 All right so we're just going to keep running through this. All right a lot of times this guy's not going to go all the way flat but look at this crawl space and I'm staying in his bed. It's super versatile. I talk about AJ shop a lot. He got an ankle ride. He would just come over top of the arm right here which it doesn't look like I got a lot of control but side pride, finger control, ankle ride. This guy's not going anywhere. He fights his hand inside. He's got a wrist. He fights his hand away. He got inside control. We can always come over top for a cross base. This is a good home base if you're a cradle wrist tilt guy. We're just focusing on Chris right here again. You need to stay thigh pride if you want but we're up here in the pack. Okay, elevate, overload that far side chest big. If you're a leg rider you can throw your leg in here but we're talking about cradles. Pop the elbow, beaky on the elbow, trap the shoulder. Now once we get the shoulder trap it's all about fresher here, circle lift and this guy starts flopping around with all patient squeeze. That's what I want you guys to think about. Anytime I've pitted a guy, slow patient squeeze. So we get that credit locked up and they're sitting up, slow squeeze on the way back. Don't rip it back. Okay, patient there. Now a lot of times we'll get this crawl space but this guy don't have this outside foot back into me. Does anybody see where I'm going now? A lot about that at hand fight camp this weekend right? Next best thing, do not step in front of this leg. It's not a benefit. This guy might hook me, make things real tough for me. Don't step up in front. Grab your own wrist, let that shoulder breathe coming straight back. Same thing. You want to hook over, you want to go bottom in the hip trees, we're perfectly fine there. But I want this guy, this crawl space on me, right? But he really tried to fit me right here, right there. We're adjusting from there. So bottom guy, make sure, all right, make it only turn a couple of ways. Make sure to turn away with your shoulder. Make sure we're grabbing our own wrist, taking them back.