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Archive for the ‘guard passes’ Category


Pulling Guard in MMA

Saturday, December 31st, 2011

Q: Hello Stephan,

I’m a big fan of your website – I’ve been following it since 2009.  I compete in BJJ and No-Gi submission wrestling.

I’ve also been training MMA with hopes of having my first amateur fight within the year.  I’ve been very successful working my guard when I compete, and I’ve been able to often score submissions from there when I spar MMA.

With some MMA fighters pulling guard I was wondering if there’s a particular guard pull that works well in MMA (I’m not as comfortable in the half guard yet).

Thanks
Jerry

A: Hi there Jerry,

Thanks for your kind words about my website.  I never thought it would grow as big as it has become when I started it way back in 2002!

Now, with regards to pulling guard in Mixed Martial Arts competition…

The simplest thing to say is: don’t do it!!!!!!!

With one exception, I’m completely against pulling guard in MMA!

If you manage to successfully pull guard (and successfully pulling guard in MMA is definitely not a given) then the simple fact is that you’re on the bottom and your opponent is on top.

This gives him at least three advantages…

First of all, he can rest his weight on you.  All things being equal, that means that you’ll get tired faster than him.

And getting tired in MMA is a very bad thing.

As I said in my very first Grapplearts blog post ever, if you’re tired then you’re not fast, you’re not strong, you’re not explosive and you’re not even smart!

Secondly, he’ll have gravity on his side and that means he’ll be able to hit you much harder than you can hit him.

It’s true that sometimes your opponent trying to take your head off with his fists and elbows does opens up submission and sweeping opportunities.  But against a knowledgeable opponent in the slippery and sweaty world of MMA that can be a long shot.

(It’s also possible that your previous successes with submissions from the bottom during MMA sparring came, in part, from your training partners not punching you full force. Don’t underestimate how much getting punched in the face really hard will mess up your submission game!)

I don’t know what the exact statistics are, but I’m guessing that for every successful submission from the guard in MMA there have been three times as many KO’s and TKO’s resulting from the guy on the bottom getting pounded by the fighter on top.

Not great odds…

Finally, should your fight go the distance, most judges in MMA will give the fight to the guy on top because he’s supposedly being the aggressor.  Decisions don’t tend to favor the person on the bottom.

Now, there’s one important exception to all of this…

Let’s say that you’re totally outclassed in the striking or takedown department.  The fight isn’t going well and you’re gonna get knocked out on the feet, or end up completely exhausted by your opponent stuffing your takedown attempts.

If you know that you’re a better grappler, then your only option might be to get the fight to the ground quick. And the only way to do this might involve pulling guard.

So let’s talk about the right way and the wrong way to pull guard, regardless of whether you’re competing in BJJ or MMA…

Many people pull guard by falling backwards to the ground in a lazy kind of way.

This is dangerous because it gives your opponent the option of standing back and disengaging, in which case the referee will probably force you to get back to your feet again.  Or, even worse, he’ll take advantage of your lazy butt-flop and pass your guard, which could be disastrous in a real fight!

So you want to be sure that your guard pull works!

One option is to tie up (clinch) with your opponent and shoot your hips forward ultra-dynamically in an attempt to to get the closed guard.

Think of hitting him so hard that you knock him over backwards.  In all likelihood you won’t knock him over, but you probably will get to the closed guard.

It would also help if you had a solid half guard game.  Many times when you don’t get the full guard you end up in half guard.  And the half guard CAN work in MMA: watch the sweep that Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira (Big Nog) did on Tim Sylvia in UFC 81.

One final option I’m going to talk about today is something that I’ve seen work in both MMA and submission grappling.  Namely jumping to a leglock attack and/or to the single-leg X guard from a standing position!

This is a very surprising attack, with strong followup potential…

The goal is to submit your opponent with the leglock.  But even if that part doesn’t go according to plan, you still get to the ground, often ending up on top as your opponent tries to escape the submission attack.

Here’s a clip from my Leglock DVD taking you through that specific jumping leglock entry:

Before we get carried away talking about the specific techniques to pull guard, let’s make one thing really clear.  Regardless of the technique you’re using, if you’re even thinking about doing this in MMA then you’d better practice it first in sparring!

Here’s a drill that might help you (I previously taught this in “Lesson 4 – Escaping in Transition” of the Grappling Concepts Course).

This game is good for both partners.  It develops: A) effective guard pulling, and B) effective guard passing during the transition.

You and your training partner start on your feet.

Each person only has ONE way of scoring points in this game.

The first person’s goal is to pull guard.  If he can secure a guard position (any guard position, open or closed) for 3 seconds, he gets one point.

The other person’s DOESN’T want get caught in the guard.

His goal is to avoid getting entangled in the guard or half guard, and pass to a dominant position (side mount, kneemount, full mount, etc) as the other person transitions from standing to the the ground. If he passes the guard and maintains a dominant position for 3 seconds then he gets one point.

This is sparring with very limited parameters.

All one person is trying to do is get to the ground and maintain guard (or sweep him) for 3 seconds. All the other person is trying to do is not get caught in the guard and try to pass it even before it gets established.

After a pre-determined length of time you switch roles.

If you want pulling the guard in a match to be a last-ditch emergency option then this drill might be a good starting point for you.

But if your emphasis is MMA then you might want to mix it with some light boxing and/or clinchfighting with takedowns.

Also, you might want to award  the non-guard-pulling person ONE point if he breaks free of your guard and gets back to his feet, and TWO points if he passes your guard (this would reflect the severity of ending up in a bad position in MMA).

One last thing…

We’ve talked about pulling guard as an ace up your sleeve when nothing else is working.

Alright, we’re in agreement that it’s good to have a backup plan…

But if you want to fight MMA these days you need to have a striking game, a takedown game and a ground game!

Of course you’ll always be stronger in some areas than others – that’s completely normal, and is true even for the very best UFC fighters.

But if you only feel comfortable in one range then your opponents will eventually figure this out and clobber you.

Just remember, concussions are bad for you, and dental work is very, very expensive!  Train so that you got some options in all three areas of the game!

Take care, and good luck with your training!

Stephan Kesting
www.grapplearts.com

How To Stop Someone From Passing Your Guard

Monday, October 24th, 2011

*** A Grappling Question from a Reader ***

Hi Stephan,

Thank you for the newsletters!  I started training BJJ and MMA about 5 months ago – it’s been life changing for me.  Do you have any tips for keeping someone in your guard and not letting them pass?

Sincerely,
R.W.

======== My Answer ========

Hi R,

First of all, congratulations for jumping into such a challenging and hugely rewarding sport.  Most of the people around the office water cooler only talk about the MMA, but you’re actually doing it!

With regards to stopping your opponent from passing your guard: there are at least two answers to your question….

First, there are specific TECHNIQUES that you need to know.

This means having specific technical answers to the specific technical problems that you encounter most frequently when you’re using a specific form of guard…

For example, let’s say that you’re using the closed guard and your opponent stands up.  You keep your legs locked and your entire body gets hoisted off of the ground

It would look kind of like the picture immediately to the left…

So in this case your specific technical problem is that he’s standing up, your guard is closed, and you’re hanging off of him.

If you stay there for long enough (especially if he gives you some added physical ‘encouragement’) then your legs will eventually open, you’ll flop to the ground and he’ll be in a standing position ready to rocket past your guard.

Now there are MANY different technical answers to this problem.

There are techniques to break his posture, to submit him, and/or to sweep him and get yourself to the top.

(Click here to get a specific example of a really simple and very technique solution that worked on me in this situation.)

So there’s no getting around it: getting good at BJJ and submission grappling does involve learning lots of techniques…

And to “keep someone in your guard and not let them pass” you’ll need to add specific techniques for specific situations in specific guard positions to your arsenal…

But there’s something EVEN MORE POWERFUL than knowing a bunch of techniques…

Which brings us to a second solution to keeping someone in your guard…

Techniques are good. But strategies, concepts and principles are better.

If you’re using a concept, or are being guided by a strategy, then the specific details of a technique you’re using (e.g. precisely where to put your hands, exactly how to move your hips, etc.) become less important to memorize, and the original move becomes a lot easier to execute.

So I’m going to share a STRATEGY that you can use anytime you’re in the guard, and with any type of guard.

Ready?  It’s GRIPFIGHTING!

A key part of the battle to keep someone in your guard is constantly fighting the gripfighting battle and never conceding the grips that your opponent is trying to get on you.

Many people only think of gripfighting in the context of standup Judo or pummeling for a good position in wrestling…

But gripfighting is JUST AS IMPORTANT in maintaining the guard and attacking effectively from there.

It’s critically important to constantly fight for the grip, whether you’re doing gi or no gi… With or without striking… For the closed guard, the open guard, the butterfly guard, the inverted guard, spider guard, and every other guard position out there!

Grips are everything.

If your opponent has good grips then you can’t attack, and he can make posture and start the guard pass.

If you have good grips then you can break his posture, attack him with sweeps and submissions and dominate the fight.

Never concede the grip!!!!

Hope this helps!

How Many Guard Passes Do You Need in BJJ?

Monday, June 13th, 2011

How many guard passes do you think a four time world champion and an 18 year veteran of BJJ uses?

If you can put up with rough guerrilla-audio in the video below (it was shot at the last minute) then Vitor Shaolin’s answer might surprise you…

Robot Legs Drill (video)

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Today I want to show you a fun and effective way to improve your guard passes that I call the ‘robot legs’ drill.  Once you get comfortable with this drill try going faster and faster so that you also get a bit of cardio burn.

But here’s the ‘catch’ – this drill ISN’T only for the guy on top.  It ALSO lays the foundation for some highly sophisticated guard retention drills for the guy on the bottom.  That makes it win-win for both training partners, which is always the best kind of situation!

Obviously there’s a lot more to defending the guard pass than this highly simplified ‘robot leg’ movement, but this is a great place to start.  Once you get comfortable with this, then you can move on to other, more advanced, drills.  Click here to see the Robot Legs Guard Passing Drill Video.

The ‘Twitch Pass’

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

I’ve been mulling over what I’m going to do with my flagship instructional product, the Grappling Concepts Course. I put my heart and soul into this course, and included an absolute TON of material that I’ve never taught anywhere else.

The course was wildly successful, which was great, but it also created a problem.

Because so many people signed up my hands were absolutely full. I don’t like to farm out my customer support and I try to answer every enquiry personally, so for the next 26 weeks I got very little sleep and was operating well above my redline all the time.

(It’s ironic, but in the act of helping other people improve their grappling, my own training suffered and my friend and family time shrunk to an absolute minimum.)

But I’ve got a solution.

I’m going to open up registration for the course again next week, but this time I’ll clamp down on the numbers. I might cap it at a maximum of 75 students, and maybe it won’t be so overwhelming for me this time.

Of course limiting the numbers means that some people won’t be able to get in, and for that I apologize. As a consolation prize though, everyone will get access to lots of cool video tidbits over the next couple of weeks.

The first excerpt I want to show you is the ‘Twitch Pass.’

Many advanced grapplers use this exact movement to pass the guard. But – as is so often the case – not all of them can explain it or demonstrate it slowly.

When I was first trying to incorporate this pass into my game I had to sit down and think hard to figure it out. I’m glad I put the effort in, though, because this pass ended up becoming a very effective open technique for me.

So check out the ‘Twitch Pass.’ I use all the time when I’m rolling with good opponents, and I think it might be your move too!

Grappling Concepts Course Preview

Countering the Double Leg with a Sitout & Switch

Monday, May 10th, 2010

I respect most grappling arts, not just BJJ.  Freestyle and collegiate wrestling, in particular, have a lot to offer to submission grapplers and BJJ practitioners.  Obviously we can get a lot of good throws and takedowns from wrestling, but we can also ‘steal’ some very powerful moves on the ground as well.

One of these techniques is called the ‘switch.’

The first time I ran into the switch was incredibly frustrating.  Years ago I was sparring with a wrestler who was getting ready for an MMA fight.  Every time I came close to passing his guard he’d sit up, reach over my shoulder, and completely stalemate my guard pass using his arm.  This must have happened 5 times in the course of our sparring that day!

I know this move is effective, so today I’ve recruited Dave Scholten, 3 time Canadian wrestling champion, to take you through the technique.  In this 1:41 video Dave uses the switch as a counter to the double leg takedown in an MMA context, but you could use the exact same technique to stop a guard pass in submission grappling.

P.S. If you liked this or my previous Youtube videos then I strongly suggest that you go to my Youtube Channel and subscribe.  It doesn’t cost anything, and it means you won’t miss my future Youtube videos!

I Only Got Tapped Out Twice!!

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

A few weeks ago I went to a training session with the goal of working on and experimenting with the so-called “Sao Paulo” guard pass. My plan for sparring this day was to start in my partner’s closed guard, and then only use this one guard pass.

I spent the session training with one guy: a competitive brown belt who was about 15 lbs lighter than me. I’m heavier, stronger and more experienced. Should’ve been an easy sparring session, right?

Ummm, not so much…

That sparring session could be accurately described as long periods of deadlock, interrupted only by brief periods of him severely kicking my butt. After forty-five minutes he’d submitted me twice from his guard, swept me several times, and I HADN’T passed his guard once.

On my way home, though, I had a great big smile on my face. As far as I was concerned, the training session had been a great success!

You see, the previous time I’d worked with this same guard pass I’d had a hell of time surviving in the guard of a blue belt. ‘Only’ getting submitted two times this day by a brown belt was actually an improvement.

Furthermore, the fact that there were now long periods of stalemate meant that I was doing some things right. And my sparring partner told me that I’d actually been close to passing several times.

By the end of the sparring session I’d identified several sticking points in that guard pass – situations for which I had no good answers. These are times when the best thing you can do is go home, brainstorm for potential solutions and then test those solutions in sparring on another day.

So don’t freak out about tapping out. Cut yourself some slack, especially if you’re experimenting with a new technique, or tactic or strategy. If I can consider a training session successful despite getting tapped out multiple times by a lighter and lower-ranked grappler, then what are you worried about?