 Hey, so we're gonna talk about two different positions now. So a lot of times when we're chasing this dump or climbing the arm, we can also get a reaction where this guy will start kind of circling and try to chase him, but his arm's trapped. So we got knee taps, we got dumps. So we're working in this position. And again, I can't just do this to climb the arm. I'm gonna get put in a lot of bad spots. So I gotta have elbows tightened. I'm just climbing it a little. And as I'm climbing it, I'm circling. I'm not just staying in front. So once I get that tight part up on the armpit, that's when I can knee slide down and start to get to my dump. Casper asked a good question. He said, I feel like I don't need to knee slide as deep when I knee tap. And that's pretty accurate. Because my knee tap is kind of an extension of my slide and my dump. So that's what he's talking about. He's talking about not having the knee slide as close to get to his knee tap. And that's accurate. So I'm climbing this arm, I'm circling a little bit, and then I get ready to knee tap. It's more, it's more I'm circling and then I just drop this knee and tap. I drop my knee, I'm not sliding it as much. I'm just kind of tapping. Boom, just kind of clearing out. Same thing, listening to the heartbeat, circling and collecting the body. Now, what I want to do is as I climb the arm and start to circle, I want to kind of start circling up to my feet. All right, because we might even try this dump and we just can't get it. But while we're trying to climb this arm and dump them, he's not thinking about snapping down and putting a lot of weight on us. So it gives us an opportunity to come up, all right? Plus it gives us a handle to kind of climb. So I start, start attacking the circle, a little bit of climbing the arm, start to circle up right here. Okay, but I'm still tight on the arm. As I circle, and I'm trying to pull here, a lot of times this foot will be right there as he oversquares. I'm just gonna pull down. Notice I'm pulling him with me. Boom, right there. See, I'm still pulling the arm. Boom, right there, put it on his butt. Okay, notice I didn't come up to my feet and then dive across back into a front headlock. Everything stayed home, everything was tight and I'm circling and creating an angle because the angle threatens his position. I'm not just diving to a position. Okay, and just crossing my fingers. He's chin and tricep. I get to the elbow, it's probably gonna be kind of high. So I'm gonna have to circle and pull. Choke up on it. Might have to use my hands a couple times. Circle, circle, circle, right here. Boom, just like a low single. Just like a low single, tight here. Bad, come, come, come, come, come. Boom, cross the body. But when I go across, I'm pulling everything down. It's the same thing as an ankle pick. If I was gonna ankle pick Sam, crunching everything down. Framing the foot, putting him on his butt. Questions, anybody need to see it again? One more again. So go slow at first. Start with one little pull. Get way up. Work into that position. I got a little too extended that time. I shot a little too far. It should be almost like a drop down as opposed to a dive across. We don't wanna dive across because if this guy sprawls, where do we end up? Right back in dog on front headlock again, right? Good, and then we'll go over in a second. A lot of times what happened, I'll start circling, circling. I'll go to dump, put him on a hip, then I can come back up and sucker drag out, okay? So it's almost like hitting him with a couple different attacks from a front headlock. Traditionally a front headlock, he's supposed to be in the driver's seat. He's supposed to be dictating what I'm doing. I'm moving down there, climbing arms, knee tapping, dumping, ankle picking across, arm dragging out, sucker dragging. Now he's like, man, why am I even here? This supposed to be my position. Go.