If you have an easier time with the Anaconda, that's fine. Since it's harder to see the arm shoot through, you generally have less time to defend, and it's easier as the attacker to get your arms in position, even when they devote their arms to stopping the attack. The second reason is that they have two arms that they can use to stop your attacking arm/s while keeping their elbows close to their core (center of power.) The Darce goes from the outside-in, where there are no arms to stop the attack. The first is that they can see the arm going across faster than they can with the Darce, so they have more time to defend. You're passing your arm in front of their face and chest. To get the Anaconda choke, you have to pass an arm across their neck and outside their shoulder. Just to name a handful: turtle, top-half, top-side, bottom butterfly, top butterfly, 50/50, bottom side control, mount, etc.Ģ. Think about how many positions you can get the Darce from. You can attack the Darce from angles, and that automatically gives you way more setup options. The Darce does not require that you be lines up with the head. He can flip, sweep, scramble, and somersault into angles where he's in-line with the head, even if it's not in a traditional "sprawling front headlock" situation. That's what makes him so good at the Anaconda. To get the Anaconda, you have to have a front headlock, or even at a higher Mendes-type level, you have to be able to position yourself directly in-line with their head. In gi or no-gi, the Darce is going to be easier to get than the Anaconda (unless you're Rafael Mendes.) There are a couple big reasons for this:ġ. I could go on about this for pages and pages. Click to expand.Everyone knows I probably have an unhealthy obsession with chokes, especially the Darce.
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