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01 : Jasculs
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Testimonials

I started BJJ with Jason in October 2005. I was uncomfortable going to a BJJ school and being "the new guy" so i decided to give a Jason a call. He came to my house for a private lesson and i have been hooked ever since. It was Jason's laid back personality and his love for BJJ that made me want to start training. Definitely train with Jason if you want to get in shape, learn BJJ,and have a great time. I am happy to able to call Jason a great teacher and friend.

Carmen Spezzi
BJJ Blue Belt

Working with Jason was a vital part in the development of my jiu jitsu. He taught me it wasn't enough to just know the moves but to have concrete set ups. Jason opens your eyes to the different aspects of the game and will try his best to bring progress to his students. He's a dedicated instructor and a good friend. Training with him will elevate any ones game.

Jay P.
BJJ Blue Belt

When I began training with Jason, I had no prior grappling experience. I had never wrestled, never done Judo, and certainly never had prior experience in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. Jason is able to break techniques down into their natural parts, explaining how everything works in a manner that made it easy to learn. He teaches the principles behind the movements, so that they become a part of you, making it that much easier to learn the next move. Jason is very knowledgeable about the art of Grappling, and constantly looking for ways to improve both himself and his students.

Joe Marino
BJJ White Belt

Jason Scully is a very motivated individual with a high sense of respect for everyone he is around. His grappling classes are based on effective techniques and strategies needed to excel in the sport. The classes are very organized and well run, not to mention his attention to detail, which makes him a perfect instructor for beginners as well as advanced students.

Tinh Tupy
BJJ Purple Belt

Where do I begin? I have known Jason for about 7 years now. We met doing bjj at the rec center in Howell. Since then, we have become training partners, business partners and I am happy to say, very close friends. As a person, Jason is a stand up guy, who sticks to his beliefs and will not back down to anyone. As a teacher, Jason has taught me more then anyone(black belts included) about the sport of jiu jitsu. He has a passion for learning and teaching bjj that is unparalleled. He is very patient when it comes to teaching and is very knowledgeable on the subject. I am sad to see him move to a different school but am also looking forward to training with him in the future.

Greg Killian
BJJ Purple Belt

I trained under Jason Scully for about five months. When I started with Jason I had already had a few years of BJJ training under my belt but wanted to further my knowledge of the martial art. Jason provided me and my fellow training partners with a comfortable training environment which allowed everyone to learn effectively and efficiently regardless of previous experience. He was friendly and humble from the first day I met him and had a wealth of knowledge of BJJ both in the gi and without the gi, along with competition experience. Scully was active in competitions and believed in the value received from the competition experience. He is a calm individual who never seemed to get frustrated, and a teacher who you could tell took pride in seeing his students conquer their own personal goals. I had a pleasant and beneficial experience training under Jason Scully.

Rob Woods
BJJ White Belt

Since I began taking jiu-jitsu classes about a year ago, I've had the privilege of training with Jason many times. I always feel inspired and enlightened afterward. His love for jiu-jitsu and teaching is evident; he is always willing to share his extraordinary wealth of knowledge about the sport - breaking down moves and explaining them in a way that is simple and easy to understand. His technique is clean and efficient - beautiful to look at. He's also a lot of fun to train with, because he's so easy-going and patient, and he clearly enjoys his time spent on the mats.

Stefanie Gotta
BJJ White Belt

Where do I begin, I have often said Jason Scully is a true student of BJJ. I've always been very impressed with Jason's knowledge of the sport, I refer to him as a walking BJJ encyclopedia. Jason is able to fully explain techniques and break down BJJ to it's simplest form. He makes training intense and fun at the same time. His teaching ability and character is something you will have a difficult time finding at another school. I've been a student of Jason's for over 3 years and I'm proud to call him my friend. I would recommend Jason's academy to anyone looking to train, from the BJJ competitor to the beginner. His message is simple, "No politics, just hard training".

Rob P.
BJJ Blue Belt

When I first met Jason Scully I was walking around at 200lbs, out of shape and lacking focus in life. The every day 9 to 5 grind of being a business man in the city was eating away my desire to care about anything but work. Jason presented me with an opportunity to train in his advanced class to accommodate my busy work schedule although I had no jiu jitsu experience. I quickly found that Jason was not some guy running a McDojo, but a mentor and a good friend.

In three months of training I won my first jiu jitsu tournament at Grapplers Quest. The skill set of wrestling, judo and jiu jitsu that he taught me enabled me to beat competing students of some of the best jiu jitsu academies on the East Coast. Jason’s teaching style makes everyone he instructs feel like a winner by paying special attention to everyone, not just those who are excelling. Not only did Jason teach me, he counseled me on weight loss, mental stability and a new way to look at life. I was taught how to focus and brush away my frustrations with a deep breathe. He lifted all my doubts and fears of the unknown in the jiu jitsu room which is now my sanctuary of peace.

Now I walk around 20lbs. lighter, a champion and with the reassuring fact that my instructor is more than that title, he is my friend. Jason is an experienced world class grappler and one of the best athletic coaches I have ever had the privilege of training under. The man eats, sleeps, and lives grappling which is why he will take in any student who is willing to listen and learn. Jason Scully is a mentor that every aspiring grappler should come into contact with one day.


Andrew Vuocolo
BJJ White Belt

Central New Jersey (NJ) Brazilian Jiu Jitsu (BJJ) - Monmouth County - Red Bank: Fight Forum

Central New Jersey BJJ :: View topic - Passing the Guard by Ed Beneville and Tim Cartmell Review

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Jasculs
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2005 2:56 am Reply with quoteBack to top

from Sherdog.com

From: aesopian

As I'm sure everyone is wondering (as I did), Who are these no-name authors, and why should I trust their book?*

To be honest, I don't really know, but it turns out it doesn't really matter. They are just some purple belts who decided to take one aspect of Brazilian jiu-jitsu and document it in extreme detail. Imagine if two purple belts from your school took a single subject, then systematically documented, demonstrated, and instructed on everything they could about it.

In case you don't take BJJ, here's what I'm getting at: Such a book would rock your socks off.

One of the first things that impressed me about this book was its comprehensiveness. Just take a look at the chapter index:

* Fundamentals of passing the guard.
* Passing from the knees.
* Standing guard passes.
* Defenses and counters to submissions and sweeps from the guard.
* Passing the half guard.
* Attacks while in the guard.
* Attacking the turtle position.
* Drills.

The book starts with basics such as base, posture, grips, and uncrossing the ankles, then expands to individual passing techniques, and then into all the problems you can run into when your passes fail: escaping attacks from the guard, passing the half guard, attacking without passing (mostly leg locks), and (one which I was very happy to see) how to attack the turtle, which people will do to avoid being scored on in competition.

Another thing about this book that impressed me was how it covers many techniques and positions I've never seen explained anywhere else, or hadn't expected to see in this book. Here are some that caught my eye:

* How to untangle trapped arms and break grips.
* How to properly do a can opener.
* Passing De la Riva guard.
* Escapes from omoplatas, triangles, armbars, biceps crushes, etc. that I've never seen elsewhere.
* The entire chapter on attacking the turtle, especially the section on the crucifix, which I have never seen explained in a BJJ book before.

Those are just some off the top of my head.

What really blew me away about this book was the quality of presentation, and the attention to detail in instruction.

In the photos, the attacker always wears a blue gi and the defender always wears a white. They are referred to as Blue and White in the text. If you've ever read Theory and Technique by Renzo and Royler Gracie, you know how annoying it is to try to find details in the mass of white gis, while trying to remember which is which, as they switch off demonstrating moves.

Incorrect techniques, such as poor base, posture or grips, are often shown and explained so you know how and why NOT to do certain things. White is always the one doing the wrong version.

Many of the techniques in this book are shown in their entirety two or more times, to capture techniques from multiple angles and show all parts. This is very helpful where entire parts of the move would have been obscured if shown from only one angle.

They use some symbols to mark the start and end of techniques, the start and end of alternate views of the same technique, connecting red lines to show the order of the steps, and yellow lines between photos to show that they are the same step from different angles. They also use several other symbols to explain techniques. This is slightly confusing at first, but once you get familiar with it (there is a legend at the front of the book), it is actually really useful.

Each move is shown with enough photographs, so you're never left wondering how they got from one step to another, as often happens in martial arts books.

Important aspects of moves, such as common problems or helpful hints, are often explained with additional photos in side panels. Yellow "stick-it" notes surround moves to point out details, and red warnings are posted next to anything dangerous.

Often if a detail such as a special grip or foot placement is hard to see, multiple close-ups are included.

For fast or unusual moves that are difficult to capture with still photos, such as jumping or flipping passes, they have filmed these and show them with up to 20 screenshots in a row so you can see it "in action". This is in addition to the normal instruction of the technique.

Also, moves with a lot of motion are often explained using colored arrows that show past and future movements. You can look at his foot and a red arrow and see how he already moved it, and then look at his other foot and a blue arrow and see where he is going to move it.

Simple graphics such as red circles and lines are used to highlight details, such as where to grip or proper posture.

If a defense or escape is shown, the attack is always shown first, sometimes in its entirety. They do not assume you are already familiar with the sweep or submission they are going to teach you to counter. Blue will be the one demonstrating the attack, so don't get surprised when white is suddenly trying to pass the guard at the start of an armbar demo.

You can see most of what I'm talking about on their website's sample page:

http://www.grapplingarts.net/Samples/samples.html

Every chapter starts with an informative introduction and explanation of the material to be covered, and explains the times you will encounter such situations, and the strategies of when and why you might want to use certain types of techniques in sparring and competition. They are also not shy from writing a lot of text about a move if the pictures cannot express its important details or strategy.

If you want to be really picky, there are a couple typos, but I think they made the whole book in on their home computer in PDF, so I'll cut them some slack. It actually has some of the best text of the BJJ books I've read, since both authors appear to speak English natively.

Okay, so it's a nice book, but does any of this actually translate to better skills? That's something I made sure to test before writing this review.

I am a habitual guard puller in class, since I am light and find most of my success comes from the bottom anyway. But after reading from this book, I decided try to do nothing but fight from the top for a week, and purposely let myself get caught in someone's guard. The results were great.

To give you one example, there is a blue belt who will sometimes pull guard on me since he knows he can get a quick submission most of the time since my passes suck.

When he tried this on me last time, he spent the entire round fighting from half guard and side control, and he couldn't catch me with his normal guardwork. At the end of the 6 minute round, he said he was just holding on for dear life the whole time. He was so impressed at how quickly my top game had improved that he had me write down where he could by this book for himself.

I've been asked these before with other books, here are some points to consider:

It is all gi, none of the instruction is no-gi, and many of the individual techniques make us of the gi.

They try to only cover techniques legal under the usual sport BJJ competition rules, so some things like heelhooks in the attacks from the guard section are not taught.

Despite this, I recommend this book to anyone involved in gi grappling with groundwork, especially if you find your guard passes and top game lacking.

For you no-gi guys, it's worth borrowing from a friend to read about the fundamentals of base, posture and weight distribution, and to pick up some tricks, but many of the techniques won't mean much to you without gi grips.

It's also like $20 or less, so unless you're a poor college student, it's a great deal.

You can pick up a copies at any of these links:

Grapplingarts.net (authors' site): http://www.grapplingarts.net/Order/order.html

Amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...=books&n=507846

Amazon.co.uk: http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos...=books&n=507846

Budovideos.com: http://www.budovideos.com/shop/cust...745&cat=&page=2

*Tim Cartmell is actually now a BJJ black belt, as well as a famous Internal Martial Arts instructor. http://www.bjj.org/a/people/cartmell-tim.html

From: Sherdog_Mutt

I concur with this review. Passing the Guard is probably one of the best BJJ books out there. Clear presentation, plenty of pictures, attention to detail, lots of guard passes from every position... this is what a BJJ book should aspire to be. I find that it's a good reference book that should be part of every grappler's library.

Your review is a lil' dated. Tim Cartmell is now a black belt under Cleber Luciano. I'm not sure but I believe that Ed Beneville is also a black belt now. They're very active in the So. Cal. jiu-jitsu tournament scene.

From: Stephan Kesting

I absolutely agree with this review - probably the best book on a single subject for all of grappling (and that includes all the Ippon Judo books)

Stephan Kesting
www.grapplearts.com
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