 virtually the same and easier, but on that one, you all won, it goes hand-wrist, right? Remember I talked about, he won't feel this, if I'm up here, I'm almost in front of him, but you gotta go out and around on it. Now you guys are trying to drag it from over here, I'm in front, he's got a head position. I'm getting around his body, Here, I'm getting around his body. You can sit here, out and around. So, that motion is identical to this one. Look, I do a lot of 201 stuff. I developed a lot of stuff from here, I feel like when I got here, I got a lot of options. I can step here, I can use my front hand, that's the one that gets me down. Right, I can use that to a woman, to a foot hooking, he posts on my head, and I might bump the double, he goes wrist, I might drag. There's a lot of stuff in it, so I don't like to just stay basic guys all the time, and that's not a hard tie, look, look, he's working it. If I'm going to my underhook, I'll either, right, just bang a guy down front head, stuff him, slide into my underhook, and when I go underhook, I go elbow against the wrist and the lat, I go hook on the shoulder, and I pressure his head, and who's got head position? Huh? Right, I have a patrol situation, the guy doesn't want me to be there. David got 201, he doesn't want me to be here because I can start dropping, right, I can start peeking through. From head to get into it, stuff him, pass it. I know some guys that just bang, they just bang into their underhook right here. Okay, I can go miss the shots up here. Right, got him underhook, elbows down inside, hands on the shoulder, head position. Austin, now you might get in this fight. It's in here playing this game with the hands. I'm sure you guys have been here seen it, right? Okay, he gets hand control, damn it. Now he takes hand position, double down, right? You think he feels comfortable? Huh? Better than he was. And what's he doing with his body weight? Lean in. Now this one's easier because it's hand mounted. That was right under knee. And you've got to go out and around. Head position, I can go whether I have his wrist or whether he has mine. It's better if you learn it when he's got yours because he feels real good. He feels like, okay, I'm still fighting an underhook, but I got head position, I got his wrist, can't do anything. Right, he's leaning on me. As this one's coming out of my feet, he ain't going the same time they were running. Take that weight away from him. Take that wall he's leaning against. Get rid of the core. That's where my bissy drags. Go on the slide in, here, bang him out. He bangs back, get him, bang him out. Hide in that armpit again. The finesse part is what? Rarely would I just get position. The greatest threat. Right, I usually, if I pick up on something when I'm wrestling the guy, whether he's got it off him, if I'm wrestling the guy, okay. I'm saying to myself right now, okay, there's an arm track later on. Get out of there. I start thinking about that drag. I don't typically just bang and go on it. I want to make sure I get him leaning and leaning. Keep getting back there. Keep getting back there. He's got wrist, he's got head position. Good to take. Question? Alright, one, two.