10th Planet Van Nuys on Facebook
December 22nd, 2010 In News | Comments Off on 10th Planet Van Nuys on FacebookHey gang, Team Alder is on the social network that your grandmas have been talking about. Add us to your likes!
Hey gang, Team Alder is on the social network that your grandmas have been talking about. Add us to your likes!
We’ve added a donate button to 10th Planet Watch. If you like what you read here, and would like to donate some money to support the cause, you now can. We provide a free service here at the site, but unfortunately, even free things cost us money. All contributions no matter how small are greatly appreciated. Thank you to all of our readers, we love you!
-The 10th Planet Watch/10th Planet Van Nuys Staff
Congratulations to 10th Planet Durban on making it official.

Posted by: Mike Frausto
Submissions 101 and 10th Planet Victoria co instructor Jean Marc de Groot wins his latest tourney in spectacular fashion winning the under 145lbs advanced mens division.
Posted by: Mike Frausto
10th Planet Van Nuys is proud to welcome coach Chad Solano to the team as the wrestling instructor.

With this new addition in the mix, Van Nuys has simply become a laboratory, producing aggressively technical machines to take over the grappling scene. With Chad’s hard work ethic and heavily stacked credentials, 10th Planet Van Nuys is the place to be to improve your wrestling and overall MMA game.
With a track record adding up to over 16 years of competitive wrestling and coaching, Chad is no stranger to what it takes to compete as well as develop a competitor. He attended Northglenn High School where he was coached by two Colorado State Champions including Lance Oviatt, Terry Trujillo (3x Colorado State Champ) and Leonard Solano (Colorado State Champ). He has coached for 7 years at the High School, Junior High, and kids level as well as competed at the International level in Freestyle and Greco Roman for 2 years.
Specializing in three styles of wrestling including Folk style or collegiate wrestling, Freestyle and Greco-Roman, Chad has put many young wrestlers at the tops of their game. Currently coaching out of San Fernando High School he has taken their team to the City Championships and won 5 years consecutively, as well as sending three young students to the State Championships. (Two of which took first)
Chad is teaching the 7 basics of wrestling at 10th Planet Van Nuys every Sunday at 11am before Jiu Jitsu at 12pm. Come down and improve you wrestling as well as your overall MMA game.
10th Planet Van Nuys
16838 W Saticoy St
Van Nuys, CA 91406
Posted By Mike Frausto (10th Planet Van Nuys: Team Alder)
I try to compete in grappling tournaments as much as I possibly can. Why is that you might ask? Well it’s for many different reasons:
The love of competition – The first reason is that I love to test myself and compete. I love the challenge that competitions present and after a good match win or lose I am glad I stepped on the mat against someone I didn’t even know. Competitions are fun for me and that is what really motivates me.
It’s a true test – Competition is a true test of how all of your grappling skills come together. Under the stress of competition the true nature of your skills come out. There isn’t any lying to yourself or anyone else about your abilities. It is just you, your opponent, and your mind and it’s up to you during that time and in the environment to decide what you’re going to do with it.
Those are just a few of the tests that you have to face in competition and it is great to see how you would do. Competition helps to let you know where you stand in the larger scheme of things by giving you a realistic look at where you stand against other guys with the same experience level as yourself.
The people I meet – As with your classes and training, competitions are a great place to meet people who love doing what you do. I have been fortunate to meet many great people from going to competitions. I have made friends, been invited to other training facilities, and got to know many great people from going to competitions.
Not many people think of competitions in this manner, but you never know as far as the people you meet and how they might affect your life. I try to not live mine as a hermit and I take advantage of the different people I can meet, because they just might help me become a better person and help me lead a life that I might not have been able to lead if I didn’t meet them.
The experience and learning – While competition is a test of your skill against an opponent you aren’t used to and in an environment you aren’t used to there is no such thing as passing or failing in competition. The one thing that does always happen after competition is growth
I have never participated in a competition and not learned something or gained a greater experience of grappling, whether I was to win or lose. Every time I step off of the competition mat I step off a better grappler, a better person, and someone who wants to work harder.
Now you may not feel exactly the way I feel, but I guarantee you will feel something. You may be angry because you lost, you may feel satisfied because you did better than you thought, or you may be pumped up because you won. Either way you are walking off with a feeling, and with those feelings you will analyze. You’ll analyze what you did right, and what you did wrong. You’ll analyze what you could have done, and what you should have done. You’ll analyze the way you felt, your conditioning, how the crowd made you feel, and so on.
With all of that analyzing you will grow. Sometimes it just isn’t the same as practice. With practice you do learn but you don’t really analyze that much because it is something that you do on a regular basis. You warm-up, you do some drills, learn some techniques, and you roll. You may think about it after, but with not much analyzing. After a competition though you won’t be able to help but to analyze what you did. This will make you so much better then you can imagine.
You will be pumped up for the next training session and to drill the things that you feel you need to work on as a result of your match and you will grow. You will have gained an experience that you just can’t mimic in practice.
You may want to compete even more, or you may not want to compete any more, but you will not be able to walk away from that competition without learning something.
Here are some things that I’ve learned from competition whether I won or I lost:
That’s not even a complete list, but I’m sure you get the point. If you are worried about competing and if you’re not sure if it’s for you, you’ll never know unless you try. The people who become champions and who succeed in life didn’t do so because they thought about trying it’s because they did try.
Here are some tips to help you make your first competition go smoother:
Good Luck!
Jason Scully
Grappler’s Guide Academy
Grappler’s Guide Community
I took this blog entry from http://www.grapplearts.com/

This week at 10th Planet Van Nuys we’ve been going over attacks from the vice grip. Here is an old video of Eddie showing a butterfly pass to a darce choke.
Posted by: Mike Frausto
“Vinny Magalhaes shows the rocker sweep from deep half guard to top control and half guard pass to side control.
About Vinicius (Vinny) Magalhãesis a Brazilian mixed martial artist. He was a participant in The Ultimate Fighter: Team Nogueira vs. Team Mir. Vinny was promoted to Black Belt by his Instructors Vinicius Aieta and Royler Gracie, on the Podium after winning thirteen matches (Ten by Submissions), and take home two Gold Medals in the 2005 World Jiu-Jitsu Championship as a Brown Belt.
In 2007, Vinny would become the first Jiu-Jitsu No Gi World Champion in the Super Heavy Weight Division as a Black Belt.
In 2009, Vinny had an impressive performance in the most prestigious Grappling Tournament in the World, the ADCC Submission Wrestling World Championship, winning 2 Bronze Medals. Vinny currently trains and teaches at TapouT Training Center, in Las Vegas, Nevada where he teaches Jiu Jitsu.”
Posted by: Mike Frausto
Alan’s recent MMA victory via spectacular submission! Check back for information on his Pro MMA debut early 2011.
Posted by: Mike Frausto
Bottom half guard series originating from the “Von Flue Choke”
Posted by: Mike Frausto (10th Planet Van Nuys)