Call it luck, maybe. What you train is what you will use. Case in point, from an experience I had with a person that did a two leg take down on me. During a class I was teaching, some visitors stopped in to observe my class. The class was at a local college I was teaching at for years. Sure, from time to time people would stop in because this was the only class on campus, and I was always open for new students. This particular night was different though, this night 3-4 young males came in at the middle of my class and were watching and commenting to each other about the class. I stopped my class and tried to interact with them but got a weird feeling about the situation. Toward the end of class, when the sparring part came, I was ask if I wanted to spar, by one of the visitors. I felt this was a challenge and was taken back by the invitation to spar in my own DoJo. I figured once they watched the sparring, that it would be enough to discourage them. At the end of class, we bowed out, class was over, and we were preparing to leave and I was asked again. I am not sure which of us made the mistake, and I do regret the out come, but the worst happened. Once we bowed and squared off I moved first, thinking I could easily discourage him. My leg went up, half power, to feel him out but as my leg returned to the floor he moved in very fast and grabbed both my legs. With no prior training in anything but GoJu, I tucked my chin, grabbed his hair, and by the time we hit the ground my thumb was deep into him eye. The match ended that fast. Proud, no, lucky, maybe. I am a firm believer that what you train at you will use in the heat of battle, not sport, but battle. When my legs were grabbed, and I felt threatened and in danger, it was in someone elseÂ’s hands, not mine. The teachings that were drilled into me coming up through the ranks were, never go to the ground, but if you do, then you have a fraction of a second to react before the dreaded ground meets your back. With legs tied up, one hand grabbing his hair, and only one hand free, I did whet instinct taught me, I survived. Out come, lacerated eye, trip to the hospital for him, court action, with the college being sued. End result, my students verified everything, and because of the entire situation, it was deemed self defense, case closed. Did I luck out, yes, in more ways then one. Do I want to grapple, no, I am a GoJu practitioner, and my kata contain just enough to help me at the right times. Do I condemn people that cross train, no way, it just makes me look deeper into my kata, knowing that it is a cruel world out there, and in the blink of an eye, or in this case, the plucking of one, things happen very fast, so train hard, and expect anything, knowing that your mind conditioned reflexes will take over.