► Become a Member for Exclusive Members-Only Breakdowns: / @dpsbreakdowns
► Members-Only Videos: • Members-only videos
► Support DPS Breakdowns through Patreon: / dpsbreakdowns
► Instagram: / dpsbreakdowns
► Twitter: / dpsbreakdowns
► Newsletter: mailchi.mp/c6670b89a9af/email...
► Short Form Breakdowns Playlist: • Short Form Breakdowns
► Music: Future Architect by Akihiro Kasuga: • Future Architect
This is called Geduev's priem (short form breakdown) in Russia, because Aniuar Geduev came up with this tactic first.
Appreciate the background info. So it sounds like this technique is relatively new (i.e. last 10 years)?
Thanks. Great info
Yeah that’s true, it’s called Geduev’s !!!
@@DPSBreakdowns LOL
Actually, I'm pretty sure Achilles pulled this on Hector right before he lashed him to his chariot and dragged him around Troy. It's original name was " Achy Bois fun flip" (short non Greek translation form).
Also known as the Ms. Makhachev!
And then became the Mrs. Saldate
It’s Aniuar Geduevs technique
@@dmitriirudovskii3760 so underated
@@dmitriirudovskii3760 even named after him in Russian.
lol casual
Seems the Russians have perfected ye olde 'Wrist YOINK' technique
"excuse me, comrade, im just gonna YOINK THIS ARM OFF OF YOUR BODY!!"
No russia Chechnya,Dagestan Kavkaz King lord Region
Lmao!!!
“You’ve dropped something comradeski! YOINK!”
@@user-ww1vm5jn5h bot
I just wanted to say that this channel is brilliant.
Greatly appreciated!
Yes you have a good concept here. I just started watching and you definitely give a person a reason to subscribe.
instablaster.
I learned this move in Iran, we call it Russian ragdoll.
lol actually got me laughing perfect name
hahahahahahaa
That’s black magic aikido man
Lol this works aikido is a joke
No man magic has nothing to do with it, it’s physics laws and technique
@@THIS---GUY Actually a great deal of techniques in aikido are seen in Greco-Roman wrestling, freestyle wrestling, folk style wrestling, and(especially)judo.
@@michaelterrell5061 which means the only techniques that work in aikido aren't aikido at all lol I've wrestled two aikido black belts and it was laughable what techniques they tried to use. Aikido is a terrible and anyone with 2 years wrestling experience could out grapple them
@@THIS---GUY No it means that a great deal of aikido techniques that are from aikido come from Japanese jujutsu which was also an influence for judo, sambo, ARB and even catch wrestling. Also it’s most famous technique(I really can’t remember the name) has been seen in mma and is quite effective for destroying another persons wrist if done quickly. I’ve seen some very good aikido black belts. As a matter of fact from what I hear in the judo community a great deal of us cross train with aikido.
Mrs.Makchachev - LEGEND
That's Geduev's favourite move, i also think he started it Didn't see anybody doing it before him
kzhead.info/sun/pdiMcsWCoJyDlX0/bejne.html russian freestyle wrestling originated from sambo so alot of actions came from there. It is sambo move called venik (broom) - reward is clear win (ippon) if you stayed on your feet but freestyle wrestlers uses mostly fake based on that action
So awesome. Thank you for the breakdown. The move almost looks like magic.
Super Simple, Super Effective!!! Love this move and I've hit it on high level grapplers. Key is to force opponents to feel like they are reaching for the ground to catch themselves from falling forward, then aggressively pulling their arm across just before their hand touches the ground. As long as their weight is forward and top heavy they'll fall forward. Good vid showing details.
Is it ? It looks like you need to be super confident /technical to pull this. What do I know Tho. From a casual perspective looks effing complex
@@mg6240 i saw kids 14-18 pulling it on competitions in Russia, Like other moves you just have to train it
Wow, never thought of this. Brilliant!
For more content like this, please be sure to follow DPS Breakdowns on Instagram - instagram.com/dpsbreakdowns/ and Twitter - twitter.com/DPSBreakdowns
Best video I’ve seen on this technique yet. I’ve been trying to add this one to the bag. Thank you!
This is how to teach wrestling ! Show the move repeatedly with a few key points to explain how to make it work. Excellent.
Great breakdown. I've seen clips but had no idea what happened
Thanks mate. Recently saw the Makhachev footage and couldn't for the life of me figure out what happened.
Thanks for making this it's really helpful gonna try and get good at it
this is a high level channel, good stuff
This was really helpful. Thank you 😎😎
These videos are awesome and truly helpful for the wrestling community! Could you do a breakdown of Kurbaniliev`s Arm Drag series/ set-up? That would be awesome to see and very appreciated!
Sick Breakdown!
This video blew up! Love the content keep it! You've inspired me to start my own breakdowns
Thanks for the video awesome break down for the technique
Great stuff. Thanks!
No clue how this ended up on my feed but this is some awesome stuff to know!!!
Beautiful! Love your content!
Ive seen a similar move done after catching the push kick in thai boxing, with very similar pull across motion, although much larger. Lovely to see.
"Send me that!!")))
Got it 😂😂
Just found this channel! It’s a hidden gem, you need more recognition!!!
Thanks!
I tried this out last week in live goes and had a lot of fun hitting it in live goes.
Awesome, much appreciated!
Glad you showed the clip of Mrs Makachev
I’ve never seen that before. Amazing move!
Reminds me of the time I went ice skating for the first time and wiped out, hit my face on the ice before I even knew what happened
This is some quality content! I wish i had this back when I was competing!
Sick! Can you do a breakdown of sajidovs overhook snap down/throw by? Gadisov used to hit it a lot as well. Never seen a breakdown of it
I second this request big time!!! Sadulaev used it a decent amount when he first started his senior level run. Makes sense with Sajidov training him. Love that move!
@@DUCKemz ye coached both guys sadulaev and gadisov no doubt they got it from him all or got it from someone else. Seen gadisov and sajidov hit it a couple times on yazdani who probably had the toughest underhook at the time I've sort of hit it a couple times but the arm always gets stuck
@@GBDazzler wait till you get wet during match - then hit it )
amazing technique brother you shows very well thanku so much for this video👍👍👍👍🙏
Thanks Barinder!
love you and your channel from Iran ❤ your channel is awesome! please make more wrestling breakdown techniques.
❤️
Good breakdown👍🏼
That reverse grip on the ankle is interesting. I’d imagine that he uses that to shutdown the opponent’s kick-through to centerline to break the grip, if he achieves it. With the other outcome being them kicking away from the centerline and adding power to the snap.
kzhead.info/sun/pdiMcsWCoJyDlX0/bejne.html
Waahhh I love this technique 😄!! Looks so simple but it's very tactical. In fact, it's pure tactic and nothing of muscle, great ^^!
Aww, man. That looks like fun. Wish that was a thing back when I was wrestling.
Utterly fascinating!
Great breakdown
Best move ever can’t wait till the kids come over and try to mess with ol dad haha
pls next video saajid sazhidov, suadialeav, Mogomoidev overhook snapdown
Such a clean move!! 🔥
Awesome Dan. I covered Geduev doing the same thing, but you did it "more" justice of course. Sadulaev........that would be dope.
Thank you Brendan! A Sadulaev breakdown has been on my last for a while. We shall see...
@@DPSBreakdowns I did one but it sucked, I couldn’t wrestle until after Jiu Jitsu, you’d kill it brother! Oss
Scrolled through videos couldn't find Geduev
@@veerlaff5528 it's a Sadulaev video but BD Club, I covered it in the Islam M. breakdown, that's there.
You can do this if they grab your wrist as well it’s a little different but works as a counter
i wanna call it Reaper's Handshake
I approve
That's a beautiful move 👊🏽
Good job!!!Thanks
Very similar to an aiki move using kuzushi ...awesome tech
It looks like the threat of ankle pick gets the opponent's momentum moving away from the direction of the wrist snap - creating rotation.
@DPS Breakdowns do you think that this is a technique that can be performed if your opponent has wrist control instead of you? Or do you think they would be able to let go of wrist control and post too easily before the snap can be finished? Or even stop the snap completely with their wrist control? Thank you for the content by the way.
Wow, what a smart move!
I like how you put head tap for 1:57
Too cool of a detail to leave out! Head tap ---> fake reverse ankle pick ---> wrist snap. Beautiful combo.
@@DPSBreakdowns yes islam very smart
@@DPSBreakdowns im new to wrestling, what purpose does the headtap serve?
@@chrisXDfull distract to make opponent expecting head tie or grab then he goes down for anckle and 3 в make actual move using wrist
@@chrisXDfull Carioca😂
Thank yooouuu!
Great video
Please more breakdown like thí🔥🔥
Timing is everything with this move hard.to pull off on some opponents
Woah, that technique is so effective.
Actual skills and talents are quite beautiful
Beautiful
Beautiful move!
this move also came from sambo - called Venik (broom)
So do you twist the wrist/arm as you pull across ?
This is just beautifull
Super high level.. wish I had this access in HS along with high level coaching and training partners
This technique is not American wrestling style, I don’t think U.S. Olympic wrestlers even practice it, this technique is invented by Aniuar Geduev from Russia it’s Russian school of wrestling
@Chuppi Chuppi good luck with that bro, it’s a very beautiful and effective move if you learn practice and master it properly.
Very cool move!
Greco 85kg Belarusian Hamzatau does it almost once a match with a motorcycle grip, or when they grab his wrist. No fake, just counter pressure.
if you do the "handshake" method... just push toward that hand and the weight shifts to their opposite foot... then pull aggressively (especially if and when they push back)... look for the backside of the opposite arm as they come around, and take it... even if you are still standing you will be behind them and have "the upper hand"...
I learned that from Fred Powell when I wrestled at Slippery Rock...
it is just a variation of an "arm drag"
That move is some high level chess merdé. That wrist yank across body plus gravity downs the only outcome. The look on the opps faces is like👀
Klepanie po karku, w ostatnim pokazie to wskazane,w trakcie wykonywania tego obalenia?
Very nice 👍🏻
I wonder if it would work in mma when the opponent tries to knee
What's that back ground music called
Looks like aikido (more severe and "dirty", of course, but at the same time more realistic because IRL it is hardly possible to perform clear throws like from movies with Steven Seagal).
Smooth move ex lax.
What a effective, simple move
Brilliant
Amazing.
What a move !!!
Ótima Técnica 👍👍💪✊👊🤛
What does the head tap accomplish? 1:56
Such a bad ass beast jutsu ...
Music please
Wow this technique is very similar in taekwondo..ankle snatch..same principals identicle technique!!awesome skill here
The ONLY thing this breakdown needed was a YOINK when that move was done. Okay, maybe the sound effect for it as well. Other than that, perfect breakdown as always.
so easy and effective nice vid
Very usefull for wrestler
I wished I had wrestled in HS (40 years ago or so, I’m old now). Thing is I was raised in inner city and everybody was into boxing and karate (wanting to be like Bruce Lee but no wing chun nor kung fu around and karate was everywhere). No one understood wrestling and only saw it on TV as guys in tights grabbing each other’s private parts :-). By the time I got to HS I had already learned to box and was doing karate. I was from very bad neighborhood but I was a combo nerd and “street hood.” The guys in my classes were nerds (not into streets at all). Many were on wrestling team- and our HS for some reason had a great wrestling team (probably due to the coach). The guys on the team tried to convince me to join- saying I was built for it (we were friends while in school but). Unfortunately, I let the narrative of guys in tights, etc... get to me and I gracefully declined- though they frequently invited me to join them (they were clean cut good smart kids- I was a clean cut smart hoodlum kinda, I was a nice kid just tainted). There isn’t a time today when I watch videos like these that I do not think back and regret not joining that wrestling team... It’s no wonder that wrestling came out to rule MMA (with a little tweaking for the cage). Every wrestler I have known (and that includes through my Army (Airborne) days - yes, I did continue with martial arts (kickboxing and much later Ving Tsun) - but, every single wrestler I have encountered were some tough dudes and fierce fighters. Like I said, I regret not taking those kids up on their very frequent invitations to become a wrestler.
Wish I knew this move in high school and also when I coached, would've made more match winning points in close competitions.
Would this move work better in bjj with gi grips being easier to obtain ?
Probably ya
@Esentur Kudaibergenov youre right BJJ players didnt sprawl б they using guard at every situation
Tô it work on street u need make ur oponent fight u in an angle of 90°
Гедуев 💪😊
Can you make a video on how to defend this? I don't ever want to be on the receiving end of this lol.
Don't give in to the attempted ankle pick.... which, of course, brings up an entirely new set of problems.
@@nautifella the beauty of dilemmas!!! Accept the ankle pick or defend and get snapped. Awesome technique.
It's a common move in kushti wrestling
It's not an off ballancing effect, he's going to think you're shooting. When he think's you're shoot or ankle picking he's going to kick his leg back which takes away his base. Since his base is gone, well I suppose he is off balance but that's an over simplification. You want him to kick his leg back. Kicking his leg back get's him going in the direction you're going to throw him.
Man I wish I would've known this move when I wrestled back in the days
Well you know it now, just make a time machine.