The following post is an excerpt from the upcoming book Martial Logic by Paul Green
You know I tend to read alot and do alot of research when I'm not teaching. I have alot of friends in the defense industry and sometimes I like to bounce ideas around with the ones that I respect. Often I'll look at a thread on facebook or some forum just to see what people are talking about and more often than not lately it seems to be things like which is better striking or grappling. At other times it's some dumb ass that thinks only striking works or vice versa with grappling and that the other camp is full of crap. The problem is in some instances both are right and wrong at the same time. It seems to me that it isn't what they are saying if it's in the proper context it's that they are not clarifying what they mean to the other people. This usually results in a big long thread with people arguing when they are basically saying the same thing but none of them have the ability to communicate what they mean to each other. The point of this section is to clarify where some of these tactics fit best and where they don't and compare the pieces of this jigsaw puzzle these legends in their own minds have created in regards to grappling vs. striking.
Context is very important and there is no one catch all situation. I want to cover about three different situations where these things come into play based upon what the individual instructors are trying to focus on, or rather the group they are trying to teach. As far as which is better it really depends on what the hell you are doing. A mugging type situation is going to be inherently different from two guys at a party getting pissed off about something and decide to take it to the back yard. It's even more different when you’re in a professional setting such as police or security of some kind. These things affect what tactics make sense and what tactics don't fit. Let's take a look at each of the three.
The
Self Defense Situation
Now first I want to explain what I mean by a
self defense situation. I mean they are all self defense situations but what I
am referring to here is a robbery type thing or some type of attack where your
best course of action is to flee for your safety. In situations like this
grappling can be kind of pointless. Let me set this up. A girl is at a party
and has to use the bathroom upstairs. Everyone else is in the living room
downstairs and in the kitchen. One of her guy friends is drunk and has a crush
on her and has decided to make his move. He stops her in the hall as she tries
to exit the bathroom and starts flirting heavily. She say he's drunk and she
isn't interested right now or maybe she doesn't see him that way and just wants
to be friends. Well he doesn't like that and there is no one around so he
decides he's going to take what he wants. He just got turned down and his ego
can't handle it so he tries to shove her back into the bathroom. Does she drop
and pull guard and go for a wicked bad ass helicopter sweep? No, that wouldn’t
be a wise move for her to do. She screams for help as loud as she can and claws
the hell out of his face. Maybe she catches an eye and knees a groin and runs
back downstairs for help and safety. You’re trying to get out of there why
would you want to tie up with someone. The best course of action is getting out
of there as quickly as possible. This is where incapacitating blows would come
in such as eye gouges, groin attacks, throat punches, ear slaps, etc. The only
way you may need to use grappling here is if you end up on your back and need
to use leverage to get them off of you. Even then the right shot could get you
out of there. This is also the situation where they are the most likely to have
a weapon of some kind. If a knife threat is not already taking place it could
be shortly so time is of the essence. A little awareness and avoidance training
can go a long way in this situation as well but we will be covering that more
in depth in another section of this book. This could also be something that
could happen on the job if you’re a supervisor and you have a disgruntled
employee were a verbal de-escalation technique may serve you better. Once
again we will cover that in a different section as well. One of the ways I do
see a grappling tactic being used here is if there is some type of edged
weapon involved and you are able to capture the weapon bearing limb and control
it while you perform some blunt force trauma with the other hand. If you’re
talking about a situation where striking is better then, this is it. This is
where it shines. In most instances here grappling is pointless when all you
want to do is flee.
Get
Your Scrap On
This is about as common as water in the
ocean. Big Merle and Cletus are at a party. They both get to drinking and
having a good time and Cletus notices Big Merle talking to some girl he wanted
to talk to. He doesn't like that at all and he suddenly thinks he should whoop
Big Merle's ass for doing such a thing. Well Big Merle doesn't quite think
Cletus can whoop his ass so they decide to figure it out outside past the tire
swing where it's safe away from the pickup trucks (wouldn't want to ding
those...I mean hell it's a damn truck!). So a crowd gathers around to see who
can whoop whose ass. Both have friends there watching to make sure it's a
"fair fight." Though sometimes you will, you’re less likely to see a
weapon brought out in this situation. There are too many witnesses and too many
people to scream foul. This isn't the old west anymore. I hear it said all the
time," There are no rules in street fighting." My reply to that is
this.......bullshit! I understand there is no referee (though sometimes there
actually is a referee...seriously). However, even outside the fact that all
states have some form of judicious use of force law that you need to memorize,
in most situations like this there tends to be some form of social conduct
involved. You see in this situation alot of times the fallout from the fight
can be more dangerous than the fight itself. This is one of the ways that mma
and street fighting are different. Both of these guys have friends there. If
one guy starts "fighting dirty," meaning the use of the
aforementioned eye gouges, groin attacks, etc. He becomes a social pariah.
Rules or not if Cletus pulls that crap Merle's friends are gonna think he's a
punk. Maybe they decide to jump in the fight now and beat Cletus down, then his
friends jump in and you have a huge battle royal type deal. I've seen this
happen at house parties. I've seen this happen in clubs. I've even seen it
happen at sporting events. It's common when alcohol gets mixed with stupidity.
There doesn't even have to be a girl involved it could just be the good old fashioned,
“He was looking at me sideways." It could be my personal favorite,"
Hey mother fucker why you eye fucking me?" Someone could have just farted
in the other person's general direction. Who the hell knows with some people?
It could be a million different things that started it. My point here is
depending on how this is handled it may not be over when the fight is over. If
one side feels wronged then maybe the next week they are all out somewhere else
and another fight starts based on the previous fight. Maybe this time someone
gets stabbed or shot because egos are bruised. It sounds crazy but this is what
happens every week somewhere in the United States and I bet it's happening all
the time in other countries as well. Sure some punches will be exchanged but if
Merle gets Cletus on the ground and controls him with something and talks him
down and isn't hitting him or trash talking maybe some of Cletus's friends tell
Cletus enough is enough and they break it up and go have a beer. I've seen this
scenario play out alot as well. Hell I've done it! Do you see how different
this situation is than the one before it? In this situation using grappling
instead of trying to maim the guy got you alot further and could potentially
stop alot of fallout from ever taking place. I can't tell you how many times
when I was younger I saw guys beating the crap out of each other then an hour
later they are doing shots together at the bar, mainly because one knew when to
knock it off. In these situations you aren't trying to flee. If all you know
how to do is strike and the guy covers up and dumps you on your ass you could
be eating knuckles. No one has to be a grappling expert to tackle someone
everyone pretty much knows how to do it. Do you need to strike?Yes! Do you need
to grapple? Yes! Personally in these situations I prefer grappling because I
can use it to limit the other person's offense and I usually have an arm free
to convince him to stop fighting.
The
Professional
You’re a police officer and you've just given
a field sobriety test to a guy that failed it badly. This wasn't at a
checkpoint he was weaving on the interstate so you stop him and you’re alone on
the side of the road. You go to handcuff the suspect to arrest him but he yanks
his hands away and resists. This is his third DUI and he doesn't want to go to
jail. He decides to knock your ass out and run. They rarely think about the
dashboard camera at the time. So what does the officer do? He pokes the guy in
the eye and runs like hell screaming for help down the interstate right? Of
course not, that even sounds stupid! It sounds stupid because this isn't self
defense as we've defined it. This is a completely different situation. This is
your police, security, bouncer type stuff. It is a little different than the
other two. In this scenario the person you’re fighting may be trying to flee as
opposed to just standing there and fighting you. As you can guess grappling and
restraints become more important in these situations. I've seen people recently
claim that restraints don't work and I want to address that in this section. If
restraints don't work then every bouncer who ever broke up a fight is
hallucinating. I must be clinically insane because when I was bouncing for 10
years all those fights I broke up and held the people outside for the police
were figments of my imagination. That and every suspect who ever tried to keep
from getting handcuffed all got away and the streets are full of them running
around. Well obviously none of that is true. If someone says restraints don't
work the reply should be," no...YOUR restraints don't work. Here's
the thing with that. There are alot of really bad restraint programs out there.
They tend to teach overly complicated fine motor techniques that would never
work under stress if being applied by someone who doesn't have alot of
experience. So what happens is you get martial arts types that come from
striking based arts with poor grappling that take these shitty programs. They
can't get the stuff to work so instead of looking further they just dismiss an
incredibly important part of training and their students suffer for it and have
incomplete training. Part of me thinks they never wanted it to work in the
first place. There's a form of cognitive dissonance called, "Adaptive
Performance Formation." The term itself was coined by Norwegian social and
political theorist Jon Elster. Basically what it is referring to is this:
Someone wants something
They can't attain it
They convince themselves it isn't
worth having and criticize it
There's an Aesops's Fable that illustrates
this called," The Fox and the Grapes." In the story the fox sees some
grapes he wants to eat but they are too high and he can't reach them. He can't
figure out a way to get those grapes so he just tells himself they aren't worth
eating by saying they probably aren't ripe or are too sour or something.
Frankly that's all it is. Forget about fine motor and go for gross motor. On a
side note I find that it's normally the restraints they teach for hospital
employees that tend to be the worst.
The simple fact is in this situation if you
got someone that doesn't want to go to jail and they are barreling down on you
so fast you can't get a punch off or you got dumped on your ass because you
thought you could get to a weapon and were standing too close and misjudged the
distance you better damn well know how to grapple and if you don't know how to
restrain someone properly then you’re going to be on the side of that road
fighting all night long.
So in conclusion you can see that these
situations are very different. Someone who only teaches self defense to the
public is going to have a very different view than someone who only teaches
police, and neither of them are going to have the same view as someone who just
flat out teaches people how to fight. All of them have something to offer in
the context of what they do but what they do is different. It is a different tool
for a different job. As long as everyone understands that then it's fine. When
people don't understand that then you have a problem. When you have a self
defense instructor trying to talk about police tactics or a defensive tactics
instructor trying to apply their tactics to self defense when the rules of
engagement are different, you get jacked up stuff like a military firearms
instructor telling civilians it's better to be judged by twelve than carried by
six when the fact is that is only a valid statement when those are the only two
choices (that's rarely the only two choices). It's just apples and oranges.
Hopefully this clarified some things and when you see those arguments on the
internet you can laugh because you know where all the pieces of the puzzle
actually fit.
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