Objective
Teach teenagers the realistic principles behind wrist grab escapes and kidnap-prevention:
- Situational awareness
- Reaction to an attempted grab
- Breaking the grip under stress
- Regaining balance
- Creating space
- Escaping to safety
- Using voice commands and tactical movement
Setup
Teens pair up with someone roughly their size.
Instructor supervises closely when adding pressure.
Drill Breakdown
1. Self-Defence and Awareness Discussion
Brief talk (30–45 seconds):
- Self-defence starts long before contact.
- Awareness prevents most situations.
- Distance, body language, and early movement matter.
- If grabbed, respond immediately with structure, not panic.
Ask:
“What signs tell you something might be wrong?”
Teens will mention approach, body language, tone, distance.
2. Avoiding the Grab
Partners attempt a controlled wrist grab.
Defender:
- Moves feet early
- Pulls arm back
- Steps off-line
- Uses voice
- Creates distance
Add tactical ideas:
- “Don’t stay in front of the threat.”
- “Angle out, not straight back.”
3. Wrist Grab Releases – Technical
Teach both:
- Single-hand grab escape
- Double-hand grab escape (towards the gap)
Add mechanics teens can understand:
- “Pull through the gap, not toward the fingers.”
- “Use your whole body, not just your arm.”
Finish each release with:
- Step back
- Hands up
- Clear command (“Stay back!”)
4. Add Pressure and Resistance
Partner grabs with increasing firmness.
Defender must:
- Widen base
- Lower centre
- Release with structure
- Add push
- Create distance
- Move to safe angle
Switch every 45–60 seconds.
5. Burpees → Grab → Release (High Energy Phase)
Defender performs 3–5 burpees, stands, and closes eyes.
Partner grabs strongly.
Defender must:
- Regain base
- Release effectively
- Push out
- Angle off
- Move to safe zone
This simulates fatigue and delayed reaction.
6. Ground Start – Sit-Ups Into Pulling
Defender performs 5 sit-ups.
Partner initiates a pulling action.
Defender must:
- Get feet under body
- Stand before attempting release
- Release grip
- Push away
- Escape
Instructor emphasis:
“Standing creates power. Fighting on the ground is slow. Get vertical first.”
Let them experiment but demand control and safety.
7. Final Round – Switching Roles Under Speed
Rotate fast:
- Burpees round
- Sit-up round
- Standing release
- Avoid the grab
- Escape drill to a safe zone
Quick rotations keep teens mentally sharp.
Progressions
- Add moving grabs (walk → grab).
- Add verbal pressure (“Come here!” “Don’t move!”).
- Add second grab attempt after release.
- Add light obstacle (bag or pad) for evasion.
Variations
- Two-person pull (light and controlled).
- Blindfold stance start: eyes closed until contact.
- Escape to real-world exit point.
Coaching Points
- Encourage smart footwork and angles.
- Remind them: “Balance first, break second.”
- Control intensity — they are teens, not adults.
- Keep commands sharp and loud.
- Reinforce finishing with distance and awareness.
Safety Rule
Pulling must be controlled, never jerky.
No dragging or running with a partner.
If anyone loses balance, both partners stop immediately.
Instructor supervises closely during high-intensity rounds.