 The rush is not just the time that allows me to move his hands and the head out of the way so I can get to a leg. It also works as a good off-balancer, okay? Off-balancing this guy. There's a lot of Greco technique that we're not going to get deep into and I'm not great at teaching anyways. But there's a lot of off-balancing Greco technique where we're really dripping the shoulder now, okay? We're starting to make this guy move. We're mainly concerned today, right now, on shoulder connection, on top, all right? And getting this guy to move back and down hands to the mat, all right? But what you notice is the harder you try to get this guy's hands down to the headlock, they'll take a big step with this history of hurts. Because they're stepping, but their hips are behind them so there's not a lot of weight on the leg. Sometimes there is because they're trying to keep their hands from touching the mat, but you'd be surprised at how much people would fight that Russian pull and step in front to pose to keep their hands up and that single leg's just staring them in the face, right? And then you meet the push, right? And then we'll bother them with the foot sweeps, right? We just got done with the slide by foot sweeps, playing with that guy, messing with his timing. When he starts thinking about no foot sweep, no foot sweep, he stops thinking about upper body. Everybody stops thinking about upper body, we put his hands on the mat too easy. So elbows are tight here, okay? Punch it in, my elbows are still tight. I'm pulling them down, and I'm starting to look to pull this wrist and slide below the shoulder. Just right here. It's not like I'm keeping the arm up and then climbing up under his body to his legs. This is pressured in, shuffling snow, and then just reading that single. Getting it all the way outside up to my armpit. Don't worry about your finishes right now. Don't worry about snagging, okay? Some of you guys are standing this shoulder down to the mat. I'm not trying to break it, but I'm just turning it. And I'm leaning on it. He's carrying a lot of my weight. And lastly, when we start talking about this single leg. That's hard. Pull up below his shoulder, and if I try to shoot through his shoulder, and he takes that leg back, now I'm fighting pretty powerful. Super easy leg attack, okay? Questions? You see it again? Pretty simple. Now goes to my ribs. Shoulder beats his shoulder. Stabbing, driving. I'm putting all that weight to his back leg so this leg gets lighter. Keeping the arm out of the way until I need to drop up to it. Okay? Good clean single finishes. Go!