Silat For The Street
Silat For The Street
Silat For The Street
Dan Inosanto
Herman Suwanda
Paul de Thouars
Special thanks to my wonderful, very accomplished and highly skilled students (from left to right,
Israel Cruz, Scott Ishihara and Jarlo Ilano) who assisted me with the photos and videos.
INTRODUCTION
PENCAK VERSUS SILAT
Our understanding of principles greatly affects our effectiveness in life and in
the fighting arts. From my perspective, the biggest error in the silat community
is that many don’t fully understand the difference between the two words pencak
and silat. We need to fully understand this difference and how it impacts our
training if we want to be truly functional-silat fighters.
The word pencak indicates the performance-art side of the coin. This artistic
expression includes various types of dances and single or multiple-person forms.
It is an integral part of Southeast Asian martial training, but the emphasis is on
being aesthetically pleasing.
Silat is the fight. A fight is when your partner or opponent is actively fighting
back against you. Silat takes place during sparring practice, fighting competition
or actual combat. It is the application of the art against someone who is resisting
your every move.
Long ago, actual fighting practice was almost always taught at the same time
as or even before the dance portion. Knowing how to fight made the dance more
meaningful. But over time, the demonstration side took precedence, often at the
expense of sparring. While pencak is great for developing strength, agility,
flexibility, coordination, relaxation and grace, it is no substitute for silat practice
if you are preparing for combat. This is one of the main points that I want to
emphasize in this book. If you want to be able to actually use your silat, you
need to go beyond just practicing the pencak. You need to work with a partner
who is not cooperating with you.
The big misunderstanding occurs because many (not all) silat practitioners
think that training their entries, strikes and takedowns on a cooperative partner is
the silat portion of the art. But that is not correct. If you go through fast,
ferocious routines and your partner is cooperating with you, then you are
practicing highly energetic pencak. Silat means to fight, and there is no fight
unless your partner is resisting you.
Here’s a motto that I devised years ago that is apropos: “If you want to learn
how to fight, you must practice fighting against someone who is fighting back.”
That is what the silat portion of the training covers. Going through techniques on
a cooperative partner is simply another form of dance, regardless of how
viciously you apply your techniques. That is not to say that pencak practice is
useless. Indeed, it is very valuable for ingraining proper form, attitude and
technique while working on physical and mental qualities essential to fighting.
But some fighting attributes are only gained through sparring. Reading a crafty
opponent’s intentions, proper timing and developing the determination to
overcome obstacles are only learned in the crucible of combat. Training against a
resisting partner during your silat practice is crucial to fighting success, and the
pencak portion reinforces this practice.
Please remember that sparring shouldn’t be an all-out affair. In Thai boxing,
which is a derivative of silat, fighters spar at about 60 percent intensity most of
the time. They do many rounds of light sparring and go all-out on the Thai pads
and during their matches. Sparring hard is dangerous, and it does not pay to go
into a fight injured. Do your sparring, but do it safely, at moderate intensity and
under the supervision of a qualified instructor. This is what most silat
practitioners did for many millennia. The resistance can be minimal, but it forces
you to spontaneously find solutions to problems, and that is what being
functional in fighting and life is all about.
The pencak portion is very important for ingraining moves, working on
physical attributes and enhancing your health. The kembangan (flower dance),
for example, is enjoyable, and the dance keeps the body and mind supple and
healthy. For longevity and vitality, the dances are extremely practical. Practicing
jurus (one-person forms) helps ingrain fighting motions as you practice your
lever positions and footwork patterns. If you are a pencak silat practitioner who
also wants to keep the practical fighting portion of the art alive, please grasp and
pass on this vitally important concept: Only when your partner is truly resisting
your techniques are you engaging in silat.
The flower dance — this is an example of the pencak portion of the art.
Sparring sequence against a partner who is fighting back — this is the silat portion of the art.
FUNCTIONAL-SILAT PRINCIPLES
There are hundreds of principles in silat, but we only have room in this book
for a few. Here are some of the most important principles for functional fighting.
BE HONEST
If you aren’t honest with yourself, you will never admit your faults, which
means you will never have cause to improve them. Teachers who are not honest
with students will allow them to think that they are better than they are, which
can be dangerous in a real situation. Honest training in which partners counter
each other’s moves results in honest assessment and improvement.
ASSUME ALL ATTACKERS ARE ARMED
In silat, you should assume that every fight is a knife fight — the attacker is
hiding a blade or is going to draw a weapon during the encounter. This
influences the urgency of your defense so you finish the fight as quickly as
possible. You also must ensure that the aggressor’s arms are always accounted
for so you can recognize the draw and deal with the weaponry threat early. If you
can’t see or feel the combatant’s arms, you can’t detect a weapon being drawn.
USE FORWARD PRESSURE
This means you take the fight to the attacker both physically and mentally.
You drive forward using your leverage while striking and overwhelming the
attacker with your physical technique. You do your best to constantly move
forward with maximum pressure in order to keep the aggressor off-balance and
looking for a way out.
You also keep pressuring with your relentless fighting spirit. Your
determination is palpable, which can diminish the will of the attacker.
USE LEVERAGE AND LEVER POSITIONS
Leverage is aligning your skeletal structure in a way to maximize your body’s
strength. This is not about muscle power, although it does help. Your posture
should be in the strongest possible position to apply that force against the
weakest structure of the attacker. Maximize your leverage while minimizing that
of the aggressor.
The farther a weight is from the fulcrum, the more leverage you must generate
to lift that weight. Use leverage to optimize your technique, especially against a
larger foe. The farther you put your weight from the attacker’s core, the weaker
he or she is. When grabbing to set up strikes or takedowns, grasp limbs in areas
that compromise the opponent’s leverage. Push higher on an attacker’s forehead
to lessen the person’s leverage to fight the move.
There are two basic, but valuable, lever positions from which you can
maximize your skeletal structure to exert maximum force.
The forward-lever position is the “pushing the car” posture in which your feet
are nearly in a straight line and you bend at the waist to get your nose
approximately over your lead foot. Maintain good posture in your lower back. If
you have to push a car, you will naturally get into the forward lever because it is
the strongest position you can assume while moving forward.
The side-lever position is the “breaking down the door” posture in which you
lean to the side, leading with your shoulder. The idea here is to ram the attacker
with your shoulder, usually after stepping inside the attack. You also can use a
side lever in a twist stance.
Forward-lever position
Side-lever position
BE AN ANCHOR
An attacker’s common counter to a sweep is simply to lift the leg being swept
and step out. But the attacker can’t step out if you anchor him by using your
weight to hang on his arm, neck or body to tilt him and keep the weight on the
leg you want to sweep. Unable to stay balanced and step away, the attacker will
go down when you sweep the leg.
Paul de Thouars and Burton Richardson demonstrate the anchor position.
DEVELOP FLOW
You cannot assume that your first attempt at disabling an attacker is going to
work. This is why you need to develop flow. A real attacker will be moving and
resisting, so you need to be able to flow around the obstacles he imposes to
achieve your goal. This is why silat is often practiced in combinations rather
than as one move followed by resetting. You need to be able to put the attacker
on the defense and flow from move to move until you achieve the position to
finish the fight. Flow allows you to spontaneously overcome obstacles and find
solutions. Apply this principle in your everyday life, as well.
EMPHASIZE PUKULAN PENCAK SILAT
Pukulan means striking with a fist. Pukulan is often added before pencak silat
in order to highlight the emphasis on striking. The pukulan arts are not just about
moving in and then throwing and controlling the adversary on the ground.
Striking is essential during the entry, is used to set up the takedown and is the
primary form of neutralizing a downed attacker. For functional self-defense,
strikes must be integrated into all phases of the silat continuum.
HAVE THREE SHARP KNIVES
There is a saying among Southeast Asian fighters that you should always have
three knives with you for self-defense: one to use, one to throw and one to give
to a friend. And they must all be very sharp! This saying is also used to describe
the concept of having three primary moves that are your go-to techniques. It’s
fine to know a lot of entries and takedowns, but you should have a few so
thoroughly practiced that you can apply them on almost anyone without thought.
And where do you find out which moves work best for you? Through sparring.
If you spar enough, you will discover your own proclivities.
Find your top three moves and hone them until they are extremely sharp. You
should still take time to practice the other moves in case the opportunity to apply
them arises, but be sure to have your favorite “blades” honed to a razor’s edge.
ATTACK THE MOST VULNERABLE TARGETS
It is easy in this world of combat sports to forget that, as painful as they are,
Thai kicks to the thigh and punches to the head often take time to produce an
effect. A groin kick usually works right away. Fingers in the eyes, kicking the
side of the knee and striking the throat are illegal in combat sports because they
injure the combatant and the fight ends too quickly. But that is exactly what you
want in self-defense. Keep in mind that you should always be looking to use the
moves that most efficiently inflict the greatest damage on a larger, stronger,
determined attacker who means to do bodily harm.
Burton Richardson parries Israel Cruz’s jab (1) and throws a devastating cross-stomp kick (2), which
goes to the very vulnerable side of the knee (3), a move that is illegal in combat sports.
CHAPTER TWO
The karambit is a Southeast Asian knife used for extreme self-defense. Here is an example of an
upward motion with the karambit attacking the biceps (1), followed by a horizontal backhand slash
to the throat (2).
Empty-Handed
Doing the same motions empty-handed, substituting the elbow for the knife, is possible but nowhere
near as effective and presents dangers. An upward strike with the elbow to the biceps may hurt but
will rarely disable an aggressive attacker (1). The horizontal back elbow leaves an opening for Scott
Ishihara to move to Burton Richardson’s back (2-3).
Example B
Armed
As Scott Ishihara steps in, Burton Richardson pulls out a karambit (1). Richardson traps Ishihara’s
right foot with his left while leaning to the side and hooking the blade inside Ishihara’s knee, where
the ligaments are located (2). Richardson continues falling to the side, pulling Ishihara to the ground
while potentially inflicting tremendous damage (3). This karambit move is frighteningly effective.
Empty-Handed
Doing the knee pull empty-handed is a different story. Burton Richardson traps Scott Ishihara’s foot,
grips the ligaments with his fingers and starts to pull (1). But if Ishihara is able to rotate his foot
toward the pull, he counters the takedown (2) and has the opportunity to jump to Richardson’s back
while trapping an arm (3). Although the knee pull can work, it does pose dangers: Besides being on
the ground against a standing, striking attacker, you also can end up in a compromised grappling
position.
CHAPTER THREE
MULTIPLE ATTACKERS
Fighting one-on-one is tough enough, but having multiple attackers is
extremely difficult for anyone. It isn’t like the movies in which the bad guys are
professional stuntmen who are paid to make the star look good. It is a nightmare
situation to have to face a ruthless, vicious, real-world mob mentality.
Your best tactic is to find or create an escape route and use it. Use your
training to maneuver yourself into a position in which you can do your best
impression of an Olympic sprinter! If you can’t escape or if you’re with someone
you need to protect, you must be more aggressive, more skillful and smarter than
the attackers.
Here are a couple of the best silat answers for a multiple-opponent situation.
PULL AN EQUALIZER
A mob attack leaves you at such a disadvantage that pulling out an equalizer is
usually legally justified. Before ever having to face such a situation, though, be
sure to consult with your local law officials to be certain that whatever you are
carrying and how you are carrying it is legal. You also should know where self-
defense crosses over the line to criminal assault. This is especially true when
using weapons against unarmed assailants.
In silat culture, producing a knife is not just fair but highly encouraged. You
can use it to threaten and intimidate the crowd or, if necessary, go on the attack
to make them stop. You must read the situation and determine what actions are
necessary to protect yourself and your loved ones.
If you are forced to engage, keep moving and be extremely aggressive. Be
ferocious. Don’t let anyone get behind you, and protect your knife arm from
being grabbed. Throw out a volley of strong, fast combinations to keep the
attackers at bay. Most bullies are cowards and don’t want to deal with any
resistance, especially in the form of a blade. Knowing how to brandish the knife
may be enough to dissuade the attackers. If not, make your attacks precise,
properly targeted and deceptive. Get in, get the job done and get out. Escape as
soon as you can.
Knowing how to wield a knife can intimidate and dissuade a group of empty-handed attackers.
In this scenario, there is one main aggressor and two friends backing him up. When Burton
Richardson believes that an attack is imminent (1), he suddenly bursts toward the farthest, least-
prepared fighter, hitting him as he runs (2). This counterattack puts Richardson outside the circle
and gives him an escape route with a head start.
As with all other aspects of silat training, it is imperative that you practice
multiple-opponent scenarios with resisting opponents. Use progressive resistance
and good safety equipment, making sure that nobody gets wild. As you drill, do
your best to keep from being surrounded and keep circling to try to get the
attackers in a line so you only deal with one at a time. If they surround you, use
the ram’s horn defense and run through the middle like a football fullback
crashing through the line. Hit and move, hit and move, until you can escape.
With trustworthy partners, you can take the intensity up quite a bit without
undue risk of injury. Be sure to have an experienced instructor there to regulate
the intensity of the rounds. Playing the various performance games with multiple
opponents will surely open your eyes to the reality of the situation, as it is never
easy.
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FOOTWORK
Langkah (footwork) in silat is extremely important for getting to an optimal
angle against an attacker. Assuming that the assailant is bigger and stronger than
you are, you don’t want to go force against force. Because of this, you must use
evasive footwork on the outside to avoid strong attacks or use precise footwork
to enter at optimal angles.
The idea is to use footwork to get into a position in which you can maximize
your force and direct it against the attacker’s weakest point. (See the Triangle
Baseline Theory discussion in Chapter One.)
There are many complex footwork patterns, such as the serak diagram shown
here, but remember that they are actually combinations of the basic components.
Memorizing the patterns is not enough. Training to use them against a resisting
attacker is most important.
The pattern applications, especially when the patterns are put into
combinations, are virtually infinite. Practice them well so that you can use the art
of angulation to overcome larger, stronger attackers without thought.
FOOTWORK PATTERNS
This chapter presents some of the most useful footwork patterns from silat.
There are many applications and variations for each footwork pattern, far too
many to be covered in an entire book that only covers footwork. But these will
give you a great start. In combat, given that you have practiced enough, you will
spontaneously combine these patterns depending on the flow of the fight.
Serak footwork patterns
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Dominance Through Footwork
I have a student who is a powerlifter. He is much stronger than I am
and outweighs me by 70 pounds. If I go head-to-head with him, I am
going to get crushed. When we spar in the clinch, my primary mission
is to maneuver into a position in which I have a good angle on him.
Once I achieve that angle, the size and strength disparity is eliminated
and I can apply striking and other techniques with what looks like
relative ease. The truth is that I am still working hard to maintain that
position, but because I have the angle, I can control him and hit
without being hit. Footwork is the key to getting to a dominant angle.
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STRAIGHT LINE
This is the simplest footwork — just move straight forward. But the key is to
optimize your force through using the forward-lever position. (See Lever
Positions in Chapter One.) Adding the force of explosively bursting forward
with the strong structure of the forward lever can overcome the force of an
attacker who is more upright. This is especially useful in sudden attacks when
you don’t have time to use evasive movement. Straight-line footwork is usually
used with the dive entry and sometimes with the flower entry (explained in
Chapter Five) in order to crash in as quickly as possible.
But even when using the straight line, you don’t want to go force against force
like two rams butting heads. Instead, point that straight line off to the side of the
attacker’s centerline, usually toward his shoulder. This will give you a slight
angle and allow the power of your body and legs to be directed against the outer
edge of his body. You can make him turn on impact, which will off-balance him
for a moment. That split second is all you need to take control of the encounter.
SQUARE
The square is usually used for sidestepping, then moving forward or
backward. If you start at the rear left corner of the square, you can sidestep to the
right rear corner, then step to the forward right corner. This is very common in
silat dance and in application against an aggressive attacker.
If you are at the rear left corner, you can step forward to the forward left
corner with your left foot, then to the forward right corner with your right. This
is used to enter and knock the attacker off-balance to the side and is essential in
several takedown setups.
If you start at the forward left corner, you can step to the forward right corner
with your right foot, then slide your left foot back to the rear right corner. This is
used for back sweeps and for evasive movements. In capoeira, this footwork is
called jinga.
LIGHTNING BOLT
The footwork you choose usually depends on the situation — how many
attackers there are, where they are, what they are attacking with and where your
escape route is. But to enter hard and deep against a single aggressor who is in
front of you and within kickboxing range, you are usually going to use the
lightning-bolt footwork. The reason is twofold; the first step has all the
advantages of the female triangle. You get off the line of the incoming attack
while moving closer to the aggressor. But the second step allows you to drive
your shoulder, often preceded by strikes or checks, directly through the attacker
toward the weakest point — the rear triangle point of the attacker’s base. (See
Triangle Base Theory in Chapter One.) This results in a very deep entry that
drives the attacker off-balance. It also can result in a devastating takedown as
your leg goes deep behind the attacker’s lead leg.
The key is to twist your body slightly so that your shoulders are lined up with
the second line of the lightning bolt rather than just stepping directly down the
first line. That way, you use your shoulders like a battering ram with a very
strong, slightly twisted side-lever position. It is a great way to enter against a
skillful striker who is staying outside. Some high-level MMA fighters use this
footwork. Any athlete who fights in the cage should spend a lot of time on this
very valuable footwork.
Side-lever position on the lightning bolt
Burton Richardson and Jarlo Ilano square off (1). Richardson enters diagonally on the lightning bolt
with a double trap (2). He transitions his right hand to Ilano’s forehead while stepping deep on the
lightning bolt with his right foot (3). Richardson finishes with the head tilt (4).
ASTERISK
This is a universal pattern for any motion — footwork, head movement,
angles of attack for a weapon or evasive tactics. For footwork, the concept is that
you are in the middle of the asterisk. From there, you can move in any direction,
360 degrees of a circle. To break it down into a more manageable pattern, eight
lines are used on the asterisk so that each basic direction is covered. Once you
move out along a certain line, the asterisk moves and you are once again in the
center of the asterisk. You can again move in any of the eight basic directions.
This particular pattern is very important for you to learn because it also
applies to your everyday life. You are always in the middle and can choose at
any moment to move in any direction you like. If you have been going down a
bad path, you can change right now and choose a new direction. Each direction
takes you toward a particular destiny. If you are going down a path that is not
best for you, change your direction and move toward a more fulfilling
destination.
Burton Richardson is in the ready position (1). As Jarlo Ilano begins the rear front kick, Richardson
takes a step to the side with his left foot (2) and begins to twist his hips and torso while leaning away
to avoid the kick. He simultaneously shelves the leg with his left arm (3). From here, Richardson can
slide his right arm under the leg (4), which leads to a devastating throw (5).
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ENTRIES
Because silat flourishes in close-quarters combat, the silat fighter needs
methods to get from outside range to the inside, preferably while delivering
firepower. These methods of getting to close range are “entries.”
Revered Filipino martial arts grandmaster Leo Gaje once said, “The obsession
of the kali man is how to enter.” Outside, a big, aggressive, untrained attacker
has a striker’s chance to knock you out. Inside, it takes skill. But you need a
method to go safely from outside range, through his striking power, into close
range where you can use your silat. It’s even better if your entry damages the
attacker.
Silat entries are all about delivering firepower as you safely move to close
range so you can dispatch the aggressor as quickly as possible. There are many
entry methods, and their uses are situational; some work well under certain
circumstances, while others work best under other conditions.
There is also overlap. There are several entries that would work against an
attacker who throws a big haymaker. But remember that merely knowing the
different entries does not mean that you can actually apply them under pressure.
You have to drill the movements and practice against an uncooperative partner to
attain the necessary timing and feel. Also, realize that even though you may
know many entries, when that clenched fist is traveling violently toward your
face, you only get to choose one. Have a primary response ingrained so that you
can use it without thought. When things go from peaceful to violent in a split
second, you will not have time to think about which method to use. Your primary
response must be automatic.
Here are some of the most effective and functional entries from silat. If you
want to get to close range where, as Paul de Thouars would say, “all guns can
fire,” then you need solid entries, preferably those that include firepower. Hone
them to a fine edge so that you can dictate the range at which the fight takes
place.
THE DIVE
The dive entry is a simple, universal entry. Universal means that it works
against almost any type of attack: straight punches, swings, elbows, grabs and
even blunt weapon attacks. The dive gets you into close quarters safely, in a
hurry and with no reliance on fine-motor skills or impeccable timing.
Answering fast, powerful punches with a parry would require a lot of skill,
and when an attacker suddenly pounces on you, it is very difficult to use
parrying tactics. If the attack occurs at night or in low light, you may not be able
to see the punches coming. The dive takes all this into account by creating a
structure that protects your head as you pass through punching range into close
quarters. It is so incredibly simple that its power as a self-defense tool is often
overlooked.
When you feel the attacker move toward you aggressively, drop your head and
extend your arms in a dive-like configuration and charge in with a forward-lever
stance. The opponent’s punch, elbow, bottle or rock will deflect off your arms as
you slam into close range. Now you are in your territory where you can strike,
clinch or go directly for a takedown.
When you dive, you will either have one arm on each side of your opponent’s
neck or you will have both arms on one side of his neck. This can happen by
design, if you have time to think, or by chance. For example, if you favor the
Thai neck clinch, you will prefer to dive with one arm on either side of the neck
so that you are already set to attain the position. But in a surprise attack, you
dive and flow from wherever you are.
In the dive, it is very important to keep a slight bend in your elbows so your
forearms are in a diagonal line when you enter. If your forearms are horizontal,
your arms may slide over the aggressor’s shoulder and he can grab you in a body
lock or end up at your back. Keep your elbows down so they touch the attacker’s
upper chest. This will surprise the attacker, stop the person’s forward momentum
and keep the person in front of you.
When doing the basic version, you should move into a strong forward-lever
position and shock the attacker with the impact of the dive. You also can alter the
structure to deliver firepower during the entry. A simple adjustment is to bend
the inside arm so that you deliver a forearm or elbow strike with the dive.
You also can use the dive structure to slam your palms into the face of the
aggressor, possibly driving your thumbs to the eyes, as well. It is a fast, simple,
extremely damaging way to enter that doesn’t take a high level of skill. But it
does require lots of safe, realistic practice so you respond automatically. The
dive entry should be one of your most practiced moves. It is tempting to only
practice the more complicated entries, or those that cross the line into being
performance art that only works with a cooperative partner. But if you are
training yourself and your students for functional self-defense, be sure to work
your basics each session.
Burton Richardson sees that Scott Ishihara is attacking with a stick (1). Richardson confronts the
attack by dropping his chin and preparing for the dive entry (2), using both palms on Ishihara’s face
for a jarring impact (3).
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THAI COVER
This is an arm configuration that is used extensively in muay Thai kickboxing.
In the sport, combatants generally use this to ward off punches while staying at a
range to return kicks or knees. In the silat origins, it would also be used to enter
deep on an adversary to attempt a takedown.
Put your lead hand behind your head and bring your forearm in snug against
your ear. If your forearm is too high, there will be space for a closed fist to get
through and hit you hard. Keep your hand low below the base of your skull and
the cover tight. Be sure that your elbow does not point outward but instead is in
front of your face. This closes the line for straight punches.
Extend your other arm with your palm open and fingers up to avoid getting
them sprained. The lead side is similar to a one-armed ram’s horn, and the other
side is similar to a one-armed dive. Together, they make a strong structure for
keeping punches and elbows off your head as you move in to take control of the
fight.
The great benefit of this entry structure is that if you don’t quite make it all the
way in on the first movement, you are still covered quite well. You can throw
kicks and make adjustments while deflecting punches until you can get to your
preferred range. It works great in the incredibly rigorous world of muay Thai,
and it can work for you in a self-defense situation.
Israel Cruz swings (1). Burton Richardson uses the Thai cover to block the punch while using his
right hand to keep enough distance (2) to set up a strong knee strike (3).
FLOWER
This entry is called the flower because of the corresponding dance movement.
In the dance, the hands start together, travel upward and bloom open in opposite
directions. For fighting, the hands move apart as one hand blocks and the other
hits, checks or sometimes blocks, like against a two-hand push.
If a right swing comes in, the left arm comes up and toward the incoming arm.
The forearm torques outward just as contact is made to add extra velocity to the
blocking surface. That extra torque makes a noticeable difference in the power
generated, meaning that you don’t only stop an incoming blow but possibly
inflict significant pain and damage to the aggressor’s arm. This is why the hands
and forearms in the dances often rotate and torque. It looks beautiful, but it is
also quite applicable if you understand the movement and have practiced well.
As the blocking arm is extending outward, the other hand is exploding
forward, usually toward the face. “Hand” is preferred to “fist” in that sentence
because it affords a variety of tools that you can use with the same motion. You
can punch with a closed fist, strike with an open hand, gouge at the eyes or use
any other hand configuration you prefer. The idea of the flower is that you hit
while you block before the attacker has a chance to throw a second strike.
You also can use interceptive timing with the flower. If you perceive the
aggressor is preparing to attack, like in rearing back a fist before throwing a
haymaker, you can hit first with the flower entry, keeping your blocking hand
there in case the attacker’s blow follows through.
The flower entry is very powerful and quite surprising to an assailant. Practice
it well because you may be able to use the flower entry to end a fight before it
even gets going.
The flower movement is often seen in Southeast Asian dances.
This is the flower motion in action. Burton Richardson is in a ready position against an aggressor (1).
When Jarlo Ilano swings, Richardson uses the flower entry to block and strike with an open palm
simultaneously (2).
Burton Richardson is in the ready position (1). Israel Cruz fires a jab, but Richardson uses the slap-
and-strike entry to block the punch while delivering a straight punch of his own (2). To acquire the
timing necessary to pull this off, students must do a lot of sparring.
DOUBLE TRAP
This is a very simple entry used against someone who has his hands up in a
boxing posture. Move in and jerk both the adversary’s wrists down to open him
up to a head butt, elbow, slap to the groin or takedown. It is suggested that you
slip your head outside the aggressor’s arms as you make the entry — in case he
punches as you step forward. Taught by tuhon Dan Inosanto since at least 1980,
this technique has recently started appearing in UFC fights. It’s usually followed
with an elbow. The double trap is a great way to enter with firepower.
Burton Richardson is in the ready position (1). Because Scott Ishihara’s hands are up in a fighting
stance, Richardson uses the female triangle footwork to move closer while getting his head off the line
of Ishihara’s punches (2). Getting his head out of the way of the aggressor’s strikes is critical and
allows Richardson to safely apply the double-trap entry, followed immediately with a strong elbow
(3).
THREE-COUNT
This aggressive entry can be used from outside or inside the punching arm,
against straight or curved punches. The key here is ferocious commitment to the
entry. You must overwhelm the attacker with speed and forward pressure.
The movement is basically the same as that used in many double-sword or
double-stick stroking patterns. If parrying a left straight punch from the outside,
your right hand parries across, followed immediately by your left hand, which
comes up from under your right arm. These first two movements are used to
blast the punching arm aside, leaving an opening for the right hand to attack. The
movement is done in an extremely fast and powerful rhythm. You can’t “patty
cake” the entry because you will get blasted by the attacker’s second punch. This
entry needs to be done with utter domination.
The first two movements blast the incoming arm to the side, but the three-
count entry works even better when that second hand is driving in toward the
attacker’s face. Think of how fast a jab-cross comes in. If you wait until the third
beat of your entry to attack, you may be eating that cross. You want to hit on that
second motion to at least disrupt his balance so he can’t fire a good second
attack. The third movement, which can be a backhand or a forehand, continues
the counter-assault and sets the aggressor up for your following moves.
To practice the three-count entry, Inosanto would have students put on boxing
gloves and have partners throw full-speed punches. At first, everyone was
surprised that the entry wasn’t as easy as expected. But after several sessions of
this drill, the students improved dramatically and gained timing and attitude.
Spar it and you will understand how you need to really take over and enter deep
with the three-count to make it work. In true silat fashion, you must crash that
line.
The three-count is particularly useful when an aggressor attacks from the side
because regular parries and blocks do not work as well. The compound effect of
the three-count entry is a great solution for rear attacks, too.
Burton Richardson is lucky to see that Jarlo Ilano is attacking from the rear (1). Richardson ducks
his chin and uses his right-hand parry (2). His left follows immediately to also block the arm (3).
These two motions happen within a fraction of a second. In this instance, Richardson opts to use his
right elbow strike as the third motion of the three-count (4).
TAKEDOWNS
Takedowns are extremely important in silat. The attitude of the silat fighter is
to put the attacker on the ground as quickly as possible to take away many of his
tools, put him in a vulnerable position and possibly injure him as he hits the
ground. Remember that sports such as wrestling and judo limit the types of
takedowns to ensure the safety of the combatants. The sports avoid manipulating
the joints of the neck, back or knees to avoid crippling injuries. Throws that land
the opponent in a dangerous position are also illegal. But silat is designed for use
when your life or the lives of your loved ones are at stake. The most injurious
throws are prioritized.
Let me emphasize here (and I will point out again later when detailing the
more dangerous takedowns) that you must be extremely careful when practicing
these moves! You can seriously injure your partner with these takedowns, even
when training slowly. When practicing the most dangerous throws in sparring, it
is best to just get into a position in which you could apply the takedown without
following through with the actual finish. Safety first!
One word to keep in mind as you practice the individual takedowns is “flow.”
Sometimes, you go for a throw and you make it happen. Other times, you have
to feel what the opponent is giving you. The opponent’s counter to one takedown
usually leaves an opening to another. You may start a head tilt and the opponent
swings his left leg back and around for balance, but that gives you the back
sweep. This is flow! Stay on the offense long enough with forward pressure and
you will find a place to move into a heavy takedown.
There are so many silat throws and variations that we don’t have nearly
enough space in this book to cover all of them. We will prioritize those that are
simplest to apply yet devastatingly impactful against a fully resisting opponent.
HEAD TILT
The tarik kepala (head tilt) is extremely simple and has worked on numerous
occasions, including many times in all-out stick fights as well as in moderate-
intensity sparring. One specific instance was a stick-fighting match in the
Philippines against the then-world champion, which resulted in the match being
stopped.
The head tilt is a must-have takedown for your arsenal. Silat students who are
in law enforcement have used this technique successfully to take down suspects
while retaining control without causing injury. One such student reports that he
has used the head tilt at least 20 times on the streets of New York City to make
arrests. Assuredly, this simple takedown works very well. But as with all the
throws, the mechanics are very important for maximum efficiency.
The opponent must be in a somewhat upright position. (Another type of
takedown would be more successful if the person is bent over.) The key in tarik
kepala is to tilt the head to the rear, and when the back of the head (occipital) is
oriented downward, push straight down, trying to drive the opponent’s head into
the ground. Don’t just push the head backward because the opponent can walk
back out of it. You want the opponent in a severe backbend with locked-up
vertebrae. The neck and spine bind up and the aggressor experiences a very
uncomfortable fall. Do this takedown slowly in practice and be very controlled
with it in sparring. But in self-defense, apply it explosively.
Although not necessary, it helps to block the opponent’s lower back to keep
the person from walking away and out of the throw. Even better than blocking
the opponent’s lower back, you can slap the person’s kidney and grab skin to
move the hips forward.
Jarlo Ilano fires a left hook (1). Burton Richardson uses the flower entry and checks Ilano’s rear
hand while grabbing behind his neck to set up a strong head butt (2-3). Richardson slams his right
palm into Ilano’s upper face (4), shoves backward (5) and then down for the head-tilt takedown (6).
THROAT GRAB
The tenggorokan genggam (throat grab) is another very simple takedown that
works well. You simply grab the opponent’s throat, block the lower back or leg,
and drive through with forward pressure. The aggressor is bent backward and
falls down. Simple. This is an easier takedown than the head tilt against a taller
assailant, and you can better control the way the adversary lands and avoid
injuring the person. In a self-defense situation, you will drive the assailant down
hard into the ground.
Push upward and backward at the same time to get the aggressor up on his
toes, and use forward pressure to follow through with the throw. If you just push
straight back, it is much easier to counter. Another great benefit of the throat
grab is that you can do it with relative safety in sparring, so you get more
repetitions in while under the pressure of a resisting opponent. That ingrains the
move.
This move can work even in sparring against experienced grapplers who are
larger and stronger than you. The throat grab comes as a surprise. When the
grappler straightens up to try to remove your hand, down he goes.
Burton Richardson uses the flower entry against Scott Ishihara’s rear punch (1). Richardson
ballistically strikes/grabs Ishihara’s throat and drives him backward (2). Richardson continues the
forward pressure while slapping Ishihara’s lower back, which keeps Ishihara from stepping back to
counter the pressure (3). Richardson finishes the takedown, slamming Ishihara to his back (4-5).
HEAD TWIST
Again, we are going for head control to secure a simple takedown. Note that
the previous head-tilt and throat-grab takedowns are ways to control the head.
That old saying, “where the head goes the body must follow,” is certainly true.
The head and neck of a very heavy opponent are vulnerable, even with a base
that is difficult to upset.
The puter kepala (head twist) takedown requires more control of the head
before applying, while the head tilt and throat grab are done more ballistically.
But once you have control of the head with both hands, twisting in the correct
direction with proper footwork makes for a spectacular takedown. When done at
full speed, both the adversary’s feet often come off the ground. A student who is
very proficient with this takedown once used the neck-clinch version several
times during hard sparring in his JKD Unlimited instructor test. He later became
a police officer and uses it routinely against combative suspects who are much,
much bigger and stronger than he is. He has gotten great results in the field with
the head-twist takedown.
To secure the head, the opponent must be bent over a bit. You can force
bending at the waist with groin strikes, a partial sweep or by pushing and
pulling. Be sure your head control is very tight because you don’t want the
opponent slipping out.
There are several ways to secure the head. You can use a neck clinch, which is
very popular in Thai boxing, grab the chin with one hand and the hair at the back
of the head with the other, or just grab the side of the head with both your hands.
You also can cross your arms and apply a reverse neck clinch.
To throw the aggressor to your left, step back with your left foot while
keeping your upper body close to the head as you keep the pressure on by using
your bodyweight. Swing your upper body back toward your left foot while
twisting the opponent’s head, right ear facing the ground and pulling the head
diagonally down toward your left foot (extremely important for off-balancing).
This provides maximum torque and keeps the opponent from being able to step
forward for balance. A horizontal motion allows the aggressor to take a step and
re-balance. A diagonal drive downward places the aggressor’s weight on the
right foot, anchoring it in place, and the person flies.
Burton Richardson uses the flower entry against Israel Cruz’s two-hand shove (1). This gives
Richardson inside position for the neck clinch and head butt (2). Richardson circles his right leg
behind to use his bodyweight to twist Cruz’s head and pull him off-balance (3-4). Richardson slams
Cruz to the ground (5-6).
CHIN GRAB
This is a variation of the head twist, but it comes from a different position.
When the opponent is bent over, you can reach over the back of the head to
secure the genggam dagu (chin grab) position. Put downward pressure on the
attacker with your chest, and keep your forearm high on the head so the person
can’t pull out of the position. Lean away and twist the head by pulling the chin
up and around. Keep your forearm stuck to the back of the aggressor’s head and
travel away while stepping to the side, dropping your body and pulling in a tight
circle. Push on the opponent’s far shoulder to keep the person from spinning out
of the takedown, and pull until the person is forced to fall onto his back.
Avoid doing this takedown in sparring because the move twists the vertebrae
and can cause damage to people who do not have a very strong, highly
conditioned neck. Get to the position, feel how you would start the throw, then
let go and move on. It is highly effective. As an example of its effectiveness, a
jiu-jitsu fighter at the Abu Dhabi Combat Club Submission Wrestling World
Championship once used a variation of this takedown to put a great wrestler on
his back.
From the double-biceps grab position, Burton Richardson throws a knee to the groin, which bends
Israel Cruz over (1-2). This gives Richardson the opportunity to reach over Cruz’s head and grip his
chin (3). Richardson steps back to the side and pulls Cruz’s chin to twist his head while pushing on
the shoulder to keep Cruz from spinning out (4). Richardson slams Cruz to the ground and takes the
top position (5-6).
CRADLE THROW
This is a great example of a throw designed to injure the opponent when he
hits the ground. The angkat banting (cradle throw) depends on lifting one of the
opponent’s legs off the ground while you are outside of that leg. Your other hand
goes around the opponent’s back at the waist. Bend your legs to get your hips
under the opponent’s and explode upward, leaning back while lifting.
It is important to lean back and pull the aggressor over you so you’re using
your legs to carry the weight. If you are bent over and try to lift, you will be
relying on your lower back. Your lower back is weaker than your legs and you
may injure yourself. So get underneath the opponent and pull the person back
over your hips as you explode upward. Lift as high as you can and then drive the
opponent down as hard as you can. You’ll cause maximum damage by slamming
the opponent down on the shoulder area. You’ll knock the wind out of the
opponent with a throw to the back. Be very aware that if you throw the attacker
headfirst, you may kill him. That would mean severe moral and legal trouble for
you, which could ruin your life. Only resort to that sort of extreme action when
your life is threatened and you have no other choice. You must be able to justify
the use of deadly force in a court of law.
Jarlo Ilano has Burton Richardson in the neck clinch. Richardson puts his forearm against Ilano’s
hip to slow down and lessen the power of the coming knee strike (1). As the knee arrives, Richardson
sidesteps with his rear leg and tucks his body to avoid the blow (2). This puts Richardson in position
to hook his right arm under Ilano’s knee (3). Richardson brings his hips in close and wraps Ilano’s
waist with his left arm (4). Richardson explodes his hips inward and upward to lift Ilano, turn him
and pile-drive him to the ground (5-6).
BICYCLE STEP
The sepeda langkah (bicycle step) can be a throw in itself, but it is usually
used as a quick way to get the opponent’s leg to move and set up another throw.
Turn as if your going for the inside back sweep, but because you can’t move
the person to get to the proper position, point your toes and reach back as far as
you can. The back of your thigh will touch the opponent’s. Once your toes touch
down, slam your heel to the ground to straighten your leg. It is important to get
your thigh traveling slightly upward to uproot the opponent’s foot, so bend
forward as you do the bicycle step. This knee-straightening action will knock the
person’s leg back and his foot off the ground. With the adversary on one leg, you
may be able to finish the throw to the ground with a torquing action. If that
doesn’t work, you can flow to other moves, such as a shin bind, a back sweep on
the support leg or striking to the groin. The bicycle step is a very valuable move
to affect a strong opponent’s balance.
Burton Richardson tries for the inside back sweep, but Israel Cruz is too rooted and his leg won’t
budge (1). Keeping his thigh in contact with Cruz’s leg, Richardson reaches his toes back as far as he
can (2). Then he slams his heel to the ground while bending forward to pop Cruz’s foot off the ground
(3). With Cruz on one leg, Richardson can step behind Cruz’s left leg and transition to a huge outside
back-sweep throw (4-5).
OUTSIDE FOOT SWEEP
The sapu luar (outside foot sweep) is another takedown used many times in
Dog Brothers fighting, tournaments and other full-resistance situations.
Sweeping properly from the outside of the leg makes the opponent fall backward
toward his weakest point, so it is more reliable than sweeping from the inside of
the leg.
The keys to the foot sweep are timing, proper angulation on the sweep and
accuracy.
• Timing. You can’t do the sweep when an opponent’s weight is all on the
lead foot. It is too hard to move that leg unless the person is very light.
Assuming the attacker is your weight or heavier, you have to move or coax
the person into the proper position or recognize when the attacker is in a
position to be swept.
• Proper Angulation. Just sweeping the leg in any direction is not going to
give you good results. You need to sweep at the optimal angle to get
optimal results. Visualize a baseline between the opponent’s two feet and
extrapolate it toward you. For the outside sweep, you want to take the
opponent’s foot/leg 30 degrees off that line in front of you. That will give
you very good results. For the most efficient sweep, you want the
opponent’s upper body moving at 30 degrees off the line behind you. This
splits the attacker’s upper and lower body in two different directions. Down
goes your adversary.
A wide stance automatically makes it difficult to shift bodyweight. That
kind of stance primes an opponent for a sweep. In this case, you don’t need
to manipulate the upper body. Sweeping at the precise 30-degree angle
makes the sweep work very well.
Note that the sweeping foot does not travel parallel to the ground. You
come in low and sweep diagonally upward, which helps uproot the
opponent’s foot from the ground. There is also a slight torque of the foot to
give a little extra oomph when contact is made to send the opponent’s leg in
the correct direction.
• Accuracy. If you hit the outside of the opponent’s foot or ankle with your
foot, you will end up with no sweep and a sore foot. Ideally, the arch of
your foot should connect just below the bottom of the opponent’s calf.
Targeting a little below the midpoint of the lower leg maximizes your
ability to get the foot up off the ground. The closer to the ground you do
your sweep, the more power you will have to generate. The closer to the
knee you sweep, the more likely that the adversary’s knee will bend
forward and you won’t get the foot off the ground. The sweet spot is just
below the calf.
Jarlo Ilano and Burton Richardson square off (1). When Ilano fires a foot jab to the midsection,
Richardson scoops from the outside to catch the kick (2). He then pulls Ilano’s leg back and
downward to the side, causing Ilano to catch his balance in a wide stance (3). Richardson pushes
Ilano’s shoulder to keep him from moving his weight over his left foot (4). Lining himself up,
Richardson applies the foot sweep (5-6).
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
BEAR HUG
The peluk (bear hug) takedown is often seen in videos of Indonesian village
matches. Slide both your arms under those of the attacker. You have two basic
positions: either hold very high under his armpits or grab low around his lower
back. If you grab high, you limit his ability to use his arms to counter or strike,
and with his weight up on his toes, you can hook a leg to trip the attacker. If you
grip low on his torso, you can step in, lift and throw. Maintain a strong posture
so you lift with your legs, not your lower back.
Forward pressure is very important in getting your adversary backpedaling as
you do the trip. If he is able to plant his feet, that sets him up for the lift and
throw.
Burton Richardson uses the ram’s horn entry against Jarlo Ilano’s aggressive barrage of strikes (1-2).
This puts Richardson in position to grab Ilano’s body (3). He drives his hips in to lift Ilano (4).
Richardson turns Ilano and slams him on his back (5-6).
ELBOW COMPRESSION
Here is a silat throw that is often used in muay Thai fights. The idea in kenjit
siko (elbow compression) is to step behind the opponent’s lead leg while driving
your arm across the chest so that you can push the person back and over your
thigh.
If the adversary’s left leg is forward, twist your stance, lean forward into a
strong lever position and drive your right arm across the chest at an angle so you
bend the person backward. Strive to drive the opponent’s upper body toward the
point of that rear triangle. With your right leg, step in deep behind the left leg
and slam your thigh into the opponent’s thigh. If your adversary re-balances,
maintain your forward lever and compress your elbow into the chest while
twisting toward the rear to drive the person over your thigh. The goal is to make
the opponent’s head fall next to your rear foot. The fall is awkward and the
impact is very hard, so be very careful when doing this in practice.
An off-balanced aggressor who doesn’t fall is still wide open for strikes to the
groin. So either way, you are in a position of advantage.
Burton Richardson and Scott Ishihara are in the ready position (1). Richardson catches Ishihara’s
foot jab and pulls to off-balance him (2). Richardson steps in deep in a side lever with his arm angled
across Ishihara’s chest (3). Then Richardson turns and compresses his elbow to throw Ishihara over
his thigh (4). The result is a very hard landing (5).
DOUBLE-LEG LIFT
The position for the angkat kaki (double-leg lift) is the same as for the elbow-
compression throw. Your lead arm is in front of the attacker’s chest; your lead
leg is behind the attacker’s lead leg. But instead of driving the opponent
backward, squat down and grasp and lift both the opponent’s legs.
You must be in a strong side-lever position before you grab the legs. This will
ensure that you are pushing the opponent over your thigh and not lifting with
your lower back. As you squat and bend over to grab the adversary’s legs, rock
your hips forward to tilt the person rearward over your thigh. Lift explosively,
turn and dump the opponent hard. If you are grabbed, you will go to the ground
with the opponent, but you will land hard on top and be in a favorable position,
past the opponent’s guard.
This looks like a power move, but because of your deep position, you actually
first pull the opponent back over your thigh before lifting. This means that most
of the weight actually rests on your thigh. Students are always surprised that they
can lift much heavier partners with the double-leg lift. Using your thigh as a
fulcrum gives you the leverage to topple a big opponent. It is also a great answer
to a high rear bear hug.
Israel Cruz has a high rear bear hug. Burton Richardson tries to open the grip but can’t (1). Because
the lock is high, Richardson’s hips are free to move. He steps around Cruz’s right leg (2), plants his
foot deep to block Cruz’s legs and uses the side lever to drive Cruz’s upper body back while grabbing
under both legs (3). Because of the lever position, Richardson can push Cruz back over his leg (4),
which makes it very easy to lift him high (5). Richardson slams Cruz to the ground and lands with all
his weight on Cruz’s chest, compounding the force of the impact (6).
KNEE COMPRESSION
Controlled, safe sparring is essential for acquiring the necessary timing,
perception and distance to pull off your techniques. Some teachers tell students
that their style is “too deadly to spar,” but you can always spar punches, kicks,
elbows, knees, groin strikes, throat grabs and most takedowns. However, some
techniques are too dangerous to use in sparring, and the kenjit kaki (knee
compression) is one of them. Do not use this technique in sparring because you
will likely tear the ligaments in your partner’s knee! In addition, be very careful
when practicing this with a cooperative partner. If you push a little too far, the
knee may go. When the knee compression was first introduced to the American
public in the late 1980s, many people suffered serious knee injuries from
practicing this takedown, and that was without resistance. So just get into
position and don’t even move your partner’s knee.
The technique is based on collapsing the leg by driving your foot through the
side of the knee. The knee does not bend in that direction, so ligaments rip. The
sound that knee ligaments make when they tear is something no one wants to
hear in practice.
It is best to have the opponent’s bodyweight over the leg so the foot doesn’t
slide out and there is a further collapsing and tearing effect during the fall. It is
easiest to tilt the attacker’s head over the lead leg while turning to face that leg.
Bring your rear foot up to the outside above the knee, and stomp diagonally
down through the side of the knee while driving the person’s head straight down
toward the ankle. Stomping at an angle (instead of horizontally) aids in
anchoring the foot. As the knee collapses sideways, the attacker’s bodyweight
will fall straight down, adding to the snapping pressure on the ligaments. It is a
decisive way to take out a vicious attacker.
To have it at your disposal without sparring, you will need to do thousands of
dry-run repetitions, then get close to the position during your resistance sessions.
Just don’t follow through! With enough proper practice, you will be able to
apply it under pressure to the great detriment any criminal who assaults you.
Burton Richardson is tied up with Jarlo Ilano, grabbing his neck and triceps (1). Richardson fires a
snap kick to the groin (2). Ilano somehow survives and brings his right leg forward in front to protect
his groin (3). With his right foot now forward, Richardson uses his right hand to turn and tilt Ilano’s
head to the side while preparing to stomp diagonally down for the knee compression (4). Tilting
Ilano’s upper body over his leg puts more weight driving down on the knee as it collapses, adding to
the shearing force on the ligaments (5).
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Thoughts on a Clinch Position
If you get to the silat two on one (a clinch position described in the
next chapter), you can push the attacker’s arm toward his chest and
move to his back. I pulled this off for a few weeks while sparring
against a partner who is good in the clinch. Then my partner
discovered a counter — he used the forearm of his free hand to brace
across my throat, creating a barrier until he could free his arm from my
grip. (This counter is used against the arm drag in Greco-Roman
wrestling.)
One day, as I tried the move and my partner countered, my left hand
released the grip on the opponent’s triceps, grabbed the wrist of his
blocking arm and torqued his arms into the cross-arm-lock throw. It
wasn’t done consciously, but years of working on the position with a
cooperative partner had burned a pathway into my subconscious.
When the position presented itself, my body did the move. I was
shocked!
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
CROSS-ARM-LOCK THROW
Some readers may think this technique is in the realm of fantasy until they
start getting this throw consistently in sparring. As always, the keys to actually
applying a technique you have memorized are recognition and timing, acquired
through lots of training with a resisting partner.
To do the throw, get the adversary’s arms crossed at the elbows. Push on the
vertical arm while pulling on the horizontal arm to keep it straight. Turn in the
direction of the throw to maximize your leverage. As you continue to push and
pull, you will cause a hyperextension of the elbow, which coaxes the opponent to
fall. It isn’t a primary move at all, but it is really fun when you can pull this one
off.
Israel Cruz grabs Burton Richardson’s neck with his right hand (1). Richardson turns his shoulder
into the arm (a wrestling counter to the single neck grab) while using the kali-silat two on one to push
Cruz’s arm away (2). Richardson tries to use the opening to move to the back, but Cruz blocks the
transition by putting his left forearm across Richardson’s throat (3). Richardson retains his grip on
the wrist with his right hand and brings his left hand inside Cruz’s blocking arm (4). He grabs Cruz’s
left wrist, turns and achieves the cross-arm-lock position (5). Richardson turns hard while pulling on
Cruz’s left arm and pushing on his right to force Cruz to fall from the pressure of the arm lock (6).
KICK CATCHES
Catching kicks is an important strategy in silat. When a kick comes in, you
don’t just want to block it; you want to capture it and use the opportunity to put
your attacker at a distinct disadvantage.
Once you catch a kick, your attacker is on one leg and vulnerable, so
immediately strike, do a takedown or strike to set up the takedown. Since one leg
is up in the air, the primary striking follow-up is to kick or knee repeatedly to the
groin, which usually results in the aggressor falling to the ground. You also can
kick the knee of the support leg to damage it and make the attacker fall.
But striking does take a few seconds, which is a long time when there is more
than one assailant. The takedown happens in a fraction of a second, so you may
choose to throw immediately. The two most common takedowns from a kick
catch are to kick out the attacker’s support leg or raise the leg high and run
forward, causing the attacker to crash to the ground. If you choose to kick the
support leg out, know that hitting the back of the support leg causes a backward
fall. Kicking the leg out from behind is the preferred move because the attacker
will take a hard backward fall and is more vulnerable to quick striking follow-
ups. Kicking the front of the support leg causes a facedown landing, which is an
easier fall but exposes the person’s back to you.
Lifting and running for the takedown is especially useful against multiple
opponents because you can create distance from the other attacker(s) and
possibly head toward an escape route. Use your environment when lifting and
running. Slam the attacker into a wall, car or other hard object to make the fall
even more severe.
When you catch a kick, realize that you are not out of danger. Be aware that
the attacker could draw a weapon, start hitting you or lean forward to clinch you
before you complete the takedown. Many silat stylists will counter the kick catch
by leaping and throwing a head kick with their free leg. Use the kick catch
immediately before the aggressor can re-balance and continue the assault.
As in fighting or in life, when an opportunity arises, you must take advantage
of it immediately because it won’t be there long. Catch that kick and use it to
win the fight.
Dan Inosanto catches Burton Richardson’s kick.
Catch a midline round kick by wrapping the arm over the leg.
Catch a high round kick by wrapping the arm under the leg.
Catch a straight kick by moving back and capturing the foot with both hands.
Shelve a side kick by sidestepping and bringing the outside arm up underneath the kicking leg.
Burton Richardson has ended up on his back with Scott Ishihara standing over him (1). Richardson
fires a front kick to the groin (2). This gives Richardson time to hook his bottom foot around the
outside of Ishihara’s lead foot while driving a hard side kick to Ishihara’s knee (3). Ishihara’s knee is
hyperextended and he falls (4). From here, Richardson can escape or get on top to finish (5).
Knee Pull
This sweep was originally done with a karambit or similar hook knife in the
hand. The karambit makes the move extremely effective. But it can work with
empty hands, as well. As with any technique that applies force to the inside or
outside of the knee, please use extreme caution when practicing. You risk tearing
a partner’s ACL if you practice this move carelessly — it’s been known to
happen.
Whether dropping from standing or starting from the ground, lay the side of
your leg on the ground and place your foot against the side of the attacker’s lead
foot. This keeps the opponent’s foot from sliding away or twisting to counter the
takedown. Grip inside the knee with your hand and dig your fingers into the
flesh behind the knee. Lean your upper body to the side and pull the knee
outward and to the ground. For self-defense, this should be done with explosive
intent. From here, you can kick to the groin or stand up.
Use caution: The opponent can counter your takedown and may move to your
back by rotating the knee outward in the direction of the throw. Keep this in
mind if you choose to attempt the knee-pull takedown.
In a confrontation, Burton Richardson adjusts his posture to draw the high punch from Israel Cruz
(1). As Cruz fires, Richardson drops into the knee-pull position (2). He slams his left foot outside of
Cruz’s right and grabs deep inside the knee (3). Richardson continues to the side, using all his
bodyweight to pull the knee and finish the takedown (4-5).
Burton Richardson is attempting a head-and-arm-turn throw against attacker Scott Ishihara, who
goes with the movement and turns out of it (1-3). This gives Richardson the opportunity to step deep
with a side lever while sliding his arm across the attacker’s chest and delivering a powerful groin slap
(4-5). Richardson can finish with the elbow-compression takedown (6).
Inside Foot Sweep to Head-and-Arm-Turn Throw
When Burton Richardson is applying the inside foot sweep (1), attacker Scott Ishihara bends over
and shifts his weight to catch his balance (2). But this leaves Richardson in position to push Ishihara’s
head down while hooking under his arm to apply the head-and-arm-turn takedown (3-5).
Knee Pull to Arm Weave
From the low position, Burton Richardson attempts the knee-pull takedown against attacker Scott
Ishihara (1). But Ishihara counters by cross-stepping to catch his balance (2). With one hand,
Richardson maintains the hold on Ishihara’s lead foot and weaves his top hand behind Ishihara’s rear
knee (3). Richardson pulls to block Ishihara’s rear knee as he drives his shoulder into the lead knee
(4). He finishes the takedown and brings his torso up into an upright posture to take the top position
from which he can strike or escape (5).
Elbow Compression to Outside Foot Sweep
As Burton Richardson drives in with a side lever for an elbow-compression takedown (1), adversary
Scott Ishihara is able to slide away and make space to counter (2). Richardson slides his lead hand
back to grab Ishihara’s shoulder (3-4). He’s now able to pull Ishihara’s body at the proper angle to
apply an outside foot sweep and take him down (5-6).
CHAPTER SEVEN
CLINCH POSITIONS
Silat instructors often move in deep while striking and quickly transition to a
takedown. But they also perform many moves in the range that martial artists
today refer to as the clinch. This is the range at which you can physically grab
the attacker and he can grab you.
If you charge in to take an aggressor down but you can’t apply the throw, you
are in the clinch. It is imperative that you don’t just revert to trading blows but
instead grip in a way that it is difficult for the attacker to strike or move you
while maximizing your ability to strike, off-balance and throw the attacker. If
you want to optimize your fighting ability, you must understand the different
positions in the clinch, prioritize them in terms of functionality for self-defense,
and train these positions so you can dominate the fight in close quarters.
The average attacker can throw a damaging punch from boxing range but
usually doesn’t have much more than a head lock in the clinch. This gives you a
huge advantage if you are well-versed in close quarters with functional, street-
specific skills. Blending Southeast Asian methods with a mixed-martial arts
clinch yields tremendous results. And keep in mind that sparring in the clinch is
also great fun!
As on the ground, if you don’t understand the clinch and end up against
someone who does, you are going to be dominated. If you find yourself sparring
in the clinch with someone proficient in silat and even Filipino martial arts who
has a lot of moves but does not spar in the clinch, you may discover that the
opponent does not understand the structure and will leave openings. You will be
able to take his back over and over again. Blending silat training with a strong
MMA clinch approach is a huge advantage, allowing for defense, the application
of street-specific attacks and transitions taken from wrestling and jiu-jitsu
training.
This chapter demonstrates the major clinch positions used in functional silat.
There are many variations of each, but these basics have proved themselves very
useful in sparring for MMA fighters and silat students.
To be your best, you also should work in positions and tactics from wrestling.
They fit very well into the silat matrix and give you more options.
Please note that in many of the positions, silat practitioners will grab the skin,
muscle or nerves to further inflict pain and secure a better grip on the attacker. In
sport training, practitioners make it a point to not pinch or gouge each other
because it becomes irritating. But in silat, it is encouraged! Just be gentle when
sparring.
Understanding, practicing and sparring in the clinch is essential if you want
your silat to be effective in the modern MMA era. Regardless of your particular
style, be sure that clinch sparring is a normal portion of your training so that you
can discover which techniques work best for you, then hone them to a fine edge.
DOUBLE-BICEPS GRAB
The double-biceps grab is very simple, works against much larger and
stronger opponents, and checks each arm so you can monitor whether the
aggressor is about to draw a weapon. A problem with some sport clinch positions
is that they are meant to be used against someone in the same weight class. (A
simple move like the neck clinch, for example, can be difficult against someone
much taller.) In silat, it is assumed that the attacker is bigger and stronger, so the
priorities change.
Unlike the neck clinch in which you secure the body, the double-biceps grab
has you hanging off the attacker’s arms. This gives you a lot more leverage
because your grip is farther from your adversary’s core. You are using almost
your entire bodyweight on the arms, near the elbows.
Grab both biceps with your hands, using your thumb and fingers to grip into
the muscles. The thumb looks for the nerve that runs inside the arm just below
the biceps. Be in a forward-lever position, with your head on the attacker’s upper
chest. This keeps you clear of head butts, but you can rear back at any time and
deliver one of your own. As soon as you secure the position, fire knees or snap
kicks to the groin. Maintain forward pressure to keep the assailant from moving
back out of range. As he works to free his arms, you can transition to his back, to
throws, to strikes or switch to another clinch position.
SNAKE
The snake is a natural way to control an attacker’s arm. Your arm slithers over
and around the attacker’s upper arm and constricts to secure control. Once you
have the snake, the attacker’s arm is well-trapped.
Be sure that your arm is down near his elbow. This maximizes your leverage
against him by putting weight farther from his core. The higher you go on his
arm toward his shoulder, the stronger he is, and he can possibly use the position
for his own underhook, which gives him control of your body.
If your left arm does the snake, engage your biceps to create constriction on
his arm. Drop your weight so he is working hard to maintain his posture. Your
free hand can strike, but that leaves his other hand free to strike you. You may
overwhelm him with strikes to the eyes, throat or groin with your free hand, but
a safe tactic is to use your open hand to control his free hand. Grasp the wrist or
biceps to keep him from hitting you and to monitor the drawing of a weapon.
Throw knees and kicks to the groin, head butts and/or go for a takedown.
BEAR HUG
The peluk (bear hug) is a common position in village silat tournaments. Often,
when the fighters get very close, one will go for a bear hug to control the
opponent and immediately try for a takedown, often lifting and slamming. It is
an important position to know and to be able to counter.
Get both your arms under those of the attacker. If you hold very high, you will
severely limit the attacker’s arm motion and you can transition to a trip. If you
grip low on the torso, you can lift and throw, but the person might be able to use
his hands in your face or eyes to push you away.
The key is posture so you don’t end up bent over and lifting with your lower
back. Maintain good posture as you grasp the assailant’s body and use forward
pressure with your legs to control the attack and set up a takedown. Sparring
with wrestlers who do this for a living will greatly enhance your bear-hug
offense and defense.
HAIR GRAB
The hair grab is the safest, most powerful position in the clinch. So why isn’t
it the first clinch move a student learns? Because a lot of people have already
countered it by keeping their hair short! Just as you don’t want to rely on
whether an opponent will have sturdy clothing for your grips and takedowns,
you don’t want to rely on someone having hair to grab. But if the opponent does
have a mop, this is the go-to move.
Grip the hair on the upper, outer sides of the skull. This gives you handles
with which to control the attacker. Step back and snap the head down so the
attacker is bent over. Keep your arms almost fully extended to maintain your
distance and limit the assailant’s attack options. You can now kick to the groin,
knee to the face, sweep a leg or just jerk the opponent to the ground. That is a
dominant clinch position!
Hair grab
Anytime you are inside punching range, you can grab an attacker’s hair and gain maximum control.
Against Scott Ishihara’s left swing, Burton Richardson uses the helmet to block the strike (1). He
simply reaches out to execute the hair grab, pulling Ishihara forward and off-balance (2). The groin
kick is the most efficient strike from here, and ripping the opponent to the ground is quite easy (3).
TRICEPS CUP
This is a very temporary but extremely useful position. It could be considered
half of the two-on-one position. Use your lead hand, palm up, to cup the
attacker’s triceps. Turn and face the attacker’s arm so that your arm is
perpendicular to your body to optimize your structure. For a momentary tie-up
and to elicit a reaction to the position, push the assailant’s arm across. If the
reaction is to turn away, take the attacker’s back.
You can get to the triceps cup from many positions, but perhaps most often
when grabbing the opponent’s biceps and he tries to pummel inside your arm.
Slide your hand to the outside and get the triceps cup, make the attacker
uncomfortable, then take advantage of the reaction.
Triceps cup
Burton Richardson executes the double-biceps grab (1). Israel Cruz swims his right hand from
underneath, looking for the preferable inside spot (2). Richardson reads this reaction, rotates his left
hand to Cruz’s right triceps and pushes to get the triceps cup (3-4). Richardson immediately uses his
positional advantage to deliver a palm strike to the groin (5). This is a simple way to pick up the
triceps-cup position against someone trained in grappling.
DOUBLE-WRIST GRAB
Simply grab both the attacker’s wrists. Once you have both wrists, extend
your arms down and slightly away from your body. Lean on the opponent’s arms
like you are doing a dip on parallel bars. This gives you the leverage advantage,
and it will take the opponent a little longer to get free from your grip. The
attacker is going to find a way out of the move in a hurry, so counterattack right
away with head butts or by throwing kicks to the groin.
Double-wrist grab
Burton Richardson deals with Scott Ishihara’s aggression from a disguised ready position (1).
Richardson counters the two-hand shove by using the flower block from inside (2). He rotates his
hands outward to achieve the double-wrist grab (3). It is difficult to retain this position for long, so
Richardson immediately fires a powerful kick to the groin (4).
CHAPTER EIGHT
GROUND FIGHTING
Silat is a war art, so, historically, grappling was done out of necessity if a
warrior slipped or was taken to the ground or to capture a valuable enemy to
hold for negotiations or ransom. Usually, fighting on the ground involved pulling
a blade and finishing the downed opponent.
Today’s different styles of silat delve into empty-handed, one-versus-one
ground fighting to varying degrees. Many prefer the pukulan approach of just
striking the opponent into submission. Others have a large repertoire of locks
and holds. And many are somewhere in the middle with striking and a few
grappling-specific techniques.
A problem that exists for many martial arts also appears in silat ground
fighting — lack of training against a resisting opponent. When you just work
with a compliant partner, you can create all kinds of positions without realizing
that, in real life, those moves would be very difficult to apply, or worse, that you
would be putting yourself in danger. But if you want to learn how to fight, you
must practice fighting against someone who is fighting back — that also goes for
the ground. If you want to learn how to grapple, you must practice grappling
against someone who is grappling back — and preferably, against someone who
is skillful in ground fighting, including strikes.
Functional-silat ground fighting is about finishing the fight as quickly as
possible. You don’t have time to patiently move from position to position
because other attackers, who may be armed, are on the way. This is the
assumption, so the primary attacker must be neutralized quickly. This is why as
soon as the fight hits the ground, almost all silat systems prioritize striking,
usually to the groin, eyes or head. If the opportunity presents itself, joint breaks
are also used. Notice that submission locks are not a priority because the goal is
not to have the attacker tap out. In the street, what happens after you make a
violent assailant tap out to an arm lock? Are you going to let go of the lock and
allow him to continue his assault? Of course not. So going for the tap is not an
option in silat.
Joint manipulation is used to break a finger, wrist, arm or shoulder quickly
before continuing with the overwhelming counterattack. Once the assailant is
neutralized, you escape.
Although the silat fighter assumes that there is no time to patiently pursue
locks, there are situations in which grappling can be applied very effectively for
self-defense. This chapter explores some very functional silat-based ground
fighting. You will either be working from a favorable top position or from an
inferior bottom position.
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BREAKS
Arm Break
Say you are in the squat position striking an assailant who rolls away and
extends an arm in a desperate attempt to fend off your punches. You can move
that arm and continue striking, or you can use the opportunity to injure it. Grab
the assailant’s arm at the wrist and pull down so that your shin is just above his
elbow. Ballistically pull the arm back while thrusting your shin forward to
hyperextend the elbow. This will render the attacker less dangerous, and you can
then go back to striking.
Arm break
Wrist Break
There are several positions in which to apply a wrist break, but here is an easy
one. Again, if you are in the squat position, the attacker may roll on one side and
cover his face, elbow pointing up. This gives you an opportunity for a wrist
break.
Lower your squat to put one knee on the assailant’s head and the other on his
ribs. Grab the attacker’s hand with both of yours. Secure the elbow against your
chest and pull up ballistically to break the wrist. There are also twisting wrist
breaks from this position. After the break, go back to hitting.
Wrist break
Finger Break
Here is a piece of advice from a Laotian silat man: “Any time you can grab a
finger in a fight, break it!” It is difficult to grab fingers when you are in a
striking fight, but in the clinch or on the ground, you have many opportunities.
It is easiest to break a finger if you first grab the attacker’s hand and wrist.
Slide down to grasp a finger. Using your wrist grab to keep the hand from
moving, make a quick spiral movement against the joint to break it. You can then
move to the next finger and do the same.
Like the gunslingers of the Old West, silat fighters like this because it makes it
difficult for the assailant to later grasp a weapon and renew the attack. It is a
simple concept to include in your flow.
Finger break
Shoulder Break
If you have ever witnessed a shoulder tear, you know how devastating it is.
People crumble from the pain. A shoulder break gives you a great advantage
over an aggressor.
With the attacker on his side and covering his head, snake your left arm under
his forearm while kneeling on his head. Reinforce your grip with your right
hand, and turn explosively toward his head to torque his arm and dislocate his
shoulder. If you don’t block his waist with your leg, he will spin toward the
direction of the break to alleviate the pressure. This needs to be done quickly and
explosively. You can then let go and continue your counterattacking sequence.
Shoulder break
Burton Richardson gouges Scott Ishihara’s eyes from the guard. Notice that Richardson’s elbows are
down — not on Ishihara’s chest — to avoid armbars and other submissions.
BOTTOM POSITIONS
Being on your back in a street attack is extremely dangerous. Your mobility is
limited, the attacker can use gravity to strike down at you, and you are more
vulnerable than ever to weapons and multiple attackers. If you are a good silat
fighter and you end up on your back, you are going to attack while seeking to
return to an upright position. Kicking to the groin or head, gouging the eyes,
striking the groin or grabbing the throat are used to viciously attack the person
on top. The intent is not just to distract but also to injure.
Experience in working to apply silat techniques against world champion
grapplers will tell you that the tactics work as long as the adversary has not
gotten to a position of superior control. Striking while keeping the opponent at
your feet (in what BJJ calls the open guard) works very well. If the opponent
gets to your side, you have just a few options and you need good grappling skills
to apply them. If the opponent is in a vastly superior position of control, like
mount or at the back, your street tactics are pretty much useless. Even if you do
get a finger into the assailant’s eye, the person is going to shrug it off and start
giving back the same or worse. You need grappling expertise to escape during
that split second of distraction that an eye strike or groin hit gives you. It is a
very bad idea to rely on “foul” tactics to escape from a bad position without
having functional-grappling skills to back them up.
If you are versed in the guard, there are many silat-based options available to
you when you are on your back. Here are a few examples of mixing silat tactics
with grappling when fighting from your back.
Example A
Burton Richardson has Scott Ishihara in his guard and keeps him close to avoid strikes. Richardson
has Ishihara’s left arm trapped with his body and reaches over Ishihara’s neck to trap his right wrist.
This allows Richardson to gouge the eye without any impediments.
Example B
Burton Richardson finds himself on the ground (1). He leans to the side to get out of the line of attack
and puts his hands on the ground. He fires an unexpected kick with the shin to Scott Ishihara’s neck
(3).
Example C
Burton Richardson is on the ground in a harimau side-sitting position, hands out to block any
punches from Scott Ishihara (1). Richardson unexpectedly springs up and forward to trap one arm
(2). He ducks to the side to deliver an explosive open-hand strike to the groin (3).
Example D
From his guard, Burton Richardson grabs Scott Ishihara’s biceps with his left hand, to hinder
striking, and Ishihara’s throat with his right (1). While Ishihara is occupied pulling the hand off his
throat, Richardson puts his left hand on the ground behind him (2). This allows Richardson to get to
his knees and take the top position (3-4). This is a great move to get off the bottom. You can use this in
sparring if your partners are street-minded and don’t mind you grabbing the throat.
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Grappling for Self-Defense
In modern culture, there are situations in which you may choose to
grapple in self-defense. There are thousands of videos on the Internet
showing street altercations involving prolonged ground fighting
between two people without anyone else interfering. I call situations in
which you can fight on the ground without an attacker’s accomplice
jumping in and booting you in the teeth “safe to grapple” scenarios. In
some instances, there are onlookers but no one who wants to get
involved; in others, a crowd gathers around to watch and acts as a
referee imposing “fair fight rules”; and other instances might occur in
an enclosed area like a home or office where it is just you and the
intruder.
Because there are times when superior grappling skills work to your advantage, I highly
suggest that you supplement your silat ground-fighting training with other forms of grappling.
If you want to get really good at one-on-one grappling, do yourself a favor and cross-train. No
system is perfect, so it is wise to take the best from Brazilian jiu-jitsu, wrestling, sambo, judo,
mixed-martial arts grappling or any other grappling system. Learn different approaches and
then mix in your silat tactics for a devastating combination. Potentially tens of thousands of
willing training partners can help you improve by giving you skilled resistance in a safe
environment. Take advantage of it. For a highly organized, functional, street-specific approach
to ground fighting, check out my BJJ for the Street program.
Anyone interested in being truly skillful on the ground, regardless of style, would be wise
to invest time training with seasoned grappling practitioners, especially with striking included.
In addition, safely add strikes to the groin, throat grabs, simulated eye gouges and weapons to
the mix, like in the BJJ for the Street program. It is more realistic and a lot more fun!
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CHAPTER NINE
SARONG TACTICS
Sarong techniques are popular among many silat practitioners, but they often
tend to skip over the simple, basic techniques and lean very heavily toward
fantasy pencak. Most of the popular sarong moves rely on heavily
choreographed sequences that require a trained, cooperative partner to feed you
just right. These are techniques in which a partner throws a jab and cross, slowly
of course, then stands there allowing his arms to be entangled before being
strangled by the sarong. Just put the gloves on and try it out with some real
resistance and see what happens.
Please don’t forget the functional-sarong techniques, which tend to get lost
because of all the emphasis on the flash and fantasy. Here are a few very
effective sarong techniques that also can be used with a jacket or towel in
Western culture.
Flashy? No. Effective in a street fight? Yes!
When doing sarong techniques, please know the difference between those that
are done for the pencak performance art and those that are done for silat. If you
have doubts as to which category your technique belongs in, just ask your
partner to fight back and you will soon find out.
The Whip
One sarong technique Inosanto taught was to take the cloth and whip it at the
eyes of the attacker, much like snapping someone with a towel. The end of the
“whip” can be a distraction, or it can cause damage if you hit the eyes. Another
move he demonstrated was a technique of some Southeast Asian stylists who
would make a knot in one corner of the sarong or even tie in a few coins or
pebbles for greater impact.
You can do the same with a jacket or towel. Whip the jacket out at the attacker
to keep him away or distract him to set up an escape or counterattack. It’s
intuitive and very functional.
With Jarlo Ilano threatening (1), Burton Richardson readies the sarong (2). A towel, jacket, sweater,
etc., also can be used. He whips it out, striking Ilano in the eye (3-4).
Put a Rock in It
Another sarong technique comes from a silat instructor from Bali. He suggests
grabbing a fist-size rock, putting it in the sarong and swinging it around your
head to hit the attackers, the assumption being that there is more than one
assailant involved. The fast swinging is designed to keep them at a distance. It is
another very simple, intuitive and highly effective method of using a sarong.
With a jacket, you can put the rock in a pocket, zip it up and get swinging.
Place a rock or other solid object in the sarong (1), and swing the cloth (or jacket, towel, etc.) at high
velocity toward the target (2).