Speaker 1:

Better . Listen very carefully. A good martial artist does not become tense, but ready. Essentially at this point, the fight is over.

Speaker 2:

So you pretty much flow with the

Speaker 1:

Goal . Who is worthy to be trusted with the secret to limit this power? I'm ready

Speaker 3:

Ladies and gentlemen . The question is , what are the three best submissions? Now a lot of people out there, they're like different submissions for different reasons, suits their game. But in any list, many things have to take the chop. And what I thought about when I was thinking about this the other day, 'cause having this chat with somebody about, you know, what submissions a good practice is things that work in gee and nogi. Mm-hmm . <affirmative> , that's, that's my take on it. And so , um, Joey , and I'll have a brief chat about it. And I think we have some, we've, we've agreed on the universality of certain submissions. Yeah. I mean, if your , uh, Instagram handle is like JT Kim Morta <laugh> , you're probably not gonna love Armbars. No . <laugh> , be honest . No , that's And you're probably not gonna put arm bars at the top of your list. No, that's right. You know, how are we thinking of like, best how best how? So there's a couple of elements here. Like when I first started Jiujitsu, I only learned an arm . That was the fundamental move. Do it from top, do it from bottom, whatever. But then I got into this trouble where I , I got really good at doing armbars , but then I fought a guy who was hyper flexible. So I had him in the armbar and I was cranking, I was doing every little thing to make it tighter, make it better. His elbow was bending on like a crazy angle and he would not tap. And then he just kind of got out and I was like, well , what do I do now? I had , I didn't have anything else. And ultimately you will meet people along the path who have the counter or the escape to your technique. But we've included some other techniques that if you don't get out of them, you are , you're gone. You know, there's , it's not a question of how flexible can't , you can't just eat it. No. In that way, there are some subs you can eat and , uh, to your detriment. But it , what that means is you per you being the person's trying to submit them, you won't be successful. Yeah . So I wanna start with armbar because I feel it is universal in disabling someone. Yeah . So even if it were not that you're pulling out armbars on the street, I don't know , maybe you are, but if you hyperextend break someone's arm, tear all the ligaments, they can't really punch you. And also they can't really grab you. Yeah. You know what I mean? Yeah . And I think that there's a huge value in that. So even if a person doesn't tap to an armbar, you have disabled them. So I'm gonna , are you saying there too that you think the armbar has like great carryover on the street? I'm not, I've never U <laugh> . Let me , let me put the caveat out . I've never used a number in a street fight, but I have broken a few elbows. Yeah . When I say broken , I mean torn ligaments had the person Yeah . Can cannot continue. So most people will tap early 'cause they feel the pressure in the elbow. So when you see someone really rip on an armbar, most people fear tap. But if I think about one of the best competitors of all time , um, Huff Mendez, never heard of him. Oh , there you go. No , I have new generation, new genera. These new generation, these kids today go , what do they know? Yeah. He did wear a GI Jo and , uh, <laugh> . Oh wow. There you go. But back then, he's actually Carl Bat's father <laugh>, I <laugh> , I've seen him <laugh> . Um , he's Alsot and DPA's. Uncle. Uncle. Everybody's frightening. Uncle Q you're gonna get , it . Was Halfer . Huffer was the mo the outstanding of him and his brother possibly considered to be the more athletic of the two brothers. Right . The most, the most winning, like, I think he had five or six time world champion , um, gee , GE retired a bit earlier, but was considered to be, is the team coach and is more the technician. Right. So yeah, they're both brilliant. But when you look at Ha Mendez , armbar was absolutely his go-to technique and he submitted some of the , the best of all time. Yeah . And yeah, for me it's my highest percentage finish in competition. So hip extension, I like a bit of hip extension, whether it's a , so get those glutes involved. Right. If you can get that that day for homeboy, that knee pinch, how about yourself? Armbars a a move. I'm the armbar guy, man. Yeah. I've got a , um, a highlight video that I made at White Belt. 'cause that's what you do, right? <laugh>, you do all right in a couple of comps and you make a highlight video. Of course. And I think I put some, I put a dead mouse track over the top of , it's like Yeah . Pretty full on . <laugh> spectacular. Yeah. But , uh, I think five Armbars in . Wow . That was, it was one of my early comps and yeah, I , I think four or five Armbars. And then the final, I won on a couple of points or something. Sure. But , uh, yeah, for me, like from that day on, I was like, it's armbar all the way to the top with this thing. I think it's an , I love 'em . It's an easy principle to grasp once you've learned to control the elbow and control the hand. It's not complicated. It's like bend the arm the wrong way. Whereas with some techniques in the gi , you , you've gotta put your hand a certain way and your hips a certain way. And like, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying armbar isn't technical, but part of the reason why they teach it as a fundamental technique to beginners is it's not super complicated. And most people don't want their arm broken. It's only when you get to the higher level that people are prepared to really risk their ligaments. Yeah. You know what I mean? I mean, I guess for us, like triangles, were never gonna be on our list <laugh> . 'cause we got thick short legs. It's, it's harder to do. Yeah. And I guess when you're a longer legged person, triangle suits, it's triangle city all day. When you're a short-legged person, armbar are a great, you know, it's kind of the opposite, isn't it? Mm-hmm . Not opposite, but it's more armbar over trying because you, you got strong legs. Like once you clamp that together . Yeah. Yeah. Man . And when I'm trying to tr close a triangle on someone your size , it just, my , my toes don't even touch the inside edge of my leg. It is awkward. Yeah. A hundred percent. And don't get me wrong, triangle is a great technique, but what I've learned over time with that is that I was doing triangles in comp and a few different things, but I was actually doing 'em quite wrong in terms of my application. Yeah. Because I wasn't shown a very technical way. And it wasn't until I was like a purple belt or a brown belt. Back then it was like, put clothes over your toes and squeezed the out of it. Just pull their head. Yeah. <laugh> . No , don't cut an angle. No. Don't squeeze the knees together. No. Yeah . Yeah. It would , it's maybe if you're , if your coach was super technical, he'd say, try and underhook the leg. Oh yeah. That's big. Yeah. That was game changer . So I think umba also because gee and no gee applicable. Yep . You know, even though you might have to change the grips slightly, if you are good and tight with an number you , you're good in, in both fields. And I think that that, so you're , you're starting out and you're like, man, what's something I can get good at that's gonna have crossover no matter what game you play? Yeah. And I think obviously from the bottom, like from guard, super effective, from the top, super effective. Yep . Personally, I always found , uh, like so triangles super effective from the bottom. Yeah. But triangles from the top are really hard. They are , you gotta have good hip mobility, you gotta have good dexterity. Yeah. Great Pressure, tight , you know, to make it work. Yeah, definitely. So I feel like armbar from the top is also a bit more higher percentage than some of the other top , uh, top submissions. And definitely even if you look at how that feeds into passing, like pummeling for the Underhook, like, you know, like if you're controlling the hip, it's there. Yeah. And I feel like, yeah, there's so many situations where you can just engender it. You can just be like, I'm putting an armbar in here. <laugh> . Yeah. Person's turtled . I'm underhooking that arm and I'm going for an armbar. So I think the , that is your multipurpose, even though it might seem one dimensional, super handy technique. The second one I'm gonna go to every technique's kind of one dimensional. Right. It's about how you weave it together, what you count what your attack off the attack is. True. True. Potentially. That's it not , yeah. But I guess once you've committed to the armbar, it's hard to go back from there with the triangle. If you, if you're good at triangles, you have the option of the armbar . Yeah . But with the armbar , you don't always have the option of the triangle. Not always . Do you know what I mean? So stuff like that. Well , you're flying through the air . You've committed to the flying armbar <laugh> , obviously I'll turn this into a takedown. What a flying sidekick. What I was a fan of the, the flying armbar. It was more of a falling armbar. Yeah. But that , I found that the jump and the leg overs . Yeah. It kind of served me well in calm . Wow. It's , nah , it , I actually tried it one time and I, I got it. But I concussed myself <laugh> because my partner <laugh> , my partner didn't bear my weight at all. Yeah. Well they just fell. Yeah . And I , so I smashed my head and I got the armbar, but afterwards I was so rocked. I was like, oh , I don't want <laugh> . I don't really wanna do that again. But , um, the next one I'm gonna go to I think is super effective. And I'm gonna say it works really well for Gee Nogi and also m m A , the guillotine. Ows Ows . I think it's underrated. I feel like I didn't learn a proper guillotine till much later in my, I was the victim of it. It's my kryptonite. It's the submission I have been beaten by most mm-hmm . Is the guillotine. Yeah . Because I did not really protect my neck or put my chin down. I would always kind of come forward. Yeah . Head first , drive my head forward and expose my neck. Yeah . And I also didn't learn good defense to the technique till much later as well. But I feel like someone who hasn't got a lot of jujitsu can snap a person down and guillotine them. Yeah. Guillotines got that from a standing position. It's easily accessible. Yes. Right. And it's also got that scare effect where like someone, someone strong just wraps around ranking on your neck, you want to tap. Yeah . Like I still, you have to fight that instinct. Even now you're like, no, no, it's okay. You're in a guillotine. Work your defense. But yeah, it's brutal. Right. It's like some, someone that's done a little bit of rugby shows up to Jits and they, you are around and they throw a front headlock on. It's a problem. There's a couple of m m a fights that really stand out in my mind where I actually feel the person wasn't better at Jiujitsu than the person they submitted, but they did it. So, really good example. Matt Hughes. Even though Matt Hughes was a great grappler back in the day and actually was my first favorite, m m a fighter. When I didn't really know anything about Jiujitsu or anything. I was just like, this guy's an animal. He did like a one arm kind of guillotine on um, judo Black Belt. Gracie Jiujitsu, he's actually an incredible competitor. Al Maa . Oh , Ricardo Al Man . Ricardo Al Mata . He got on top, he just sprawled down and just didn't even fully apply it. Like just almost one arm and just muscled it. He was so strong. Man Hughes wasn't he ? Matt Hughes is just the strongest dude. Yeah. Also John Jones against gone . No. John Jones. Against Oh , Machida Ma . Oh . Broke my heart. Dude. It man, I you like Machida was staring into his own soul in that moment . <laugh> , it was so deep the way he folded his, he folded his head standing guillotine. That's brutal . I've been standing guillotine and it's the one of the most brutal feelings. Yeah. Were you backed up against a cage like that? I wasn't, but I was like, I can get out of this somehow. And I , I , like, I could have broken my own neck. I could not, I could not get outta it. 'cause there's actually someone shorter than me having snapped me down and I was trying to stand and I couldn't. And it was just locked in. Ugh . Oh , rough. And here's the thing about a guillotine. It actually, even though there's many skilled variations, and Giles actually showed me some very good variations to make it better for me to get better at it. I also learned the kind of Marcello team , the high elbow guillotine. Yeah . Which is really awesome too. Oh my goodness. You can just be a brute and submit people with that. Yeah. It's, you know, I think in our time, tell me if you, if this happened, if this resonates with you. My coach at the time, I remember guillotines were kind of frowned upon because it was like a strong brutish submission that wasn't very technical. Yeah , yeah. Whereas my coach would like, he was all about like triangles and inverted triangles. Like he kind of saw them as like beautiful jiujitsu skillful. Like Gil is like, ah , it's cheap guillotine, you know, just crank the guy's neck, which is total. Yeah. Right. Like they Yeah. They are rough. It is, it is a rough gig, but it's legit dude. And there's also so much technicality to like, you can sometimes just get like, just grab where you grab and squeeze. Right. But if you look at like Lockie giles's setups and the way he applies 'em , like man, all , you're the Marcello team and Yeah . Yeah . Some of the stuff that Hings done, you're like, man, yeah . There's so much technicality to the guillotines. Yeah. There's a whole game there. And just controlling another person's head, I think this is really underestimated. Yeah. Like controlling their posture, controlling their head. And for too long as a juujitsu person, I let people control my posture. Yeah. And then when I started to do more standup grappling, jido and wrestling, I was like, no, that . I don't want them to control my head and my neck. That's terrible. Actually, one of my favorite guillotines of all time is Gary Toan versus Kit Dale. It was on Polaris. Ah , yes. Off the back of that scramble. Yeah. And he, he , he's kind of got the back and then he looks like he's gonna let Kit out and he wraps around and grabs the inside of his leg kit turns in and he turns it into super deep , bro. Yeah . And Kit cannot get out. He also had a massive beard, which may have impeded him, but at that time, Gary Toin unstoppable. Oh yeah. That , that was kind of the sort of at the beginning of Nan's rise, wasn't it? Right . Yeah . Yeah . Great match. And yeah, just I think it was the first time I'd I'd heard of him. Right. Man, it's a , it's one of those things that , the reason why I love this submission is it's the universality. Gee , no, gee . M m a this works. Self-defense. Self-defense. Like I think it's a huge one for, for street like armbar not so much Right? No <laugh> . But but yeah that flying armbar on the concrete. Yeah. Like snap down to a front headlock guillotine from there. Or standing guillotine like a La Nate Diaz with that guy in New Orleans or whatever. Oh yeah. <laugh> . Jake Paul impersonator. That's right. Yeah. <laugh> . It's like a , you don't have to invest a lot to get the guillotine. You don't have to give a lot of position away. No. Whereas a lot, some other submissions like car bars you do, right. Yeah . If they escape it, you could be in a bad spot now. Yeah. I remember actually McHale mentioned when I went to one of his seminars, and this is probably something that came from Locke . Sure. Uh , he was showing us some different variations of the guillotine and setups from the front headlock. And he said like, if you get to the front headlock, you shouldn't lose now. Mm-hmm . Like, you should be seeing this through from control to submission. Yeah. Yeah. And I was like, that's a really good point. Like it is a super dominant position to be in. Yeah . You should be able to finish from there. Yeah. And , um, I forget there's a particular m m a fighter who was like, they took it like the not nin joke , like a front naked choke where you, it's kinda like a guillotine, but then you take it all the way through and then you lock it up. Yeah. So you got your bicep and your forearm like that. Yeah . I can't remember. He's from Eastern Europe, but he was just doing it to everyone. 'cause he's got these super long forearms. He'd start with that front headlock control and he'd just slide it through. It's just like, God , I don't, we , we couldn't do that with our arms. Right? No, no. Too short, too nuggety , grab the chin. <laugh> can't reach. I'm just like on the side holding onto that ear, but not the right one, the other the wrong one. Need to get deeper <laugh> crank that jaw. And that's the thing that's also not trait dependent. Really a guillotine. You don't have to have the longest arms to get it to work. Yeah . That's why I like it too. It's all about efficiency. And last but not least, it's coming in at number three. But these are not ranked, this is not first to last. Oh . Can I just add something to the illa there please ? Sorry. Yeah . I actually used this the other day and I was really stoked on it. Um, using the guillotine as a, as a control position. So like the threat of the guillotine. So I , I had a , I was wrestling with a big guy which don't come up against like guys that I'm like, wow, this dude's big. And you know, he was putting big guy pressure and I had him in my, I think clothes guard and I'm like, I wanna get outta here. And so I wrapped up a gilo from clothes guard . I wasn't gonna finish anything 'cause I didn't have an angle. Sure. But I used it to get back to my feet. Yeah . And then take his back. And I'm like the guillotines actually. 'cause you get around cut the chin. Yeah . Old mate starts to sweat it. Okay. Now I can stand up and start to work. Yeah. And uh , thing I got from Josh Inger is for sweeping, it's so good for sweeping. Once you have their head, depending on what side you have them on, you can sweep them to that side. 'cause you just force 'em to roll. Of course. And so he, he uses a lot of time to come on top. Is that that arm in ? No , it could be either. Yeah , it could be either. But the thing with that is mounted guillotine is a brutal Oh it's awful. 'cause you've got nowhere to go. Yeah . You can't posture out. It's like, yeah . Tapping . But they don't work as Vulcan. Osky proved <laugh> against Ortega . <laugh> sucks , bro . Look, not all of us have built like Vulcan <laugh> that head that neck and that Macedonian brick lang tenacity. Right . <laugh> . And also when you that you have the magic of Craig Jones in your corner telling you what to do. I gotta mention too, I meant to do say this while back I up , I said that he was , I think I said he was from Fairy Meadow and what you did. Yeah. Windang Windang . Apologies to the people of Windang. Sorry, when I haven't been called out on that yet, but I'm sure it's when Vogue sees you <laugh>, he's just gonna be flying through. Yeah . Good . Inside Lake . I'm like, what was , when JT say the best emissions were again, <laugh> <laugh> . I want to go, I I actually think this is, even though , um, I've gotta get the stats on this. 'cause I , I like to parlay the knowledge of smarter people than me and pretend I'm, I'm smarter than I actually am. Um, Lockey put out a bunch of stats about , um, percentage finishes and um, I believe the highest percentage finish in the history of the A D C was actually an inside hill hook. And that's why he was like, Hey, I need to make this my thing. I think what a systematic guy, right. To just like read the data and then go, great. That's what I'm gonna become a master at. Yeah, yeah . Yeah. Incredible. And also, I I it's, I'm not saying he inside Hill Hook is the choice. I'm just saying what I'd like to do is just text Lockie and be like, Hey Lockie , what is the percentage finish on this technique? And he can usually just spit back. Oh yeah. Only 27% in black belt World championship gear finals. I'm like between the years old <laugh> . Yeah . <laugh> , you know, like, wow. Amazing resource to have. Right. Shout out Lock and Giles Submeter Bo bo I believe the most , uh, universal technique. And the reason why I say this is the rear naked choke or strangle because it is why, why is , why has strangle become like why have we now gone away from choke ? And I , I think it's a terminology that comes from Danaher. Yeah . Danaher's. Like he calls it a strangle. He doesn't like to say choke. Choke in the same way he likes to use Japanese words because maybe 'cause strangle is actually to cut off, take someone's like blood or air supply away potentially versus choke is something caught in your throat. Potentially. Yeah. Maybe don't actually I don't know if there's actually a 'cause he's incredibly good at marketing. Yeah . And so he likes to have his own terminology. And so when you hear people you think he's in , you think he's really good at marketing. Yeah. He's the richest guy off online tutorials. There is, but yet almost. Yeah . But I wouldn't , no one watches it all. I wouldn't put that down to his marketing though . Yeah . Put it down to his tuition. He's leveraged. Well no, he's , people don't watch all those DVDs. <laugh> . They buy 'em . No, but they buy 'em because they know if I can go through this, he has, he has G S P . Yeah . Like that was like really where people started take notice . I mean obviously he already trained with Henzel Gracie, so he had things on this. I don't wanna go , I don't wanna do a deep dive on Danaher here, but I'm saying if you can look at what he has done through his kind of mysticism, oddness, weirdness, et cetera , he's captivated fighters. Like he got Gordon Ryan to come across and be his student. Same thing with Craig. Like these guys all recognized, this guy has some knowledge that where we get in this knowledge, but he's actually very cryptic. He's not actually that explicit in his instructions to the high level guys. Sure. If you watch any of his videos, there's heaps of information in him trained with him. I've never trained with him, but I have, I have bought his instructional and watched them. So I can't step further than Joey's gone. No, no, no. And and I'm not saying this because I'm, I'm trying to, I'm just saying surely he's coaching them like he's gotta be a , an effective coach somehow. They're all , no, he's being effective. But what I'm saying is this, when you dig a little bit deeper, he's, I believe he's better at the interpersonal than he's on the technical level. Right . That's my take. He's good at getting the best out of someone. That's what I believe. Even though he's kind of very spectrum and <laugh> weird guy. There's something about what he does that gets good results out of athletes . I don't believe that's because he's the single most technical coach. Right . That's me not having ever been on the map with him. That's me talking with Craig. That's me talking with Lockie who've both done seminars with him, trained with him. And that's, that's their take on it. Yeah. Which is still, I mean, a facet of coaching. Right. Not so much marketing. Sure. I actually don't even think his instructional are the best. But he has a lot. And having spoken directly to Bernardo Faria , he didn't tell me exact numbers, but he said the person who sells the most online instructional other than Gordon Ryan, like the , like the person who's who made the first million through online instructional is John Danaher and continues to be their number one guy. Yeah. Wow. Which is incredible. But thanks John. Shout out , um, put a shirt on re naked choke man. Uh , let's think about it. If we go back through all the literature, I mean, I don't know what the earliest recorded submission is. There's some paintings of people guillotining uh, lions. Yeah . You know, back in the day that ISN , I don't know if that's actually true, but it's called the mat the Lion Killer. Because if you don't wanna get eaten, you gotta jump on that sucker's back and strangle it to death. Yeah. I don't think any cat ever strangled out a tiger. A giant, a giant cat that's been designed over to scratch and millions of years of evolution to just destroy anything in its past. It must have happened to some <laugh> . It must have happened at some point. Maybe a cub, maybe someone got lucky. You know , <laugh> ? No , I reckon someone , someone had to have done it. Someone , I mean maybe High Sam reader's got a chance. <laugh> got that length. The giraffe I could see beating a lion gladiator kind of type vibe, you know, with the. Yeah . Loses the sword. <laugh> . Shout to the giraffe. Hi . Hi . Sum reader in Gladiator too . <laugh> . Yeah . I'm pushing for that. Yeah, that would be a great director by Stuart Cooper. <laugh> <laugh> . You actually have , it's like Christopher Nolan. So he actually uses a real lion and actual hi sum <laugh> has to be real. I I like the , the , the mat terminology, right? Yeah . Line killer as much as any other, you know, jiujitsu, blue belt, <laugh>. Um, but I think that, yeah, I mean I , you can't hide from that, even if it's a face crush, you know, anything if and once you're on the , I mean , and you're on the back too, right on the back. It's the really defenseless , it's the most defensive position. That's why so many fighters go there. Even still get out of it when I'm there. They <laugh> don't get it <laugh> . It's 'cause you can't do the body triangle Joe . You're gonna have them long legs for the body . I did a little bit yesterday. Oh yeah. Yeah. But I'm like, eh , my meniscus could go at any point here . Oh yeah. It's risky . Like this is , this is dodgy. Yeah . Is it worth the risk? Yeah . Uh , I think we've just seen it so much. You know, like Maso Garcia. Yeah . Like one of the highest percentage from the back finishes, right? Yeah . So many successful people choking Gordon Ryan, that's his favorite thing. Gets to the back choke somebody. I , I just think it, what is underestimated is, so for example, when Craig beat Leandro, it was discussed in the gym before he went to the A D C C , that that Leandro will not tap if you armbar him or even leg lock him, he's not gonna tap. So that's not how you're gonna win. He will eat the damage and just continue to fight. Craig's direct plan was to leg lock him, to slow him down. And on that same side, he leg lock him, go to his back on that side so then he could choke him because that's the only way you're gonna beat Leandro. Really? Yeah . Unless you edge it out on points. But that's not what you want to do at the A D C C . And that's exactly what Craig did. He heel hooked him on that side. Leandro did not tap, but then Leandro could not pressure forward on that leg. And that enabled Craig to go around to the back on that side. And he rolls with the rolling back take and then he finishes him from there. Didn't he triangle him? No, he triangles , um, Marillo . Marillo . Ah , okay . He jumps that. Yeah . Right . But yeah, go back and watch that match. It's masterful. 'cause here's the cool thing and you know, full credit, he said what he was gonna do Yeah . To us as a plan before he went and did it. Wow. And to watch it done is like, bro, I think everyone thought Leandro was gonna win because I believe Leandro had actually beaten Gordon Ryan previous to that. Wow. Yeah. Which is like, not, not not in that tournament, but in the trials. Right. It's pretty interesting. Yeah, it's huge. So re naked choke. I think if you , uh, suck at it or you haven't practiced it enough, it should be absolutely bedrock in your submission game. Yep . I know there's lots of people out there being like, you know , I'm working on my barato plateau or I'm working on this, I'm working on that. It's like, that's cool, but really this move is so fundamental. Doesn't matter whether you're fighting lions. I actually have a cool story about my house brother , um, <inaudible> , uh, Ricardo Colo . He was like the right hand man house brother. Is that like the servant? No, no, no. As in he does Samuel Jackson's character in general . <laugh> . No . <laugh> dude. Not at all, bro . That's not cool. No, bro, I'm not talking about that. I mean, don't worry. They do have housemates and stuff in Brazil, but No, no, no. So Fabio Kaloi is my, is my friend and I stayed with him. And Hico Geno is his brother. Right. And so the brothers live in the house. I stayed there as my house brother. Okay, nice. Does that make sense? Yeah, yeah . Ethical. Ethical . Sorry , <laugh> . It's not the slavery piece. People don't get me wrong here. He's very wealthy, very well established . Brazilian. It's, I they had mates, but he was the right hand man to , uh, Fabi . <inaudible> , right. So he would go and pick Fabio up or run errands for him, help him manage the academy. Like he's a very important guy within the alliance organization. This story literally came from him because Fabio didn't come to the morning training . I didn't know what happened. Fabio had I , I think a bulldog and his next door neighbor had a Rottweiler and the Rottweiler and his bulldog's quite old at this point in time. And he'd walked , he's gone . He's just gone to take his dog for a walk and he , Virginia's just pulled up at this time. This Rottweiler the dog , the the lady is just bringing the Rottweiler out for a pee , I believe. 'cause they all live in apartments and stuff. And the Rottweiler's come across and attacked his bulldog and his bulldog's just like, oh , can't do much. He's couldn't get his bulldog on so to speak. But he's just getting like, mauled and, and Fabio's like yelling. And so you got Genio ran up . Fabio literally steps over the back of the rottweiler, goes under the neck and just puts the re naked choke on and just squeeze and bends this dog's like, and he , he puts it to sleep. Wow. Like chokes it out, picks it up, carries it over to the lady and take your son of a dog . Ugh . And like drops it on the ground. <laugh> . And then he had to take his dog to the vet to get surgery and stuff like that . And so Fabio wasn't at that training 'cause we saw Herardo pull up and we're like, what's going on man ? He's like, bro Fabio's dog. He's dog's like his child. Like he doesn't have children and he loves his dog and he's now at the vet and oh , and he told us this story. I was like, whoa . Wow . It's like, it works bro. So as much as you might doubt it, that's um, wow . OG Roddy , Roddy and a giant jungle cat. <laugh> on rot while as Michaela and I when we trained at Jungle hq. Yeah . Jack's got a big. He does. Yes . Called Bronson. Yes. Bronson weighs more than McHale . Wow. I think Bronson's 70 odd and McHale's 65 kilos <laugh>. Dang. It's a big dog though. Hey, big animal bro. Yeah. Huge. That's what my mom used to say. Big dogs. Big. That's true. Big. I was thinking the same thing. <laugh> , you're gonna have to clean up after that sucker . It's , it's pretty full on . But , um, there it is. My friends, it's three best submissions. Amber Guillotine re naked choke. Now you , you may disagree, but if those things are not in your vocabulary of submissions, you are missing out. If you disagree, go on, tell us what you think are the top three. Chuck it in the YouTube comments for sure . Or wherever, Instagram or some .