IT TAKES TO BE CHAMPION

by Clean Dean ~ posted July 26th, 2012

Our friend Hywel Teague at BJJHacks has done it again. This time, we’ve got rising star Yuri Simoes talking about what it takes to be a champion.

Yuri is a young up-and-comer fighting as part of the renowned Checkmat team. He won last year’s Gi and No-Gi Mundials at brown belt and was awarded his black belt by Ricardo Vieira. At black belt, he closed out the Heavyweight division at Pan-Ams with Lucas Leite and made it to the quarterfinals at the Mundials, where he lost on points to Xande Ribeiro.

Yuri is definitely a person to watch out for in the future and I look forward to watching him grow as a competitor and a top-level black belt. So check out the video and get pumped to do some training.

 

Four Supplement Staples for Grapplers and Fighters

by William Wayland ~ posted July 19th, 2012

This is an ongoing series of articles from guest blogger and Strength & Conditioning coach William Wayland of Powering Through. If you have any questions about this post or S & C in general as it relates to MMA and BJJ then please leave a comment below!

Supplements are a potential minefield, seriously! Step into any supplement store and you will be under visual and sometimes olfactory assault from all directions. You’re effectively wading through a stream of information, claims and advice. Let me put it bluntly: you are being lied to! There are however a few supplements through both research and trial by fire used by my athletic clients and myself that I can recommend. I’m going to leave joint supplements for a future post as this comes with its own set of junk supplements and supplements which actually work. Here are four supplements that I stand by for regular use.

 

Creatine in all its chemical glory

Creatine

Creatine easily the most popular supplement aside from whey protein for grapplers, MMA fighters, athletes and bodybuilders. Despite its proven benefits and vast amount of freely available information available on it, it is still quite widely misunderstood. I hope to outline what it basically does, what you can expect and what creatine is not.

Simply put creatine is an organic acid that occurs naturally in skeletal muscles. If we go back to the energy system write up I did you can see that creatine plays a key role in the phosphocreatine energy system.

We need ATP for muscular contractions. The enzyme (creatine kinase) breaks down creatine phosphate so that the phosphate group can be used to resynthesize ATP. This all happens very rapidly, creatine is stored and recycled in the cells. The more creatine we can store in our cells the greater rapid ATP production we can generate.

What does it do?

  • There is scientific evidence that short term creatine use can increase maximum power and performance in high-intensity anaerobic repetitive work (periods of work and rest) by 5 to 15%.
  • This is mainly bouts of running/cycling sprints and multiple sets of low RM weightlifting. Single effort work shows an increase of 1 to 5%.
  • Creatine has been shown to give mass gains of 1kg a week, this may be due to water retention. Usually peaking at around 2-3kg gain.
  • Recent evidence suggesting that creatine can increase growth potential of muscle fibres

Obviously if you’re involved in MMA or grappling that improvement to high-intensity anaerobic work of 5-15% could make a huge difference. In a study of Judo athletes (Radovanovic et al 2008) results showed that the two-week creatine monohydrate supplementation and specially designed training program, have a significant effect on anaerobic power and body composition (a difference of 90W power output).

There is another study: “Effects of creatine supplementation during recovery from rapid body mass reduction on metabolism and muscle performance capacity in well-trained wrestlers.” The purpose of this study conducted by Oopik et al, was to determine if creatine monohydrate supplementation with carbohydrate ingestion during recovery period after rapid body mass reduction would accelerate the restoration of body mass and physical performance in well-trained wrestlers.

The results of this study indicated that creatine supplementation with glucose ingestion during the 17 hour recovery period from rapid body mass loss did not accelerate the restoration of body mass. However, the creatine supplementation did stimulate the regain of physical performance in maximal intensity efforts in well-trained wrestlers in this one day test period.

So for fighters who have had to cut alot of weight for competition creatine taken with glucose post weigh-in can help keep max efforts high in the upcoming fight; some fighters complain that their power leaves them after a drastic weight cut. Selective creatine use could mitigate that.

There are two scientifically proven ways to supplement with creatine. The first is through a loading phase, in which 20 grams (usually split into 5g servings) is taken every day for 5 days, followed by a maintenance phase of 3-5 grams a day for periods of 2–3 months at a time. The second consists of taking 3-10 grams of creatine per day for a period of 2–3 months with no loading phase. It is generally recommended to take at least 1–2 weeks off from creatine supplementation in order to maintain a proper response mechanism in the body. Additionally it can taken with simple sugars to increase uptake, you will quite often see creatine mixes with large amounts of sugar. People with low dietary creatine tend to super respond to creatine, so this supplement can be useful for vegetarians. Just a note, creatine is not a steroid or a stimulant despite many lay people believing this, heck even today I had someone tell me it gives them headaches, in the past people have told me it gets them spotty/angry/incontinent/wired etc, not all at the same time however. The placebo effect is a powerful thing!

Sometimes its worthwhile being Beta

Beta-alanine

Beta alanine or β-Alanine a naturally occurring amino acid, and functions as a precursor to Carnosine. This is where it gets real interesting, when we exercise, especially when it’s very high intensity exercise, our bodies accumulate a large amount of hydrogen ions (H+), causing our muscles’ pH to drop (become more acidic). You’ll know this as that burning sensation. This increase in H+ ions causes the pH in your muscles to drop and this interferes with your ability to perform powerful muscular contractions.

Carnosine in effect mops up those free H+ ions, but not enough Beta Alanine means not enough carnosine (ingesting carnosine its self is problematic as its damaged via digestion). So by supplementing Beta Alanine we can decrease fatigue and increase total muscular work. Research has shown that beta-alanine increases ventilatory threshold, increases in time to fatigue and increases in time to exhaustion.

Beta Alanine can however cause an itchy, tingly sensation, and in high doses paresthesia (pins and needles) occurs, usually doses over 10mg per kg of bodyweight. Beta Alanine is not banned by WADA or its affiliates. Used in conjunction with creatine they can have a synergistic effect, creatine provides more energy and Beta Alanine buffers the metabolic waste, which ultimately results in enhanced performance.

Your day probably starts here

Caffeine

Caffeine arguably one of the most widely consumed natural drugs in the world, found in tea leaves, cola nuts and cocoa beans. It functions as a stimulant by interfering with the binding of adenosine to adenosine receptors. By interfering with adenosine, caffeine delays the onset of fatigue, increases alertness and concentration. Caffeine doesn’t give you energy as its calorie free (the cream and sugar in your caramel mocha might not be), what it does is mask tiredness extremely well. It is this change in the perception or difficulty of effort that athletes can make use of.

For those of you that train early in the day research has shown that caffeine can increase morning strength levels to that of the afternoon (when physiologically you are strongest), in the Mora-Rodriguez study increases in bench press and squat strength where between 2.5-5.7% versus a placebo in the morning. Additionally doses of 3mg/kg of bodyweight can increase maximal strength versus just 1mg/kg of bodyweight.

Caffeine concentration in the blood stream can peak anything between 20-50 mins after consumption and the resultant effect last for 3-4 hours. If you do choose to supplement caffeine, I would suggest not consuming liquid caffeine and instead make use of tablets as this allows you moderate dosage. Where as drinking it in coffee form means you cannot be sure how much you are getting (a cup of coffee is between 80-120mg). Another issue is tolerance and diminished effect with regular consumption, regular coffee drinkers will need more to obtain the advantages. Scramble sells a Caffeine containing supplement called Metabolic overdive and for those of you who don’t respond well to caffeine can always try launch fuel


Whey Protein

Probably the most widely consumed sports supplement in the world. I won’t labour on this supplement because the benefits of increased protein intake are numerous. Ordinarily speaking, whey protein should help the people who are in need of increasing their protein intake. Whey protein has been shown to aid in increasing hypertrophy and strength, but has no adverse effects on testosterone levels (unlike soy protein). It is hard to argue against the superiority of whey protein over most other forms of protein during or in the immediate vicinity of a workout (van Loon, Gibala 2011).

If you are interested In Scramble’s supplement range on offer see here, If you want more info on the author or are interested in on-line training please visit Powering-through.

References

Ricardo Mora-Rodríguez, Jesus García Pallarés, Álvaro López-Samanes, Juan Fernando Ortega, and Valentín E. Fernández-Elías (2012): Caffeine Ingestion Reverses the Circadian Rhythm Effects on Neuromuscular Performance in Highly Resistance-Trained Men.
Sedliak M, Finni T, Cheng S, Haikarainen T, Häkkinen K. Diurnal variation in maximal and submaximal strength, power and neural activation of leg extensors in men: multiple sampling across two consecutive days. Int J Sports Med. 2008;29(3):217–24.
Sokmen B, Armstraon LE, Kraemer WJ, Casa DJ, Dias JC, Judelson DA, Maresh CM. Caffeine use in sports: considerations for the athlete. J Strength Conditioning Res 2008;22:978-986. Desbrow B. Leveritt M. Well-trained endurance athletes’ knowledge.
Radovanovic, Bratic, Milovanovic (2008) Effects of Creatine Monohydrate supplementation and training on anaerobic capacity and body composition in Judo athletes. ACTA FAC MED NAISS 2008; 25 (3): 115-120
Oopik V, Paasuke M, Timpmann S, Medijainen L, Ereline J, Gapejeva J. Effects of creatine supplementation during recovery from rapid body mass reduction on metabolism and muscle performance capacity in well-trained wrestlers. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 2002 Sep;42(3):330-9.
Stout, J.R., et al. (2006). Effects of beta-alanine supplementation on the onset of neuromuscular fatigue and ventilatory threshold in women. Amino Acids.
Van Loon LJ, Gibala (2011) Dietary protein to support muscle hypertrophy. Nestle Nutr Inst Workshop Ser. 2011;69:79-89; discussion 89-95. Epub 2012 Jan 18

[VIDEO] This is what happens when you try to leglock Imanari

by Matt - Scramble ~ posted July 18th, 2012

Word of warning: if you go to a leglock seminar with the most notorious and brutal master of leglocks, do not attempt to leglock him when sparring. Otherwise this will happen.

 

 

Update on our Wave Kimono

by Matt - Scramble ~ posted July 10th, 2012

This is an update of the Scramble “Wave” Jiu Jitsu Kimono.

Our original estimated completion date was the end of July. We’re gonna level with you – that ain’t gonna happen.

That’s the gist of it.

For the full explanation, read on.

Some of you may think that making a gi is easy. Contact a factory, slap a couple of logos on, test a sample, and make the bulk order. Sure, you can do that. And a lot of companies do, I am sure. A lot of companies fail, too.

To really make a good kimono takes a lot of time and a lot of effort. You might have noticed gi prices creeping up lately – that’s not only a reflection on overall inflation, but on the amount of work it takes to produce a really good kimono. Days, weeks, months. We are still beginners ourselves, but we’ve put enough effort in to feel like we know a little of what we are talking about.

We used a cotton / polyester blend pants for the Ichiban Kimono which worked out really well. It stood up to rigorous testing, showed almost zero shrinkage, and was lightweight and quick drying. We thought we would use the same material again for the Wave. Preliminary training and washing tests were fine, so the go ahead was given. However, after around five weeks of use, the sample I had been testing started to break down just a little. The polyester was pilling up slightly. Small bobbles forming on the surface. Something about the white version as opposed to the navy version we had previously used seemed to exacerbate the problem.

I’ve shown it to a few people, and our testers, and they agree the problem is mild. We could, if we were a lesser brand, get away with it. Some hardly noticed it at all. But I did, and have decided very late in the game to redo all the kimono trousers. We’ll switch to 100% cotton, the best we can find, to ensure your kimono stays tough for as long as possible.

There’s a time delay, and there’s also a huge cost increase for us, but it’s worth it.

We still have not decided what to do with the pants – they are for the most part, fine. We may offer them as backup pants or pants for those who want to mix sizes. Leave your thoughts in the comments below, if you have any.

We hope you can forgive us for the delay but keep the end of summer in your diaries as the Wave will be arriving in all its glory.

Thanks Meerkatsu for the pics!

BTW, have you seen what Oli is up to? An EPIC BJJ trip around North America!

 

Workable periodisation for MMA

by William Wayland ~ posted July 8th, 2012

This is an ongoing series of articles from guest blogger and Strength & Conditioning coach William Wayland of Powering Through. If you have any questions about this post or S & C in general as it relates to MMA and BJJ then please leave a comment below!

I get a lot of emails from grappler’s and MMA fighters asking about training and planning questions. While I enjoy helping people out, one issue seems to reoccur, most people have no sort of long term plan! People just want to train and don’t give consideration to anything more than the week ahead or sometimes even beyond the next training day. While this bullish attitude is typical of MMA fighters, a lack of longer term planning restricts longer term development as an athlete. This is where periodisation comes into play.

Periodisation is effectively just long term planning and most self trained or semi knowledgeable will have a crack at it. They’ll go online drop £50 on supertraining and never get past the first chapter. Most sports science texts can seem impenetrable to the lay person (TLDR just wanna train! Attitude) and they’ll quickly revert back to whatever they were doing, because hey it was sort of working. A lot of periodisation for mma content on the web isn’t helpful either as most of the time these are rote answers straight out of sports science text books. These articles generally just list the phases of periodisation and how you train for each often with programs. Problem here is in objectivity, lack of context and lack of explanation about sequencing.

Periodisation in brief

Conventional periodisation is sequencing of training emphasis. It is a systematic and planned way for trying to improve our abilities over time. So for example you might that involves anatomical adaptation phase followed by hypertrophy followed by strength followed by power phase etc. These are usually formed in larger structures such as general preparatory phase (general off season training), specific preparatory phase (honing those physical capacities for certain goals) and competition phases (keeping abilities ticking over during the rigours of a sporting season) all these form macrocycles which can be divided into meso and smaller micro cycles which is formed from training days.

With language like that being bandied about you can understand why the lay person can be turned off.

These ideas usually constitute an annual plan or multi-year plan, but it comes with a major kick back. Most athletes have a planned regular competitive season, with competition dates set well in advance (Often years in elite sport!). This allows athletes and coaches to build a training structure around these long term periods and goals. Most of these original periodisation structures (often borrowed from the soviet union and eastern Europe) were originally formulated with weightlifters and track and field athletes in mind.

MMA fighters don’t have this luxury, fights are not set on fixed days way off in the future. MMA fighters generally know they have a fight 12-8 weeks in advance (longer with top level pros), at amateur levels this can be even shorter as fighters will take competitions with 4, 2 weeks notice sometimes less! Additionally there is no real off season for these fighters. In short this can prove chaotic for a strength and conditioning coach looking to constantly raise his or her athletes general physical qualities.

General Preparatory Holding Pattern

Mesocycles can generally be split into accumulation (general qualities to build a base), transmutation (fight specific qualities) and realisation (peaking). The Mesocycle Sequence below is fairly useful as it can be adapted as far out as 12 weeks or as few as 5-6 weeks.

Normally with a fighter we will work what I call persistent accumulation with regular deloading, to build general physical development. I liken this to a general preparatory holding pattern, when the fighter gets a date, we then bring them into land so to speak! We then flow into transmutation and realization. During this general preparation phase the fighter will work on raising general physical capacities but most importantly strength. Strength as I have said in the past is the “Boss” physical quality that establishes potential for the other physical qualities. I honestly believe it is heavily underworked in favour of conditioning. The greater your general physical preparation is the less strenuous pre fight “camp” is going to feel. I recall Martin Rooney stating that fighters should be nearly competition ready year round.

So when putting together a pre fight periodisation plan for a fighter often the curve ball comes when a fighter comes to me that I don’t work with on a regular basis and says “I have 12,8,6 weeks to go, what should I do?” This is basically a judgement call on the part of the S&C coach as to where to start. Leo Morton put together this excellent fast and frugal peak tree which I have adapted.

Fast and Frugal Peaking Tree, Adapted from Mortons

If a fighter comes to work with me between camps then we can make strength and building a base a priority.

Traditionally linear style periodised programs work capacities sequentially, but for our MMA fighter with 12 weeks to go. We cannot fit in aerobic, hypertrophy, strength power phases into a short space of time all the time while cutting weight. Aerobic periodisation in general isn’t an area for improvement unless testing indicates as much (Brendan Chaplin wrote an excellent piece here about the issue). Hypertrophy too can be knocked off unless if structural/functional hypertrophy is needed, this really should be worked on during our general preparatory phases. This leaves the need to work Strength, Power and Anaerobic conditioning (including strength and power endurance) in the run up to the fight.  These qualities can then be concurrently worked, obviously with fight specific conditioning peaking right before the competitive event. Its worth noting that building a base relative strength and power outside of fight preparation is crucial, I often say the consistent long term work is in laying down the roots of strength so the power and other capacities can grow.

Occasionally you will have instances where a fighter will have to compete in rapid succession 6-4 or even 2 weeks between fights if they take one at extremely short notice. In a case of 2 weeks or less its hard to recommend any strength and conditioning, apart from light technical work. If 6-2 week span between fights it is general prudent to undertake maintenance to hang on to and keep the capacities you built in the run up to the first competition. It is simply too demanding to try and increase they qualities maintenance however is easier. This would be similar to the transmutation and realisation phase but with moderated volume.

More mature athletes and experienced athletes with greater training age may require more nuance in their programming, this takes both time and preparation for multiple events, so that a finer approach can be applied. The other option is to can hire a strength coach to do the planning for you leaving you free to focus on what’s important, training!

Don’t be daunted by trying to figure out a longer term plan for yourself or your athletes. Remember short term plans equal short term progress.