blackandblue said:
Last week a new guy came into our jiujitsu studio (I heard him saying he trained at another school) and I got the opportunity to grapple with him. He fought wild. When trying to pass the guard, he landed a knee on my head. And when I had him in the guard, he put his elbow on my neck so hard it could have been a strike. Anyway, I got pretty upset and decided to take it to his level, giving him my own elbow on the neck when an opportunity presented and also a knuckle drive into the lower throat when he tried to get a cross-lapel choke. I'm not proud of this. I totally lost my cool. But this guy was a freak and later in the evening he cranked a foot look on somebody after the person tapped. But what is the protocol? How do you tell him to chill out while not coming across as a loser? Has anyone else experienced this and what happened?
This problem needs to be addressed ASAP!!!! It appears that this guy is not interested in learning anything, but instead to see how many people he can hurt with his "tough guy" mentality!
I have encountered a person like this at a grappling class that I was assisting my inst. with at a local university. Unfortunately 2 things happened that night. One, he cranked my left leg back very quick and hard, which resulted in me coming very close to tearing my ACL. The second, was that after that happened, I, like you, retaliated with an armlock and choke. I then proceeded to lecture him in front of the entire class about the need for control. Due to his carelessness, I was unable to do much of anything for a few months while the injury was healing.
Now, was this proper for me to do? Giving him the lecture yes, but should I have cranked him twice?? Probably not, but until the last few seconds of the match, things were going well, so I really had no indication of what was to come. In your situation, things got off to a wild start from the get go, so the match should have been stopped right away and the problem addressed.
Don't get me wrong...I'm all for picking up the pace a little. Provides for a little mutual challenge, but notice the key word here...
mutual Before the pace is picked up, it needs to be agreed upon by
both people participating.
Mike