Quote:
Originally Posted by mineistaken
Wouldn't they go for a kick in your head while you are underground holding one of them on top?
No disrespect, just curious and sorry for a bump 
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None taken. Good question.
Take a look on how fast you can actually do an arm lock. It was so fast that the guy that got it locked on, felt the tap faster than the ref was able to stop it. No Tap=Broken arm.
Here is another arm lock thats average speed in BJJ but lighting fast on the street.
And here it is at the kids level. Keep in mind orange belt is less than blue and blue is 10+ years away from black.
Here is a good trick with any attacker when you are on the ground. Its called a but scoot. You see it a lot in the UFC when one guy is on the ground and the other doesn't want to got there.
You can easily use it in a multiple attacker situation. Siting on your but; you can spin left and right faster than any person can get to your back to "Try" and kick you in the head.
I would teach this in class with 2, 3, and 4 attackers. Had a variety of skilled kicks, trips and moves from the butt scoot. This information isn't shit I read about, its things that I actually taught. The techniques works way easier than trying to explain how it works.
Here is a butt scoot with an attack and finish;
Now these are just a few techniques out of thousands and thousands of attack and defence combinations. These are Techniques done against others that know the same techniques.
Now put these same people against people who know nothing and are clueless on how to defend themeless. Now lets up the Anti a bit; Now put 4 someones who knows nothing and put them against somebody who weighs 220 with 15+ years of serious BJJ+MMA experience. The kind of experience where I am paying my bills and making a living teaching people how to do these things; "Type of experience."
Fortunately for me, my multiple attacker experiences, always turned out very well for me. Was zero stress and it felt like ripping apart students in a class. Please keep in mind I'm the very 1st person to try and defuse a situation with a hand shake or an "Im Sorry".
Only one time I looked for 'it" and it felt Soooo good to seriously unload!! But thats another story....
Another example of one skilled guy and multiple attackers was: Years back, War-machine at a porn party. People can say what ever they want about that night. He got surrounded by a bunch of guys that wanted to tell him "how it is;" And he didn't want to listen. He ripped every guy that came up to him. People went to the hospital that night. (Not Saying it was right) But if the people involved called the police, nobody approached him in a threatening manner or people minded their own business that night, nothing would have happened.
One very well trained guy or fighter versus a group of guys not trained; The trained guy who spends hours per day, 6 days a week learning how to hurt people more efficiently, will always be the victor.
I am no tough guy, no fighter, I just happened to 1st generation American BJJ players/Fighters and 1st generation American BJJ Black belts who fell into making a living teaching BJJ to MMA guys for a living. I happened to do it for a long time.
Just Dave