Spladle
The spladle is a wrestling technique commonly used as a counter and pinning move to single leg take downs. When opponents shoot in and grab the leg the wrestler will drop their weight on the opponents head to prevent advancement of the take down, from there they may reach across the body with their arms to grab hold of the opponents far side leg, once completed they wrap the near side leg with the leg targeted for the take down and roll forward onto the mat. When on the floor it is important to control both legs of the opponent as the wrestler wants to bring the knees of his opponent as close to inline with the opponent's head as possible.
As a pin that is the result of countering a take down, this is a very effective technique to use when possible in order to score, however the position in which the two wrestlers land can breed controversy as to who the points will go to. While the wrestler caught in the spladle is certainly unable to effectively do anything, let alone escape, the one who uses it in some cases may have their shoulders flat to the mat as well which could result in them being judged as the one being pinned in some cases. This is caused because it is likely that their shoulder rolled onto the mat first, to determine this the referee would need to reflect on the match he witnessed or review any tape there is if it is available for viewing in order to determine the victor.
Variations
- Counter: This technique is very often used as a counter-style move a variety of the single leg take downs by reaching across the back and getting a hold of both legs as described at the top of the article. While this is the most used variation and the one most commonly seen in competition or demonstration purposes it is not the only way of using this technique.
- Offensive: From certain positions on the mat the opponent may wrap a leg from where there are positions in which one may catch the spladle, typically when the wrestler on the bottom is attempting to reverse positions by attacking a leg with hopes of executing something similar to a single leg style take down, ankle pick or reversal technique involving the wrapping or control of a singular leg. With this sort of style to the spladle where the wrestler on top is working for a pin while the other stalls him or is not sure what to do, there are many possibilities present in order to work towards this pin.