Fightingkids.com Dvd

With the rise of high-definition 4K instructionals featuring ADCC champions, is a grainy, standard-definition DVD from the early 2000s still relevant?

The answer is an emphatic Yes.

Wrestling fundamentals do not age. A blast double leg from 2004 works exactly the same as a blast double leg in 2025. Moreover, many modern BJJ coaches have lost the "folkstyle" edge. Folkstyle wrestling (the American collegiate style) is about control and pressure, which is exactly what you need to win MMA rounds.

The Fightingkids.com DVD excels at teaching the "in-between" positions—the scrambles. Modern instructionals often teach static techniques. Mills teaches chaos.

For fighters who want to improve their ground-and-pound, Mills teaches the "Barn Door" and "Near Fall" tilts. These moves don't require submissions; they expose the opponent’s back to the mat, allowing for devastating punches and elbows.

Forget fancy spin kicks. The first 30 minutes focus entirely on defensive positioning. Kids learn the "T-Rex arms" frame, how to escape a headlock without throwing a punch, and verbal de-escalation tactics. The DVD emphasizes that "fighting is the last resort," but when it becomes necessary, the child must control the clinch.

While there were multiple volumes released under the Fightingkids.com banner (including "High Amperage Wrestling" and "The Spladle Series"), the most sought-after single disc typically labeled "Fightingkids.com DVD" in collector circles focuses on wrestling for fighters.

Here is a chapter-by-chapter breakdown of what you would find if you managed to get a hold of the original plastic case: