 So I'm starting at space and closing at distance, I want you to get your best favorite tie on. Your most successful attacks, your favorite tie on. What you hit your most successful attack on. And again, you might be lost for the next three minutes before we go to launch. But guess what? You're actively engaged and trying to get from point A to maybe point F. Me? I'm a firing guy. I want to look on my right side. How do I figure out starting outside the tie, paring the head, closing the distance, getting to this position to where that guy under makes a lot of use? How do I make that happen? And how do I score it on the best guy? That's what I want you to figure out. This is the problem-solving partner wrestling. If we stand over you guys and give you every answer to every pass, guess what you turn into? Robots. You turn into robots. You turn into a robot. Because unless I'm programming you, Coach is programming you, Dad, Uncle, Grandma is programming you, you don't pass. So we're going to give you three, four minutes before lunch to figure out, I'm going to start with a head pair which most of you guys have never done before today. And I'm going to get my best tie up and my best leg attack. It doesn't have to be pressure release, okay? It can be anything. That will pressure release. That would just mean baiting him to an underhook and hitting him with a fireman. If you want low singles, figure out how to get to a low singles. You want high crotch, you want double, you want headlock, you want matlock. I don't care. Start with the head pair, close distance, and ask yourself the whole time, am I in a good position to attack? Because I might be thinking, head pair, he reaches, I close distance, I bait the underhook. What if the underhook never happens? Okay, what if I'm baiting here and it never happens? I have to switch gears and be like, you know what, this guy's not going to underhook, but I got pressure. Okay, I'm going to go to my next attack, all right? But with my feet on the set, if my position's not good, there's no other attack. And then I'm chasing an attack that's never there. We get caught in that rut a lot of times, right? We're chasing an attack that never happens. And then it's like, oh, I'm going to force it. Terrible idea. So you've got three minutes, head pair, work your way to a tie, and that's a tie, that's a leg attack. Go!