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Iceman Page 24


  MMA MAIN SUBMISSION HOLDS

  1.Heel hook—Grab the heel and twist as hard as possible so the guy feels as if it were going to separate from his leg. In technical terms, you’re hyperrotating the heel. Submission that hyperrotates the ankle joint.

  2.Toe hold—Same as the heel hook, only on the toe, which should feel as if it were being removed from the foot.

  3.Armbars—From your back, place your legs across the opponent’s chest, with one of his arms between your thighs and with his elbow joint against your hips. Then grab his arm with both of yours, so his forearm is on your chest. Got it so far? To lock his arm, lean back and arch your hips at the same time. This creates intense pressure in the elbow joint. If the guy doesn’t tap, his options are torn ligaments, torn tendons, or a broken arm.

  4.Triangles—Get your opponent’s head and one of his arms between your legs and squeeze. This will force his head down and choke off the blood supply to the brain.

  5.Guillotine—This is almost too easy against grapplers. The move is executed when you are face-to-face with a guy. When he goes for a takedown, wrap his head inside your arm and squeeze hard. If the pressure from your forearm is placed against the windpipe, then you’ll get an air choke, meaning the guy can’t breathe. If the pressure is on the arteries of the neck, then you will get a blood choke, which means the blood stops flowing to his head. Either way, it’s lights out.

  6.Rear-naked choke—This works when you’re behind your opponent. Wrap one arm around his neck, with the inside of your elbow against his throat. From there you lock the hand of the arm wrapped around the guy’s neck on your biceps and use your other hand to push the guy’s head down, closing off an airway. Don’t forget to hug your arms together and push out with your chest.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  ICAN’T REMEMBER EVERYTHING THAT’S HAPPENED TO me during my life. So I’ve got to thank all the people who helped me piece things together. First, as always, is my mom, Charlene Fisher. But no one would care what I have to say if not for the following people: Trista’s mom, Casey Noland; Cade’s mom, Lori Geyer; Nick Blomgren, who put me on the road to the UFC; Dana White, who helped guide my UFC career; John Hackleman and John Lewis, who are always in my corner; the guys I’ve trained with, Scott Adams, Antonio Banuelos, Scott Lighty, Ian Parkinson, Chuck Sandlin, Eric Schwartz, and Glover Texiera. I also need to thank the fans at Sherdog, whose stories provided great details of every fight written about in this book. And, of course, Erin Wilson, for supporting me during this project.

  The book wouldn’t have come together without my manager at Untitled Entertainment, Brad Marks; my literary agent, Richard Abate at Endeavor; Brian Tart, the president and publisher at Dutton; and his staff, including Erika Imranyi and Jessica Horvath. Thanks to them for pushing me to share my story.

  CHUCK LIDDELL first stepped into the Octagon in 1998 and became the UFC’s light heavyweight champion in 2005, a title he held for two years. An accounting major at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, he still lives and trains in the SLO. Check out his Web site at www.mmajacked.com.

  CHAD MILLMAN, a deputy editor at ESPN the Magazine, is the author of The Detonators and The Odds and coauthor of Invincible and Pickup Artists. He lives in Montclair, New Jersey, with his wife and two sons. Visit his Web site at www.chadmillman.com.