 It's just like a big toolbox and you're just picking out a couple tools that work for you. So don't neglect anything right away and say, oh, that's not for me, digest it by the end of the camp. You'll be like, hey, I like these three things, I'm going to work on them, they're going to be kind of my scramble system for me. Some of you guys, the length you have helps you out in certain positions where you got good leverage. Some of you guys, the shorter stock here, stronger positions you can get to, you're going to gravitate to those. There's no right or wrong. And then the more creative you are, the better you're going to be at. So now, that was near side, meaning we're beating the near side shoulder. So he low singles, that was near side. So I'm beating to the near side, right? Now we're going to go far side, which means I'm covering his head and I'm pulling his hip. We're trying to crunch him up. If I see this, I'm going far side, right? Raise your hand if you know who Jay Jaggers is. Everybody please raise your hand. He's like an Ohio legend. He's an assistant coach for Ohio State. He got his dresses real funny all the time. He was like, what was he? Like 12 seed and like 9 seed. And N-C-A-A-Z-Eb and won it both years. Like ridiculous seed. The guy was just a gamer. He lived kind of in this position, right? He does it a little bit differently. He would cradle everybody from here. Anybody could get to his legs, but finishing on him, especially when he covered your head with a whole different store. That's a real good near two. So we're going to the far side. I want you to think about crunching this guy in a little ball. Okay? So I'm stepping across. I'm pulling the hip. And again, I'm trying to beat the drive leg, like we talked about earlier. I'm stepping across. I'm pulling the hip. Now I'm not stepping to the side. His head will pop out and he's got a lot of options to finish here. I'm stepping towards the back foot. I want that drive leg knee to the mat. I'm pulling him on his hip. Not his armpit. Not as red. I'm pulling on his hip. Right here. See how my chest is low. See how my knees pointed in. See how he's crunched up. Once I get to this position, all I'm going to do is curl my heel to my butt. And I'm going to spin on my knee. Okay? We're not going to cradle and crunch him up there. We're just going to rip our foot out. All right? All I'm doing is doing a leg curl. I'm bringing my heel to my butt. Everybody put your elbows as far behind your ears as possible. Get him back. Push him behind your ears as far as possible. Don't feel very strong there, right? Don't feel like I've got a lot of motion. Can't rotate. Can't do anything. That's what we're doing with this leg. He's attacking. His shoulder. He's attacking. I'm extending him. I'm crunching him up. I'm in a good athletic position. I'm going to take his elbow. Just ripping it out. Get this angle and rip at the same time. I'm in good shape. Okay? See how I'm pulling, pulling, pulling. He almost goes to his back. Okay, boy? So I want to pull that hip so hard. He almost goes to his back. I want to be here. I want to bust this position up so bad with my defense. Right? But slow. I'm stepping. Covering. Notice my knee and toe are pointing the same direction of the spine. This is problematic. My leg gets real light here. Right here. I'm engaging everything in my leg. Hip flexors. Right here. I'm in great shape. Leg curl. Leg curl. And then I'm pivoting on my knee. Opening my hips up. Chasing the corner. Quests. Doing that slow. Side step. Hip pull. I'm dropping to my knee. Pulling the hip. Leg curl. I'm pivoting on my knee. Fix it. Go. Go. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it. Fix it.