 This is going to be a real familiar position, right? Took a lot of ways to break this guy down. I just like to hook. I am swing the boot in, stand up drill. I'm doing a curl right here. My elbow is in his back. It's here, all right? He might just lay there and let me get my chicken wing. If he does, I don't just throw a half in. I literally walk my shoulder up to his armpit. I want that half this deep, OK? Then I'm putting that half in nice and easy. So I'm right here, nice and tight. Have we been here before? Yes. We all know what to do here, OK? One of the other reactions I'll get from this guy, as I start to pull this back, I know what I'm trying to do. So he'll hide his hand down in his crotch. He kind of hip down a little bit right here. Because I'm trying to pull and lean, he'll hide his hand. All I'm going to do is reach in the crotch and grab his wrist. From Michigan, he crushed everybody with this. A lot of people call this a charella. Some people call it a pump handle or a ball and chain tilt, right under his scapula right here, his shoulder blade. I'm just going to just extra encouragement for him to go over right here. And then when I tilt, see, I'm driving forward. I don't just fall straight back. I pinch his far leg with my knees. And I pull everything nice and tight. Now, this is going to be a real loose tilt, but I'll get it. He's going to flop around and freak out. I'm just going to pinch with my knees. And then when I'm ready for him to belly down, he pulls me back on top. He bellies down, he pulls me back on top. Boot comes right back in, ankles go back crossed. So he got off his back, the dog on it, he's right back in the fire again. Maybe I'll just swing the side headlock, right back to the next side, okay? So again, we're starting to find our rhythm. Like I said, Mitch Clark teched the guy with one move. One move. What a bunch of moves, huh?